Nightingale & Sparrow

Category: Poetry

  • Eleftheriou

    Eleftheriou

    Anne Rundle

    American hard A’s soften to awe’s
    as I learn and recite Alpha, Beta, Gamma, Delta, Epsilon
    on an island surrounded by the Aegean. Greek language
    entombed under my tongue every morning.
    I ask the ancient ones to help me in translation.
    At breakfast, I shake the words out.
    Kalimera! Hot Tea, Parakalo. Efkaristo!

    Our Greek teacher, a Cypriot, over-enunciates
    as we parrot our best imitation of her intonation.

    Repeat after me: Yah-soo is hello, and Yiamas is cheers.
    Yah-soo, Yiamas.

    Dark curls behind her ears sway as she writes
    ancient characters alongside phonetics on the small whiteboard.
    We know less than a Greek five-year-old
    which could be why she shows her dimpled smile.

    What’s the word for lesson?
    How do you say beautiful?

    Lesson is Máthima. MATT- ee- mah.
    Beautiful is or-REY-aw, like an Oreo.

    With dinner, we drink white wine, loosening
    our tongues: Lefko Grasee, Parakalo.
    Greek dancing, a grapevine with kicks.

    Everyone joins to move like a Chinese dragon
    in a parade, weaving through the tables and chairs,
    Lady Eleftheriou leads the spinning circles around a pair of olive trees.
    This restaurant has no walls or boundaries, no ceiling,
    only a trellis of grapevines, hanging, waiting to be plucked.
    The bouzouki plays 15-minute songs, speeding up
    to triple time to reveal the best dancers.
    A man shouts Den peirazei, when a lady at his table spills her glass.
    Sweaty, out of breath, and exhausted we depart
    one by one. Kalineichte!

    What does your last name mean? They said it on the Athens news.

    Ah, yes, Eleftheriou Square in Athens is a large gathering area
    for protests. Eleftheriou means freedom. El- Eff- ther- REE- oh.

    Anne Rundle

  • Pop Song Crush

    Pop Song Crush

    Jeffrey H. MacLachlan

    Organ confetti pirouettes
    like it’s prom night ’96. A pair

    of adolescents swerve home
    after assembling at Valentine’s

    Pizza & Deli. One listed hip-hop
    and trick bikes as his interests,

    and she was cut from power
    squad when she dropped crystal

    hooplets. This is a night to be free
    and to allow Finger Lake breeze

    to thumb through magazine haircuts
    with fairy dust and glass. Real love.

    They’re searching for a real love
    among angels turned visible —

    Bailamos, they sing as they muster
    courage to twirl the new kids in class.

    Jeffrey H. MacLachlan

  • Dancing Master

    Dancing Master

    RC deWinter

    I know you dance in the old way
    hardly anyone does anymore –
    smooth and graceful,
    holding your partner close,
    twirling at just the right time.

    I, a child of the fifties,
    vaguely remember the foxtrot,
    the polka and swing your partner do-si-do.

    I might be able to fake the box step
    as violins sob out the wavelets
    of the Blue Danube, but you
    will have to lead, always.

    And how I long for you to do just that,
    extending your hand, lifting me from my chair,
    taking to the floor to teach me civilization,
    as I, head buried in your neck, inhale
    the grace and beauty of a time I never lived.

    You are the echo of a lost world,
    I the shadow trailing in your wake,
    stumbling my way backwards
    in three-quarter time to meet you
    at the place of your beginning.

    RC deWinter

  • A little love poem on a little love poem

    A little love poem on a little love poem

    — for Olivia

    N.D. Erwin

    brilliant

    Brilliant soul de la sol
    Mi corazón late
    My heart latte
    My heart beats
    To think about you as food, my heart is beating.

    Set the table with those red peppers and a smoke
    beside a little love poem
    My heart is beating,
    My heart is singing again.
    Let’s eat.

    N.D. Erwin

  • Bittersweet Symphony

    Bittersweet Symphony

    Megha Sood

    “Each day we draft a new movement in our symphony of life; what melody will you compose today?”
    — Ken Poirot

    Life is a bittersweet symphony
    played from the start to end
    weaving the moments in between
    that you are roped in
    weaved in the mesh:
    of the joy and the sad moments,
    you change into a million faces
    till you are turned into dust and fade in

    Life is a bittersweet symphony
    where the verses always don’t carry a meaning
    and the chords always
    don’t turn into a melody
    strumming through the
    pain and happiness
    as you play along with life
    you pick and choose your chord carefully
    but who knows whether the choice is poor or wise

    Life is a bittersweet symphony
    and you just playing your part
    in the whole orchestra
    the percussion;
    those bittersweet moments
    /to which your old heart sways/
    and it plays a riff on your soul
    a long-lasting impression which stays.

    Megha Sood

  • A Change Of Key

    A Change Of Key

    Lynn White

    We were in perfect harmony;
    matching our moves
    perfectly in tune
    singing like angels
    straight out of Paradise.

    But all it took was a change of key
    for us to fall out of step.
    Just a few notes at first –
    soft as snowflakes
    and no damage done.
    The angels caught them before they fell.

    Then one crashed.

    We floundered.

    A discord is always a shock,
    more so when it follows a melody.

    Soon they came pouring down –
    cascades of discords
    sharp as hailstones.

    And now we are falling,
    deserted by the angels,
    out of step
    off key
    tuneless
    finished
    separated
    by discord;
    our past melodies gone.

    Lynn White

  • To A Singer, From Her Songs

    To A Singer, From Her Songs

    Clare O’Brien

    You have driven us for years.
    Counting our notes like sheep, urging us over storm-weathered hills.

    Our cries are nothing to you.
    Some you catch, stretching them beyond your rhythm, into the dark.

    Some of us you call, softly at first;
    Some you flay alive, the sound reverberating as you feed.

    Sated, you are tender then;
    caressing our bones, draping our wet skins over the chords to dry.

    Clare O’Brien

  • Ode to Klickitat Cabin

    Ode to Klickitat Cabin

    — for Henry & Betsy

    Joann Renee Boswell

    noise pollution scant,
    echo drift sound-surround
    click-a-click-a-click-a-tat
    keyboard grounded,
    conjoined trees skyrocket
    cascade kerfuffle overhead
    crunch-a-crack-a-racket
    pine cones crash collide
    Earth-bound like these words,
    whirling brain-mirrors,
    virile temptresses yurt-lure,
    shimmer south, cicada
    plants irreverent rhythms,
    Vivaldi applauds trip
    into posterity, pines persist,
    drop seeds, plunging deeper,
    thud soft as August sweet
    grass, trembling virginal
    wedding night, clouds
    besotted butter-dish-glide,
    simmer soil tryst
    sun-ripened blackberry lips,
    butterfly super powers
    elevate, Pine-Elevator, lift
    transcendent mortality, fly
    final kiss, dip, encircle eternal
    indebted atmosphere swoon.

    globe me whole.

    Joann Renee Boswell

  • Jogging to Reich

    Jogging to Reich

    Stuart Rawlinson

    Early this morning
    as traffic scraped the roads
    and traffic helicopters
    clogged the quiet sky,
    I ran with Steve Reich.

    Music For 18 Musicians.
    Imperial to metric and back again;
    Section I caught my breath
    early, head shaking
    mechanically in time.

    In Section II, I skipped
    every fifth step,
    I thought, but the time
    signatures jolted my
    staccato, flat feet.

    I got as far as Section IIIA
    when my knees collided,
    ankles together.
    At least my wrists hit
    the ground in perfect synchrony.

    Stuart Rawlinson

  • Sylvia and the Lorelei

    Sylvia and the Lorelei

    Kevin Densley

    Sylvia walks a narrow path
    through a forest of tall trees,
    drawn by voices calling her
    from the fathomless depths
    of the freezing river,
    the voices of maidens
    with long, flowing,
    marble-heavy hair.
    Pinned to the sky
    is a Gothic moon,
    which Sylvia barely notices
    as, entranced by the voices,
    she advances;
    a voluptuous virgin chorus
    is calling her,
    calling her,
    calling to her
    as they rise through the twilit deep.
    She’s a slave to their siren song
    as they sing
    that this is a night to drown in.

    Kevin Densley