is not free

  except perhaps

               in the warm womb

                            newly hatched

                                         into otherness

  but even then

               tethered

                            by that blood-red thread

                                         to history.

  Everything tries

               to hold us

                            though we emerge

                                         complete

  cut adrift

               most ourselves

                            asleep or alone

                                         in perfect stillness

  as if perched on the shore

               of a pond at dusk

                            to find one’s self

                                         submerged

  then afloat

               finally

                            aloft.

  J. Lee Strickland

  The Music of the Spheres

  Her disappointment makes them strangers.

  In her voice he can sense the abyss

  his lame attempt at humor cannot bridge.

  Conciliating words spawn newer hardness in her jaw.

  Her green eyes find another place to stare.

  She knows him all too well,

  as he knows her.

  Galileo to her Bruno he recants

  while she insists on burning at the stake.

  She’s all inscribed in stone to him, the tale

  as clear today as when the chisel struck.

  Elisions of eroding years are glossed.

  Time-softened planes fail of detection.

  Recalcitrant remembering recarves

  each faded line, each miniscule imperfection.

  Inside the stove, the fire rails

  against the glass (it would be free).

  Outside, frigid air beats on the walls

  (it would come in).

  None would touch the theme of freedom now.

  The one locked in, the other out,

  their wheeling flings new mud

  from ancient ruts.

  High Tide

  I found her at the water’s edge

  kneeling in a patch of gravel.

  Her hair had taken on the shape of sleep

  and would not let it go.

  The Tigris and Euphrates of her arms

  joined at her hands,

  which held a pile of smooth, clean stones.

  Tears streamed down her cheeks.

  “They’re so beautiful,” she said.

  How To Know The Grasses

  Mother knew the grasses.

  As I crawled about she’d say to me,

  “Don’t put that in your mouth,

  Sweet thing.”

  Saving me from certain death.

  I knew the grass

  against my butt

  beneath a spruce

  in darkness with

  a girl named Fern

  whose husky breath

  smelled sweetly

  of cheap whiskey.

  Now grass seeds shed their chaff

  and fill the cheeks

  of tiny mice

  who know the grass

  that fills their nest

  will be their sweet salvation

  or,

  them swept up by hawk or owl,

  the seed in spring

  will sprout a riotous clump

  of sweet lush blades,

  a monument to missing mice.

  Practice

  I’m practicing to be

  a sentimental old man.

  Already there is practically nothing

  that will not bring me to the verge of tears.

  I’m practicing with too

  much drink,

  not to steam with anger,

  but to simmer in a maudlin stew

  of foggy reminiscence.

  I’m practicing to love

  my old, drunk, maudlin self,

  and not, hating myself,

  to be a hater of everything else,

  jealous of all that will still be

  when I am gone.

  Anna’s Plague

  Tiny bugs come to drink at his eyes while he sleeps.

  One or two stop to graze on the salt paths that lead

  From his eye, down his cheek, to the cleft of his ear

  Before making their way to the well of his tears.

  His deep, blinding sorrow, to them, is a fountain,

  A treasure of rich, subtle flavors and scents.

  They drink after crossing broad wastelands of linen

  Unmindful of anguish and tormented dreams.

  Sorrow-filled dreams evanesce with the dawn

  Though he still feels her hands on his chest when he wakes,

  His breathing made hard by that fading dream-touch

  And a vaguely sensed movement around his closed eyes.

  In the dim light of day’s edge he flees to the wood

  Where crepuscular songs weave a dirge-like lament.

  Such a threnody strung on the darkness within

  Is, without, reinforced by the dank, clinging cold.

  Spider webs wave like flags in the mouldering straws,

  Festooned with the moisture of night’s fading damp.

  Tattered leaves, like rags, limply flap in the breeze.

  One, releasing its grip, sinks to ground.

  In the bark of gray trees tiny lenticels wink,

  Each a vessica pisces which hints at once-sacred

  Geometries prized by the ancients, now lost,

  Or the bright eyes of elves in a happier tale.

  In his mind swarm ineffable thoughts of the past,

  Crowding the images caught by his eye.

  Elves become monsters, leaves become blades

  Whirling sharp on brown branches like gilt-handled swords.

  His legs fold beneath him. He sinks with the leaves.

  At the edge of a whispering stream he succumbs

  To despair-laden dreams in a sleep of despair,

  While bugs vainly search for the eyes that they love.

  Erin Dorso

  March in Manarola

  Water presses and slips

  green silk over stone,

  a mother’s hand over hair,

  tangling loose strings of foam, floating

  away,

  the broken

  cat’s cradle, the rope

  and the rock and the sea,

  the sea,

  the sky and the rock and the

  red boats lined up,

  waiting

  On the Drive Back to Andersonville

  Snowdrifts rush across Lakeview Drive.

  Naked tree trunks pull white coats on their backs

  heaving polar fur bit by bit

  until they rear up, ancient monsters

  showing their dark bellies.

  Branches, bald and bone,

  each limb capped with pearl talon.

  Translucent snakes shine off the ends, slicing

  wind as we scream by them at 65.

  I shiver against the window on the way back out

  to the stout, less dignified part of the city

  just after New Year’s midnight.

  From across the console, my husband sighs:

&
nbsp; Isn’t the snow lovely?

  In the Kitchen

  Chopping cabbage

  the way I taught myself

  from eating nabe so many times at the izakaya

  around the corner.

  No technique—

  just hacking at squares of leaf

  the best I know how.

  We’re Italian

  and I’ve watched my mother cut the peppers

  wide and firm for cacciatore

  lean strings in the salad.

  Daikon is probably the same

  and I julien an in-between, indecisively sized amount

  of about a handful too many

  and toss the extra white strips

  in my clean, white bin.

  My neat kitchen hides the cook

  I keep shamed in the cupboard.

  I poke and prod at the ordered implements,

  order my boyfriend around,

  act the woman of the house

  while crumbs build up in the dark corners

  a real woman would know about

  and the nabe leaks bright kimuchi

  into cracks in the straw floor.

  Fig Keeper

  In the evening, I watch the fig garden

  below my window.

  The air stills.

  I wait, listless,

  for stretched leather skins to split open

  and expose what’s been ripening

  inside.

  Grow a person,

  I imagine,

  who will speak my tongue,

  sweet and pitted and

  present.

  Holly Lyn Walrath

  Behind the Glass

  Reproduction, as you put it, is a biological superlative.

  Red wine seeped up to our eyeballs

  and spilled out on my cheeks

  and splashed onto the loud city lights.

  Behind our words stood a glass wall

  shored up with ego, youth, mud, and sand.

  (The ocean breeze tries to tear it up with its teeth

  but in summer like a stalwart old sailor

  shipwrecked after his last voyage,

  his head rimmed with hoarfrost,

  clinging to the salt soaked rocks.)

  We live in a world of unfulfilled fairytales.

  You were promised I would be dainty

  with a size three foot (to fit the glass slipper)

  a bell dangling in my skirts,

  an apron bow like a present topper

  and flowers on my knees

  (red and blushing violently).

  I was promised you would be tall,

  white honored, piney-handed (handy)

  golden curled (sweat soaked tendriled)

  wearing a coat with three buttons

  ruffled feathers beneath,

  a popinjay—with a sugar-dusted tongue

  and after I tasted you we would fly

  into the sun.

  Yes,

  promises we made

  behind the glass.

  Housewife

  I am peeling the crisp brown suits

  off of a pair of onions, reproving

  for the clock is digging in

  between the ribs and marinade,

  it hates the night time sour.

  I am broken over the boiling vinegar

  and sweet-faced green cucumbers,

  knobbed and vulgar, peeled away

  to meet their maker.

  The house—four rooms with bows tied

  end to end to counterfeit the confidence of it

  concealed behind draperies

  that hemorrhage orange daybreak

  onto end tables, side tables, console tables.

  Pouring out the one beam

  like hot lemon meringue filling

  in the blinds, I see it as a slanted scowl,

  sad thing, keeping out the

  bright, keeping me in, custodian.

  She Learns How to Disappear

  She memorizes the little spaces she could hide in—

  the white place between letters on the page,

  the dashboard—a blushing radio throne,

  the corner of the yard where crows suckle,

  the cherry streetlight which creates the rain,

  the white blue sky with its open space

  where she could be a splinter in the expanse,

  fold up like an origami swan,

  tuck her face under her wing, blasphemed.

  This one thing is clear, she knows

  one more day is purgatory.

  Two Young Wives

  We two sat

  on the swing

  on the porch

  in the house

  by Range lake.

  We talked about

  the future, which

  seemed to end in may.

  There—in may—an end.

  A bridge between our old lives,

  where we were pillars

  striving to be wood, strong,

  to hold up.

  Where we were young,

  before thirty rose up

  and devoured us,

  showing its face

  at first in secret places

  blue starburst veins,

  dimpled smile lines.

  Cupping hot cups

  of blueberry coffee

  we watched yellow oak

  and brown pine

  and red maple

  leaves falling.

  They never seemed

  to reach the ground,

  drifting out over the lake

  whose surface was pinched

  as if by some invisible touch.

  And you remarked,

  “I see now how a seed

  could be spread across the ocean.”

  Aerie

  Our bones hollow fingertips feather

  pinions tinge with gold.

  We hide in silver linings quills

  line down cotton scrapbook

  nests sinews mold the quiet mess

  of a body of light—the light of a body.

  We soar into flare—burn brighter

  burn a hole with a lighter

  and view us in it.

  The walls built of sheaves of words

  the words cleaved from books

  the books penned by a sister’s hand

  the hand tiny and sweet serif finite

  sand poured over dead, dry ink.

  We remnants of light like sunbeam

  hoops petals pressed into walls

  like men’s mouths who pick

  up our light pop it in lick

  greasy fingers brush our snow

  small and precious off their

  charcoal suits.

  Jeff Lewis

  Charles Ives, a Connecticut Yankee

  Kazoo chorus

  with flutes, fiddle & flageolets

  piccolos, ocarinas & fifes;

                                                        or: “I heard something else—

  there are many roads, you know

  besides the Wabash.”

  The Unanswered Question in a clear Connecticut sky,

  a triple hammered to right,

  Columbia the Gem of Mutual Life.

                                    Read in two voice—

                                    or a battle of the bands,

  Giants vs. Cubs                                   roughly

  August, 1907                                       & in a half-spoken way

  Polo Grounds                                      played as

  The Perennial Questions                   indistinctly as possible

  of Existence,                         
               or gradually excited,

                                             marginalia

                                             erasures

                                             scratches,

  all but impossible to decipher The Camp Town Races

  in Central Park in the Dark.

  Tone roads taken and not taken

  are to represent the silence of the druids in Concord.

                                    Read in two voices

                                    or tap dance in black face,

  Mike jaunts                                   Watchman, tell us of the night

  out to CF.                                       What the signs of promise are:

  Johnny at bat                                Traveler, o’er yon Mt.’s height

  hits over Mike’s head                   See that Glory-beaming star!

  oboe on the mound

  ball strike ball ball                        Watchman, aught of joy or hope?

  strike                                               Traveler, yes: it brings the day.

  the classic 3 & 2 rhythmic            Promised day of Israel

  situation                                          Dost thou see its beauteous ray?

  Music not evolved but mutated

  in a sudden paroxysm of Fourth of July!

  All Hail the Power!

  All Hail the Power!

                                             Ives, must you hog all the keys?

                                             Why it’s just like a town meeting—

                                             every man for himself!

  Little Richie Wagner,

  Pussy Debussy—a Vermont December would do you in,

  Mama’s boy Mozart,

  Chopin the transvestite—

                                  Jigs gallops reels

                                  & for every man his own symphony

                                  & the space to compose it in

                                  for every man his own Unanswered Questions