Sunday 4 December 2022

Five Poems by E. Martin Pedersen

 



 

Amazon Lesson

 

Fencing, a noble sport, of kings and queens, or kings vs. queens

my partners are all women, the gentle ones

who’ll suckle you and spank you and ignore your cries

to teach you lessons

guess the football stars don't take this class

the women always kick my ass

many-colored flowers, indifferent to the Bee

one stuck me through the padding, a sharp shot into the armpit

another busted through my mask, no damage to the eyes

I didn’t know they could thrust so hard

or were they playing the men, solemn musketeers

those flaming dandies in the billowy shirts --

as they should

fencing with women

does me good.

 

 

bird baths

 

in Qing land

a man

carved small bamboo pockets to hang

one a cup shape one a monkey face

on the outside walls of wooden houses

as bird baths for bulbuls

very intricate, expert artistry

when he became ill

a gweilo (foreign

devil) took them

all put a brass ring

through them

carried them all

in one hand

to sell

for gold

back home

 

 

The Graveyard Two-step

 

I moved into the cemetery years ago

the City of the Dead welcomed me

I've eaten and slept here ever since

it's not as bad as it sounds

I pick up a blade of grass and break it into tiny bits

that I toss into the wind like confetti

when it rains the cemetery is extra lonely

I've walked among the graves so much

that I know most of their guests' names

but not their stories -- I don't imagine

they were exceptional, though I could be wrong --

wait. I am wrong. these were loving people

who did good works, the world

a better and better place until

the two-steps-back epidemic

hits as it always does, then

it's up the hill pushing giant stones again

the disease hits hard as evidenced by

the new dirt tamped rectangularly

but I am safe here, safe from all contagion

with the ground squirrels in the graveyard

I have shade to sit in but no books

so I make them up and make

the forgotten protagonists of magical tales

I wonder if my style is becoming out-

dated, if I might need to renew

contact with the town and its citizens

down the hill yet I am afraid

afraid they will mock me -- those

who are left -- for my present

company of corpses

I don't care

I like the silence and the springtime dandelions

and the lack of obligations.

 

 

In the Tunnel

 

Where do we go when

we blank out driving through Nevada

waiting for a plane suspended

turning in the watch mechanism

in the numbers over 1,000, sequencing

reading a page with the back of the eyes

chewing, chewing, swallowing

out the window, out the window

the girl's thin white shoe buckle over the short blue sock

copying with mechanized finger tips in alphabetical order

a freight train in a long tunnel

a very long tunnel.

 

When I go there to China, the in-between place,

through the middle Earth

is this wrong? do I long to go back there

to that gray garden, that moth-white golden gate park

that empty parallel universe, exaggeration unknown

where language never existed

experience     thought     souls

snap alive back from, out of

miles to go

and so many

rotten promises.

 

 

Their seven-story apartment building

replacing a lemon orchard,

behind the Cathedral of Pompei,

Messina, Sicily

 

In Sicily villages sit alone on hills against foreign invaders; now one of these intrepid men has taken over the castle, taken up residence in the black tower, the only tower stretching tall above all, reaching out over the hill, over the city below, over the fools and fakers, over the question: wine or beer? Is he a superman? Does he hold the ring of power? Or just a link in a chain? The tower grows ever taller as he acquires deep dark wisdom draining up from the bowels of the earth, from magma, like stainless steel frozen into a glorious razor-sharp cage to keep the philosopher-prince from polluting the populace. The rising tower challenges God to a glory bout and crumbles speaking in tongues ecstatic and static incomprehensible languages already dying.

Does he enjoy his high prison? Sure, because the view is awesome!

What better place

to die

In her arms.

 



E. Martin Pedersen, originally from San Francisco, has lived for over forty years in eastern Sicily, where he taught English at the local university. His poetry appeared most recently in Avatar Review, Canyon Voices, Slab, SurVision, and Helix Literary Magazine, among others. Martin is an alumnus of the Community of Writers. He has published two collections of haiku, Bitter Pills and Smart Pills, and a chapbook, Exile's Choice, from Kelsay Books. A full collection, Method & Madness, is forthcoming from Odyssey Press. Martin's poem, "Gull Eggs," was nominated by Flapper Press for the Best of the Net Award 2023.


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