Nightingale & Sparrow

Category: Poetry

  • Double, Double

    Double, Double

    Steve Deutsch

    My doctor said
    he could find nothing
    wrong.
    The symptoms—
    extremities on fire
    pinprick pain
    in my face
    and chest
    were merely
    occasional
    and not all
    that worrisome.
    He didn’t believe
    the sleepwalking
    was new.

    I was new
    then to teaching.
    High School calculus
    for fifteen gifted students.
    We cruised through
    to double integrals
    and April
    when interest waned
    and even my best students
    seemed lovesick
    and dull.
    I doubled down—extra
    homework, special assignments
    and frequent quizzes.
    and the dullness
    turned to testiness.
    But I was new to this.
    What could I know?

    One May night
    I woke to a full moon
    over the town square.
    My legs were blistered
    to my knees
    and my right eye
    unfocused.
    The wire trash bin
    was burning blue
    and around the edge
    were fifteen effigies
    of me—
    crude clay makings
    with blackened legs
    decorated with straight pins.

    Somewhere
    nearby
    young voices
    were chanting.
    An owl hooted
    and the hair on my head
    stood on end.

    I was gone
    before first light.
    I didn’t pause to pack.

    Steve Deutsch

  • Hologram

    Hologram

    Gaby Bedetti

    Children drop off the tree
    and roll away
    friends spin out of my orbit
    or die

    Yet I am not Ronsard’s Helen,
    a crone bent low in sorrow,
    nor Yeats’ paltry thing,
    tattered coat upon a stick
    –though I apply lipstick
    to make myself more visible

    I flicker, an illusion
    of intersecting light beams,
    a sum of particles
    that levitate out of bed
    and travel through the air
    giving the impression
    of a tenured professor

    A light-filled overlord
    I turn off the news,
    gather for coffee at Wendy’s,
    join the virtual choir
    cast about for synthesis

    all while fading away
    by natural dark
    decay

    Gaby Bedetti

  • Supplication to Flame

    Supplication to Flame

    Nate Maxson

    Sun shadow of a Blakean jaguar passing overhead/ sun didn’t set today/ only light from the stripes of the wildfire
    Here is your prayer made of smoke and dust/ rising shamanic signal, skywide: approach the throne and whisper, like so, inside the old world’s red lungs
    Let this earth disappear/ this ash-land singularity/ burn, big world to the ground

    [Nate Maxson]

  • The Crows of Portland

    The Crows of Portland

    C.M. Lanning

    The crows of Portland awaken prior to anyone else.
    Before light touches buildings and the first cup of coffee is poured,
    they observe the last patrons stumbling home from their bars.
    The morning air is full of wisdom they share with one another,
    though it sounds like mindless cawing to all who hear it.
    Perched above leafless trees lining the city’s streets,
    not a single secret escapes their gaze.
    The territory ceded by moon, unclaimed by sun is their own.
    During day they’ll still be here. At night they won’t sleep a wink.
    For that is their talent which none can explain.
    The black winged watchers know not a mystery
    and see clearly the obscure.
    Not a whisper is spoken they fail to hear.
    Their knowledge transcends history, not a drop they’ll dispense.
    Always cognizant, never unaware, they monitor the city.
    The crows are without limit and cannot be stopped, Portland’s eternal witness.

    [C.M. Lanning]

  • Apocalypse Now

    Apocalypse Now

    Neha Maqsood

    carving up marble floors
    segmenting stone cathedrals; gods
    seeking out civilisation
    earmarking apocalypses, you’re
    alone now; metallic crust stiffen fingernails
    pupils radiating a golden
    tincture; foreheads plucked
    fused emerald pendants.
    woefully, there are no trees
    where I live yet
    I am rooted. Adam & Eve
    atop a throne,
    biding time, glazing over chaos.

    Neha Maqsood

  • Scarecrow

    Scarecrow

    Diandra Holmes

    Nestled between pine tree
    branches, a ribcage picked clean.

    So weathered, it’s wooden.
    Beetles bore into its pores.

    Some enterprising blue jay
    has made its home beneath the sternum.

    Snippets of grass,
    cornstalk, and twine woven together.

    And four beaks gape open,

    the writhing, hungry heart.

    Diandra Holmes

  • Neverland of Sad Feelings

    Neverland of Sad Feelings

    Pranav Yadav

    It’s been a while,
    Since I lost my life again like last night,
    It’s so ironic that I still type
    The words which I never bespoke
    To love I’ve never known.
    Loneliness sets in,
    It’s cold, empty like we’ve all felt
    It’s empty but then why is it heavy?
    When did nothing get it’s weigh
    How did darkness started to feel home
    Showers became longer,
    Days shorter
    And the quiet breaths of sleep
    Rumble in my stomach
    Barks on the street
    Occasionally construction noise
    All became my fellow companion
    In words I brew,
    Doodles I drew,
    With the extra strong coffee I gulped.
    Not long before it turned black,
    Had vodka, the Irish knack.
    I wonder what pain did Irish felt
    That their breakfast held
    This abomination.
    But it was magic indeed,
    My night filled with smoke
    Were lonelier
    But I didn’t sleep.
    I could now sit to contemplate
    Ramble these words as my eyes
    Followed the mosquitoes closely.
    Where do they disappear in the morning?
    And why do they sing
    In our ears,
    When we don’t like them?
    Isn’t it the fate of lovers to sing us to sleep
    To kiss our cheek and leave
    Us with marks
    All over our body.
    While they love somebody
    And we’re nobody
    In this neverland of feelings
    With no escape, just killing
    Of emotions, spur and urge
    To live.

    Pranav Yadav

  • Living Ghosts

    Living Ghosts

    Jim Hanson

    Ghosts engender all of us
    and live in our civilization
    —so read a book, watch a movie, recall a line or speech or historical event, look at a great skyscraper or jet airliner
    —they are here in the light of day from the shadow of the past.

    They were back there studying and experimenting, developing their talent, breaking down old forms and creating new ones, dreaming of the ideal form, celebrating their genius, sparkling with youthful energy, disdaining any limit on themselves, and assuming as do we their life and age to be quintessential. They composed, performed, wrote, painted, acted, designed, engineered, deliberated, legislated—creating civilization, our civilization.

    (And we are here as their careless caretakers, redacting and revising their works, defiling the primary with the secondary, reinterpreting their dictums of truth, beauty and goodness with the hermeneutics of postmodernism, misinterpreting the flame of eternity for the flux of modernity, acting as corrosive as the acids of nature, listening to Glenn Gould play Bach and Al Pacino perform Shakespeare – defiling authenticity, our replicability.)

    Ghosts also engender each of us
    and live in our home
    —stay up late, turn out the lights, drink a whiskey, watch an old movie, see live actors long dead, appear in the dark
    —I watch a late-night movie with Fred Astaire dancing sweetly with Ginger Rogers, gliding across the black/white screen, brightening the drudgery of the thirties. And not alone—yes, my father and mother are here, from a long time past, in this moment of suspended disbelief. We sit on the couch and talk about the good times when dancing the jitterbug, singing the tunes of Broadway, listening to Jack Benny; also surviving the hard times of bankruptcies and strikes during the depression, the dust storms of the great plains, and rations during the war. My mother recalls working nights at a roadside café for 25¢ an hour, which was the price of a movie ticket, and there she met my father a truck driver. My father talks, too, about Model T cars and Clydesdale trucks, about FDR and Eisenhower. I offer cocktails, but the movie ends, and they rise from the couch. No, please stay, we have so much to talk about. But no use, the more I plead and attempt to hold them, the farther they drift away, phantoms fading in the late night air. Past and present tear apart, silently, leaving no trace of what once was.

    Ghosts live in mid of night with me
    when then and now occur as one.
    At dawn of day they go away
    to where I know I too will go.

    [Jim Hanson]

  • Danse Macabre

    Danse Macabre

    Stephen Jackson

    The ticking of the clock—
    death’s own little music box,

    pointed, black-cloaked hands
    inviting you to dance a waltz

    with faith,
    with hope,
    with chance—

    while, in the garden bloom
    flowers of such bright youth.

    Stephen Jackson

  • October

    October

    Donna J. Gelagotis Lee

    Month of color,
    Death disguised.
    The earth’s turn,
    Awkward, for
    One’s eyetooth
    Is candy now
    And sugar is
    Multicolored.

    October is a hair
    Dresser’s nightmare.
    The witch warms up
    To winter, bones her
    Broom to bristle
    Quick, stirs her pot
    Of munchkins so
    That it steams.

    October is a fog
    In your mirror
    With a ghost’s eye.
    Seems October will
    Remind you of decay
    Anyway, though you
    Make fun of it. Put
    A candle in your carved
    Gourd, a spiderweb
    On your doorstep. Who
    Will walk in?

    Who will open
    Her bag of tricks?
    And you will put
    Something in. The kids
    Will place their round
    Faces at your door.
    They will dress like
    Monsters. Their
    Parents will wait
    In the dark just
    In case. Because
    The night is holding
    A pumpkin over their
    Heads. It follows them
    From house to house.

    You’ll see the witch
    On her broom, hear
    The doorbell and
    A knock. Your decoration
    Worked. The color of
    Autumn has dawn
    Crawling at night
    To your door just
    When you thought
    To put out the light.

    Donna J. Gelagotis Lee