THE WATER SAYS
Of all the yellow-haired youths coming
to kneel where the lap of my lip slurps
the length of my banks. And of all
the bronzined boys ogling the twinkling
trinkets the sun in its heat hangs on
the peaks of my ripples you alone
have eyes to prize the bottomless
love I harbour. Let my water lilies
twine their stems around you.
My smouldering koi light your way.
You shall have my turtle as a rock
to stay your feet. My crane to pole
your soul through the dark
of the deep. How do I know
you’re true? The instant
your eyes wander you lose
them. You find the zero
of a fish mouth in their place.
A ruff of sallow fins supplants
your ears. And a hairy clump
of roots anchors you to
the suck of my muck forever.
I’M NOT EVEN GOING TO WASTE MY BREATH
mourning our Laundromat.
Or resenting the townhouse
whose gourmet kitchen gleams
where the washers broke down daily
and Mr. Katz used to bellow
dryer number sree at us neighbours
sunning ourselves in folding chairs
on his sidewalk
Or grieving the Heights Cinema where seniors
who could stomach its rancid-butter fumes
watched first-run movies for $8.00.
Or hating the boutique development
that has supplanted it
Or lamenting our library,
with its public computers,
its bounteous tax forms
and its research librarian who once tracked down
the Crossland Bank president’s address
so I could stop his minions dunning me
for money I didn’t owe them—
gone from the corner where 40 stories
of condos have stolen our sky from the east.
Why should I bother missing our vista
to the west where the Horrible Hotel
eclipses the Manhattan skyline
so its residents can bask in sea breezes
three stories above the height-limit once imposed
by a Zoning Board that lost its case
in a court too friendly to developers
when the cops have just discovered
that yet another pile of rags on the platform
of the Jay Street-MetroTech Station
shrouds the remains of yet another
stinky unshaven soul
a trickle of blood issuing from his mouth?
OBLIVION
If my heart had not turned
to nothing
in the void
that sometimes engulfs me,
I would never have left
a cookie-tin cover on top
of the organ console.
If my right hand had not
turned to nothing
in the heartless void
that obscured the cookie-tin cover,
when I reached, following my Prelude,
to stow my Orgelbüchlein
on top of the organ console,
it would not have catapulted
the cookie-tin cover
against the back of the altos’ pew
to clatter onto the floor
several bounces
across the chancel
into the silence
of the funeral
for the hundred-seven-year-old
woman everyone adored.
EATING DISORDER
Instead of disgorging
your moral outrage
as a baritone roar
of disparaging epithets
instead of slavering to devour
rug fringes
extension cords
my slothful toes
instead of ruminating on how
you might use your
chyme of dust bunnies
cobwebs and hair tangles
to wield as evidence
against me
take it all with you into the closet
with the shoes
and the broom
then go ahead and growl
at my stash of flotsam
take your time digesting
the schadenfreude you have
wolfed down over a life
I never could live without
making a mess
but don’t even think of hoovering
your brown bag bellyache
over anything
you might presume
to call clutter.
ELLEN WRIGHT is author of the poetry collection, Family Portrait with Oilwell (2023, Kelsay Books) and the chapbook, In Transit (2007, Main Street Rag). She has recent work in Paterson Literary Review, Naugatuck River Review, Common Ground Review and The Fourth River, among others. She makes her home in Brooklyn and her living as a musician.
Ellen Wright’s work is always a surprise—and a pleasure—to read. She is an astute observer and I love her sense of humor!
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