Saturday, 16 September 2023

Three Poems and Five Haiku by Matthew James Friday

 



Fishing For Poems

 

I was asked, what is poetry like?

 

Perhaps like the northern flicker 

riffling the rim of the path, probing

into the wood-chipped, damp earth

for a morsel to maintain its spirit.

 

No, it’s like fishing.

 

You set up your intentions

on the bank of the brown page

and cast off into the current

 

of images and ideas.

then wait 

 for inspiration

to nibble your bait, sink

the float and the poem bites.

 

Now the real struggle begins:

wrestling with imagery, trying

to land the wriggling language

on the bank of verses.

 

Out of the plopping water 

flops the first draft. Disappointingly 

underdeveloped. 

 

Poets never exaggerate the catch.

A poem is always ‘this’ big,

often smaller, a tiddler

 

in the powerful play,

but still something to contribute

to Whitman’s waters.



Something Wonderful This Way Comes

 

For those sceptics of magic,

those who have forgotten the spells

that sprang from their tongues

they need only go back to Kindergarten.

 

Listen to Kindergarteners stirring

the trouble, boil and bubble

of those three letter sight words,

words you forgot were once devillish.

 

To the Kindergartener, every word

is a new prophecy of knowing.

every sentence is a blasted heath,

every book a bloody dagger.

 

Turning the page is the ambition

that murders minutes, weakens weeks

until, like Macduff, they are redeemed,

victory on their phoneme-creased faces. 

 

A whole book is a kingdom, and 

the crowning glory is knowing the next 

book is ready for you, that you mastered

the great magic that makes castles.



The Moth

 

Another distraction caught clattering

around our bathroom moon bulb.

A panicking blur of browns, beiges, 

whites. Why don’t we see loved ones

reincarnated in your lucky accident?

You keep the secrets of life, woven

into the world around us, merged

with bark and leaves under the all-

seeing sun, hidden from all eyes.

This moth is slated graveyard grey,

wings of grimacing downcast lines.

I cradle it until it calms, then edge it

out the window with a wishing breath

to find out where our loved one went.



 

Fuel in La Pine, OR.

Did you vote Biden?

You like $10 gas?


 


Teenagers on ebikes.

20 MPH. No helmets.

New way to die young.

 

 

Rented blue ebikes 

Scattered around town,

The future is here. 



 

My students aghast

that I ride to school most days.

The American Dream.




Quail hen lump. 

Curbside babies squealing.

The guilty roads.

 

Matthew James Friday is a British born writer and teacher. He has had many poems in US and international journals. His first chapbook ‘The Residents’ is due to be published by Finishing Line Press in 2024. He has published numerous micro-chapbooks with the Origami Poems Project. Other poems are forthcoming in The Oregon English Journal and The Amsterdam Quarterly (NL). Matthew is a Pushcart Prize nominated poet. http://matthewfriday.weebly.com


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