Wednesday, 23 April 2025

Four Poems by Marceline White

 






What's in a Name 

 

In mine, mar to ruin, to spoil, to disfigure 

See also maar, a crater-filled lake, 

formed when, in a volcanic explosion 

lava flowed down a mountain, scarred 

the land, burned a hole into the earth 

which later grew into crystalline beauty. 

Above the lake, celine: the sky.  

Celine, also meaning heaven– we cast 

our eyes up to the blue searching for it  

far above and beyond us, not on this 

flawed, scarred world where Marceline  

means young warrior, or, one dedicated to Mars  

who races fiery horses through this 

disfigured land, or at times, raises a  

sacred shield to protect hard-won peace. 

Green shoots unfurl from razed ground 

marcelling the land, emerald 

waves lap the dusty red shore. 

There’s a line in my name which runs 

through the ruined and wrecked seas   

sews threads to heaven; perhaps  

the way there is 

through fault and folly. 

Not heaven, but nine months by rocket 

from where we are (from here), is Mars 

where, under scarlet sky, iron rivers rock. 

After a storm, unsettled, dust haunts the air 

apparition of longing, red ghost of absence.


 

 

 

I Want to Stop Explaining POTS1  

For Roric  

 

I want my son’s stomach,  

a knotted quark, 

to unwind itself  

 

his feet, 

red-purple shoes, 

to fade to pale pink 

 

his blood to rise  

   as my pulse-rate 

             does each time 

  he dizzies  

 

himself awake. I want  

his Usain-Bolt-heart  

to stop racing  

 

I want to return  

to the days when  

his arms were butterflies 

 

fluttering at the pool, when he  

was Helios beaming at me 

rather than Icarus, melting, falling 

 

 

when he was  

fearless. when he 

had nothing to fear.  

 

 

At nine, I took him to the symphony to hear, Icarus at the Edge of Time. 

In this retelling, the boy flies to a black hole where he carefully skims  

the edges of the circle the way an ice skater rings a pond. This Icarus leaves his 

space ship for an hour, returns a thousand years later. Black hole as funhouse mirror. The symphony written by quantum physicist Brian Green. 

 

 

Today, my son tires 

 

when day breaks,  

when night falls, 

 

all hours in between.  

 

He moves from little bad days  

 

to real bad days   weeks/months counted in pill packs      by his bright fingers  

 

From campus, he texts me interesting facts from his astrophysics class: 

Black holes form from dying stars heavier than the sun 

Black holes do not die, but slowly evaporate over time 

Black holes may contain wormholes, tunnels linking two universes 

(one where he’s healthy, another ours) but that is still a story, Einstein’s theory, not yet fact 

 

Icarus, flew, despite the odds,  

the end. 

 

  

Icarus, an asteroid, circles the sun  

as mine wakes to another clouded day. 

 

 

 

 

My (Mother’s) Wedding 

 

If I told you that she went 12 years without a wedding, 

that she twisted the cheap gold band on her finger  

like a talisman, wishing the lie a truth, that each year 

she fought me over the wishbone stuffed inside our 

Thanksgiving bird, then, when her wish to be   

wife came true, her wedding was no occasion 

for joy: my grandfather ramrod stiff, walking her up 

the aisle like a guard escorting a prisoner to the chair, 

my grandmother, her lips frozen into a thin red line,  

the groom, angrily tugging at the collar of his Sears suit, 

and my mother, drunk and crying at her own reception 

in the clubhouse of our apartment complex on a blustery  

winter's day, then, you might understand why  

for my wedding, she insisted on the rented mansion, the big band,  

two cakes, a white sponge with raspberry buttercream filling  

and an espresso chocolate groom’s cake, as well as a bowl full of red  

rose petals which friends were to rain down upon us, and you might  

not be surprised to hear that she stormed upstairs, her breath a bar 

or possibly all the bars at closing on New Year’s Eve,  

to scream at me because I botched the bouquet toss and despite  

all this, and all that comes later-what I remember most is  

the sky, a movie-set of early summer, the soft scent of  

white clover beneath my feet as I walked through  

the wildflowers to promise my love, and the sweet taste of cake  

on my husband’s lips as we kissed, as we kissed, and we kissed.


  

 

Little Lamb 

 

In the cave of forgotten dreams 

we return, slipping  

into shadow and soft silence 

 

Fall back before time  

when nights were made of 

black smudge and ochre  

 

images racing across stony ground. Once, a tall human 

Did they dream as we do?  

Did they dream of us? 

 

painted palms scarlet, rained  

 cloudburst across white rock,  

wound-red murmuration. 

 

Dreams of blood-coloured berries  

beating hearts hanging on ice glazed branches 

singing their lonely song.  

 

An archaeologist recalls his circus days, 

riding on one wheel, throwing  

things up to catch them 

 

again, again, again. He 

dreams of lions, wakes alone– 

rueful, his tender neck unravaged.  

 

Another. Deeper, womb white and rocky,  

a boy walks with a wolf, 

disappears in the dark.  

 

The boy, my son, the wolf 

may be me:  

protector/predator. 

 

I am pacing and hungry 

want more in my maw, 

more to gnaw over 

 

Give me  

the meat and the marrow 

Let me feast before winter’s sleep. 

 

I turn, watch  

shadows dance 

on stone walls lit by flame.  

 

Startled awake,  

my son balled in the crook of my arm, 

little lamb, his curls spun gold in the fire’s glow.  

 

I could just  

eat him up, I think, as his plump foot 

enters my mouth’s dark chasm.  

 

 

 

 





Marceline White is a Baltimore-based writer and activist whose writing has appeared in The Ekphrastic Reviewtrampset,  Prime Number, The Orchard ReviewThe Indianapolis ReviewAtticus Review, and others. Twice nominated for the Pushcart Prize and Best of the Net, when not writing, Marceline can be found serving her two cats and telling her son to text her when he arrives at the EDM show. Read more at www.marcelinewhitewrites.com. 

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