It stung me today,
the terrible jellyfish
that lives in my mind.
If it’s Tuesday p.m., it’s Open Link Night at dVerse Poets Pub!
It stung me today,
the terrible jellyfish
that lives in my mind.
If it’s Tuesday p.m., it’s Open Link Night at dVerse Poets Pub!
Yarroway, Yarroway, bear a white blow,
One of the herbs dedicated to the Evil One
yet daubed by Achilles (except on his heel?),
loved by butterflies, hummingbirds, bees,
none of whom need to know if another
loves them back, none of whom need
any secret spells to determine by.
If my love love me, my nose will bleed now.
If my love love me, we are only in the garden,
crushing aromatic leaves in our fingers,
ignorant of any history less happy than this
present, blameless of curses, spells.
Devil’s Nettle. Bad Man’s Plaything.
Bitterish, astringent
yarrow.
Check out Open Link Night at dVerse Poets every Tuesday p.m.!
You can start from a template:
fishing buddy
gal pal
backstabber
dumping ground
There are others, too,
or you can start from scratch,
customize everything—but
that costs extra and you lose
something in verisimilitude:
Can you custom-build your
actual flesh-and-blood friends?
Hardly. Templates might seem
artificial, but most real people
are pre-formed by the time
you meet them, anyway.
Consider this: When you get
a new green dinosaur from
a Mold-A-Rama in some cool
corner of a museum, you are
every bit as pleased with it
as if you designed it yourself.
Your new 3D friend will be
similar: all one color,
with that new toy smell.
Warm and pliable, at first.
I find my voice.
I won’t have this anymore.
You call me junky tree,
scrub tree. You plot
my death. I came
without invitation
because I didn’t
need one. This was
years before you.
This was in
the time of ferns.
Tell me it was not.
Tell me if I’m lying.
Ask your children
to show you their
tongues. Are they not
purple? Secretly, secretly,
they pick up my fruit.
As do squirrels,
as do birds,
and butterflies
sip there, too.
And now I am
not welcome.
And now I hear
many curses
as I make wine
on the sidewalk—
and you, you walk
through it without
even stopping
to drink.
If it’s Tuesday p.m., it’s Open Link Night at dVerse Poets. Check it out!
hard-boiled eggs
Bury the eyes, always,
that they may not witness
this turbulent mystery.
green olives
With pimento pupils,
they stand sentry, to repel
untoward advances.
orange slices
From what grove,
and how came they here?
They must be wondering.
ground beef (?)
Structural putty.
Muscle memory retains
the shape of the pan.
canned peas
From every crevice
springs
a mockery of freshness.
tomato slice
Countersunk
against
indifference.
mint
A jaunty sail,
a hint of life
other than this.
If you’re on Facebook, here’s the photo that inspired this poem. See more from the Kitsch Bitsch here. Yummy! Also, if it’s Tuesday p.m., it’s Open Link Night at dVerse Poets. June 11 marks its 100th weekly session.
You and I went to mid-priced restaurants.
You and I had expensive conversations.
A scent of lemon grove; it was only
industrial air freshener or the bug trap
glowing blue over my shoulder or yours.
Many decorative concealments, filigree.
Many things that could not be exposed,
no matter how long we talked, over what
desserts or off-priced margaritas as big as
our heads, as big as anything else we tried.
Go ahead and write about it,
the milkweed raising its flags,
advancing into the strawberries,
the violets everywhere, placeholders
until you make a new decision, the chives
perpetually about to bloom, the first spring bees
coming to inspect everything, approving, drunk.
Crab apple snow all over the brick, the snowball bush
in blossom—fragrant sweet spicy—the plans, all the
beautiful plans. Yours, and who else’s?
Nature’s? Nature’s plan? There’s the problem:
Everyone writes about flowers, nature, the buzz of it,
this green, nervous madness; all poets write about
spring, new life—except the ones who write about
fall, winter, death: the reaping sickle of the bitter wind,
all that. It is enough that you are now writing about
writing; that in itself is indulgence. Must this also be
about spring, the beauty of the garden? Yes? Then here’s
another plan: Don’t forget to write about the cat shit
you found yesterday where you will soon plant zinnias,
iridescent green flies walking all over it, tasting it with
their odious feet; that, and the garbage that perpetually
blows in under the fence, candy wrappers and broken
bottles. Also, there’s nonstop traffic passing by, just
a few feet away: How much carbon monoxide?
How much lead? Yes, how much lead is now wedged
in the creases of your fingers because you scrabble
in the dirt barehanded, so besotted are you, so
foolish?
Japanese beetles might come, a shiny army,
to eat the wild grapevine; the weeds might
take over once summer is in full swing, swelter
and drought, no more novelty to any of this, only
work and heat. Write about these, too, and never
forget them. Perhaps they can save you from
the sweetness of this unbearable world,
sweet as any cheap, delicious wine.
Check out Open Link Night at dVerse Poets every Tuesday afternoon/evening!
Dubiously with surprise
to no sad Weed
The Dew reheads it at its work—
In purposeful weakness—
The brunette Savior lingers—
The Moon halts moved
To randomly mark another Night
For a disapproving Mortal.
NaPoWriMo, Day 30 prompt: Take an existing poem (mine is this one by Emily Dickinson — though the copy I worked from had her characteristic dashes and capitalization) and write a line-by-line opposite.
Will link at Open Link Night at dVerse Poets.
On a related note: What happens to this blog now that NaPo is NoMo is that I post a poem here each Tuesday (for OLN, which is each Tuesday p.m.). Between Tuesdays, I often post general musings about writing, poetry contests, publishing, editing, and so on.
I hope that a lot of you who have been visiting lately will continue to follow or drop in from time to time! Thank you so much to all who have liked or commented this month. I enjoyed every single day, and I can’t believe it’s already come to an end.
Crocodilo
suave,
svelte—
un momentito,
crocodilo.
Under
la lune de biscuit,
la luna de biscocho,
una taza de noche
con leche,
café au lait
conmigo,
crocodilo,
café au lait,
crocodilo,
olé.
NaPoWriMo, Day 29 prompt: Write a poem that includes at least five words in another language or languages. I knew I had English, French, and Spanish, but then when I did a final check, I realized I had one more language, too — thanks to a misspelling that I’m leaving in because I like it better that way. Can you spot the word and its language?
When I was as green
as any apple tree,
the truth was
apple simple.
Even now,
you never know:
I could still be
verdant somewhere,
if you scratch my skin,
and somewhere,
I think I may have
a few new leaves
yet—
celadon,
peridot,
emerald.
NaPoWriMo, Day 28 prompt: Write about a color.