light cathedral towers straining west gardens where trees wear scarves and people plant themselves deep
putting out roots and leaves that
fall come fall Streets matrix at corners buses troll daring history
in the metro below rue Monge an old man in tattered sweater
birdwalks
toward me to say monsieur votre écharpe est sur le sol
then bends to retrieve it for
me we resist all history here all
light for fear it has more to say than we and feels it more
and will far past when these words wash away toward
Argenteuil
we can’t get enough of your river as if finer life were flowing here
and we tourist-lemmings head for it day
and night looking for some truth awash
near Pont Neuf since 1607 when men sharpened quills dreaming
under scudding clouds that beauty was only here and
art.
beauty is here and art and forgotten hands that strained to be a part of it at the tip of ile de la Cite randy Henri IV established
a pubic bone of land where he dallied long
and named a narrow cobbled triangle opposite the clitoris of Paris oh, le mot just we walk there now thirsty for meaning and a glass of red Bordeaux.
Wednesday, 17 September 2014
Sunday, 7 September 2014
Soul Patch by Subhankar Das
I was at a poetry reading.
My name was announced
and I got up and moved towards the stage.
Then all of a sudden
This short man hair thinning
groped up on stage and started reading.
For a few seconds me and the guy who was conducting
did not know what to do.
Then of course he was stopped
in the middle of his poem
and was asked who he was?
He said he was me.
My god a con selfie I thought.
Still he was allowed to finish his poem
before I took over
and thankfully also collected the cheque
which I almost missed.
Today I get a long distance phone call
congratulating me for a poem
in a commercial magazine
which I never wrote.
Now how am I to prove to my readers
that this is not the big man with long hairs
with a soul patch to go with.
Everyone appreciates the patch
but nobody looks for the soul
as if it did not exist.
My name was announced
and I got up and moved towards the stage.
Then all of a sudden
This short man hair thinning
groped up on stage and started reading.
For a few seconds me and the guy who was conducting
did not know what to do.
Then of course he was stopped
in the middle of his poem
and was asked who he was?
He said he was me.
My god a con selfie I thought.
Still he was allowed to finish his poem
before I took over
and thankfully also collected the cheque
which I almost missed.
Today I get a long distance phone call
congratulating me for a poem
in a commercial magazine
which I never wrote.
Now how am I to prove to my readers
that this is not the big man with long hairs
with a soul patch to go with.
Everyone appreciates the patch
but nobody looks for the soul
as if it did not exist.
Thursday, 4 September 2014
The Scorpion Priest by Steve F. Klepetar
dies and is reborn in a city
we once knew. All his heads
have grown back, his terrible
blue eyes. Scribes assemble
in the dark; torches are lit; shadows
tease the temple walls. All night
bats whirl around the ziggurat,
people sing of heat and sand and rain.
Steve Klepetar’s work has received several nominations for the Pushcart Prize and Best of the Net. Three collections appeared in 2013: Speaking to the Field Mice (Sweatshoppe Publications), Blue Season (with Joseph Lisowski, mgv2>publishing), and My Son Writes a Report on the Warsaw Ghetto (Flutter Press). An e-chapbook, Return of the Bride of Frankenstein, has just been published by Kind of a Hurricane Press.
we once knew. All his heads
have grown back, his terrible
blue eyes. Scribes assemble
in the dark; torches are lit; shadows
tease the temple walls. All night
bats whirl around the ziggurat,
people sing of heat and sand and rain.
Steve Klepetar’s work has received several nominations for the Pushcart Prize and Best of the Net. Three collections appeared in 2013: Speaking to the Field Mice (Sweatshoppe Publications), Blue Season (with Joseph Lisowski, mgv2>publishing), and My Son Writes a Report on the Warsaw Ghetto (Flutter Press). An e-chapbook, Return of the Bride of Frankenstein, has just been published by Kind of a Hurricane Press.
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