Thursday, December 24, 2015

Alan Catlin- Three Poems


Don't Drink the Water

No subject was safe
with him, especially
the weather.
I watched as he worked
the aisle of the bus,
moving from seat to seat,
diagonally along the rows
attempting to engage
the unwary in conversation,
"Lousy weather we're
having, isn't it?
I'll bet you don't know
why either, it's them
weather satellites
the government's been
putting up in the sky.
Messes up the atmosphere,
that's really what
they're for, who do you
think they're called
weather satellites?
I'll bet you never
thought of that before
did you?  And that's not
the half of it.
The government's been
putting stuff in our
drinking water,
supposed to be for your
teeth but it makes
people crazy."
"That would explain
what happened to you,"
I said, "Wouldn't it?
I'll bet the moral
of the story is:
Don't Drink the Water."
"Who are you anyway?"
he asked me.
"A government agent
in disguise." I said.
He turned pure white,
pulled the stop rope,
muttering, "I think
I'll walk from now on."
I haven't seen him since.



The Grand Marshall of  Nowhere

Settling on the rickety, out of balance
bar stool, he said, “There’s a warrant
out for my arrest. On another planet.”
Most people making a statement
like that would be totally disregarded
under the assumption what he said
was just some obscure shock value,
in-the-moment thing or maybe
wishful thinking as in, “Hey, someone
out there, somewhere, wants me.”
Even if somewhere was some indefinable,
unrecognizable place in the cosmos,
and those doing the wanting were so
alien, we couldn’t begin to envision
what they were like and what they wanted
with him. Though we were welcome,
of course, to make a few wild guesses.
Maybe it was the way he looked,
that bold attempt to achieve instant recognition
that had largely succeeded. His look included
several outstanding features, not the least of
which were: a mostly shaved head,
now patched with stubble after inconsistent
attempts at grooming, remaining, exclamation
point waxed locks, stretched down the back
of his skull in a line, each dyed a garish neon-like:
red, blue, green, yellow. His mascara highlighted
eyes with tattooed tear drops at the edge leaking
red down  his pocked marked cheeks toward
leather vest and pants. Gothic scrolled lettering on
each forearm in black ink said : ZAK SABBATH.
His alternately gold capped and tobacco brown
stained teeth, had never been brushed in this
lifetime ,and an unhealthy cast to his unfocused
eyes, suggested the unnatural yellow tinted
iris implants hadn’t taken and his sight
was shaky at best, so when he spoke
it was to a moving shadow somewhere
behind the bar, “I expect they’ll be here
to pick me up soon.  Might as we have
something to drink while I wait.”
“Like a Brother from Another Planet.”
“Just like that.”
“Stay away from the jukebox, it’s been
serviced.”
“Oh, really?  What did they do to it?”
“God only knows.”
He looked over toward the wall recess
where the infernal machine sat, emitting
its timeless, neon glow.  His staring became
so fixed, so intent, you might think they
were communicating.
And maybe they were.
In their way.



Life Cycles

They are the worm people,
who sleep on funeral parlor castoffs,
barely worn sheets, a hundred hot rinses
could not remove the scent of death from,
an odor they wore like second skins,
peeling off as if once upon a time,
they’d spent too much time in the sun
and now all memory of it must be shed,
revealing an unnatural pallor of time spent
in airless caves, stagnant barroom holes,
inhaling each other’s stale breath,
rust flaking from unwashed-for-decades
hair, no longer dandruff, but something
scaled, bed bug sores or skin ulcerations,
partially healed, leaking fetid fluids they
share like communicable diseases,
drinking the welfare checks of long-dead
relatives they claim as alive, forging
signatures, census forms, keeping the bodies
on ice in deep freezer chests until the power
fails and a new life cycle begins.


John Pursch- Two Poems


John Pursch lives in Tucson, Arizona. Twice nominated for Best of the Net, his work has appeared in many literary journals. A collection of his poetry, Intunesia, is available at http://www.lulu.com/spotlight/whiteskybooks. Check out his experimental lit-rap video at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l33aUs7obVc. He’s @johnpursch on Twitter and john.pursch on Facebook.



The Ever-Falling Bomb

“Here I am,” she thought in green dissolving panes of spacetime burbles, flooding spontaneity within a pair of psychedelic booties, wiggling toes of epsilon against their soothing soles. Turned her head, surveyed the room, a kitchen in a Quonset hut, a woman cooking human food, another baby wailing on and on within a virtual dreamscape of cellular thunder, impressing sensory assumptions on newly prescient walls.

Her obviated shins are somewhat out of view beneath translucent thighs and now slip decades far ahead behind temporal wind afloat in activated time machine to Your Nuke deli newsstand pews in worship of the ever-falling bomb, creating every savory hour of ladled shop talk tugboat captain crew aloft in peopled transport saving yet another million borrowed souls from petrodollar insufficiency to fresh ideal endless bifurcation into treed domain dementia.

“There ya go, Lola. Isn’t that wonderful? Yes, say yes, dear,” soaring now in warm caress of mother’s full embrace, lighting up all circuits, reverts temporal slip to ground, zeroing to actuality obtained.



Non-Entity

Kabuki gazes into offshore fog of hazelnut emphatic youth, contemplating life on ordinary planets, praying for reprieve from prosecution.

“What have I to fear, anyhow? In the futile analysis, planned pubescent mutation devolves to feline feeding frenzies well below the surfeit of piebald tire irons, thrivers, and trundling incendiary devotees of screw-top inner psyches, inertial boxcar pilots, and flawed phlegmatic Romeos in crawling chrome of corridor corrosion, stifling any meal hurrahs for subtle wisdom innuendo, pushed calmly into oncoming traffic.”

He expects no answer, being a thoroughly atemporal pan-identical non-entity. 


Tuesday, December 22, 2015

David J. Thompson- A Photo


                                                           "Eyeless In Yellow"



Ayaz Daryl Nielsen- Two Poems


seeking the feral
and unpredictable
four-leafed
bodhisattvas


Time-spawned caravans of martyrs,
those who died for others, arriving                                        
through forgotten graveyard portals 
Clear, pungent story-tellers of the sacred 
within our peeled and cored images.
 
 

Friday, December 18, 2015

Stefanie Bennett- A Poem


Stefanie Bennett has published several books of poetry & has poems appear in
Shot Glass Journal, The Provo Canyon Review, Snow Monkey, Dead Snakes,
Ink, Sweat & Tears, Pyrokinection, Galway Review, The Camel Saloon & others.
Of mixed ancestry [Italian/Irish/Paugussett-Shawnee] she was born in Queens-
land, Australia. Stefanie’s latest poetry book “The Vanishing” was published by
Walleah Press [2015] & is available from Walleah, Amazon & Fishpond...
 
 
 
AFTER THE FALL (RE-ISSUE) 2015    
 
And I will love you because
The world never did.
And I will cloak you in syllables
To keep inquiring eyes at bay.
And I will cover our footprints
So daringly
That no-one will ask
                     Ever again
For a sequel to love and loveliness.
 
And you will love me because
The world never did.
Because the gentleness of fortitude
Is a hard act to follow.
And we will scrape up
Our worldly ruins
To begin building this hectare
                           Of the heart
Cupped between the planet’s breast.
 
Know that the quiet
Doctrines
Will be
As fragile
As your face.
 
And the melody – clear
As a single
Birdcall
Across the idioms
Of free space.
 
In a land where
No wall stands,
We will meet and set
Our lives to the order
Of simple things:
 
We will love because
The world never did...
And give back what was
Never taken
When the time comes.
 
 
[following the painting by Charles
Billich. Poem 1st published in
Overland Quarterly Magazine]
 
 

Monday, December 14, 2015

Linda M. Crate- A Poem


bondage 
 
maybe you're my cure
maybe you're just my ailment
crawl into my veins
i want to taste your chaos
free me of the bondage of myself
let me unravel
hide my secrets in your bones
i don't know if i need you,
but i want you
let us kiss as the ocean kisses the shore;
we can be just as mercurial
for i am moody as the moon and maybe one 
day we'll decide to join as one
forevermore
kiss beneath an audience of stars and sun
dance with the wolves and fly with
the birds. 



Dustin Pickering- A Poem


Whirling Dervishes

We dance like children
in poverty, happy and ne’er longing for more.

The force is continued in the small
of your hand:
life is a distant star,
a dream.

Nonchalantly, I wait for time
to pass,
but it is not soon enough.
Blind fools dance.

I cannot change
these lives of fantasy.
The cold river warms
until it changes hue.

Face the secret room
with no walls,
and yellowing wallpaper.
No actual existence.
No transcendence.


 

Matthew D. Laing- A Poem


Matthew D. Laing is fairly new to writing fiction and poetry for publication, but has been dabbling in the craft since his time at university. He has been published so far at Bewildering Stories, The Literary Yard, and Three Drops from a Cauldron (including one print volume). Matthew writes from Canada, the land of igloos and polar bears. 


Lost at Sea

We aimlessly drift
in the wide, never-ending sea;
into a vast nothingness
of sapphire and royal blue
of hesitant breezes
of salt water and salty air.

The wooden hull is decomposing,
decaying; almost malleable pieces
of timber and steel,
of rotted cloth and vermin
of empty stores.

We dream of the shoreline;
great trees and rich soil,
of a fresh start
of water free from poison
of lands barren and wild
of gold. 


Richard Schnap- A Poem


LEGACY

I smell the smoke
From the undead factories
A poisonous pungency
Woven in the wind

And I hear the cries
Of the ghosts that slaved there
For the vampires of industry
That drank their souls dry

And I feel the groans
From the earth beneath them
Where they writhe in their coffins
Unable to sleep

And I see the night
In the eyes of their children
A sky black as ashes
That’s absent of stars

Noel Negele- A Poem



After-Humans.

This is what some scientists
are sure we will become
after a couple of years of progress.

The mind will be free of flesh
inside the mechanical skull
of a robotic body.

After the earth has become
an infertile surface,
a man made giant tumor
floating in space

we will be human minded robots
spearing the space for knowledge,
infinite and immortal
boundless by sexual tensions,
the need of water
or love.

At the top of our game
when it comes to arranging
our biochemicals
we will not feel hatred
nor the need to harm someone.
Our serotonin levels
will always be balanced.
We will not feel lonely
even after being centuries alone
drifting in space
with no limit of fear;
learning and naming 
galaxies and constellations;
discovering new life forms
and methods of math.

The scientists say we will
finally reach a conclusion
that is total.

Fortunately
none of us will be here
to witness
all that madness 
taking place.
 

Monday, December 7, 2015

Paul Tristram- A Sketch


                                                           "Magic Mushrooms"

Paul Tristram is a Welsh writer who has poems, short stories, sketches and photography
published in many publications around the world, he yearns to tattoo porcelain bridesmaids
instead of digging empty graves for innocence at midnight; this too may pass, yet.
 

Buy his book ‘Poetry From The Nearest Barstool’ at http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/1326241036
And a split poetry book ‘The Raven And The Vagabond Heart’ with Bethany W Pope
at http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/1326415204
 

You can also read his poems and stories here! http://paultristram.blogspot.co.uk/


Thursday, December 3, 2015

Stefanie Bennett- A Poem


Stefanie Bennett has published several books of poetry & has poems appearing
in Illya’s Honey, The Fib Journal, Pyrokinection, Ink, Sweat & Tears, The Provo
Canyon Review, Eskimo Pie, Poetry Pacific & others. Of mixed ancestry [Irish/
Italian/Paugussett-Shawnee] she was born in Qld., Australia. Stefanie’s latest
poetry book “The Vanishing” [2015] was published by Walleah Press & is
available from Walleah Press, Amazon & Fishpond Books.
 
 
 
 
HOME GROWN        
 
The Dust Devil Family
Spins
       Like a top –,
Kicks
       Like a mule –,
And won’t
      Ever forsake
      The past
      For last.
 
 

Tuesday, December 1, 2015

Kyle Hemmings- Three Poems


Kyle Hemmings has work published in Pure Slush, Your Impossible Voice, Abstract Jam and elsewhere. He loves manga art, pre-punk garage bands of the 60s and The Cramps.
 
 
In Her Sleep, She Became a Toy

While the night exhaled clusters of swallowtails,
 the little girl's plastic bear, one with eyes
that glowed a radioactive yellow in the dark,
awoke her and led her by the hand.
 Under the empty playground of sky,
they ate the scraps of this afternoon's picnic,
 or sucked the ragged rinds of honeydew.
They became giddy at the thought
 of owning the left-over world,
scavengers of candy fish and lost shoes.
When morning slipped in hues of insidious blush,
 the grown-ups remained sleeping.
 Or they dreamed of eating
 until their bellies went bust
and they would never be too bloated to fly.
The bear and the little girl prepared a breakfast
for two and sat across from each other, eating in silence.
They knew that the only thing that would rise now was the sun.

 
The Orchard Saint

It will cost you your life, if you embrace thorns & cabbage patch roots. For you, they are two reflections on either side of a dewdrop. Your mother prayed for twenty years that you would not get wet. Dust motes appear between the lines of the psalms she sang. But now the hang-dog king of make-believe boundaries & fantastic derivatives believes that you have a green thumb& a golden tongue. Rumor has it that he caught syphilis from the maiden of wishing wells. At the insidious edges of dawn, dogs yowl the insanity of hunger. The barbarians leave footprints in the night.

 
Saint Abha, the Amphibious Queen

She married three disposable kings of Siam & left each one dreaming of flying fish. Incarcerated for infertility, she tricked the guards with a flash of mermaid eyes. Fifty miles from shore, she invented her own island. There, she fed bits of herself to the sharks, nurtured Beluga whales. She mistook a wasp for a wisp, a bird for a telegram. Carrier pigeons carried to her bits of mainland. At night, she slept next to open coconuts. She heard the drip of voices--someone from afar still loved her, perhaps a prince-in-waiting with shoes imported from Lombardy. She wished he had wings & could share a span of warmth. She wished she could shunt a cold lonely wind. Legend had it that when war came to her tiny island, she turned into a sunken treasure ship or to the glistening dots upon saltwater. Some said her name stuck like taffy to their teeth. But not before leaving the enemy with a mouthful of scorched earth.
 
 

Sunday, November 29, 2015

Stefanie Bennett- Three Poems


Stefanie Bennett has published several books of poetry & has poems appearing in
Dead Snakes, The Fib Journal, Shot Glass Journal, Pyrokinection, Ink, Sweat &
Tears, The Provo Canyon Review, Eskimo Pie, Poetic Diversity, The plum Tree
Tavern etc. Of mixed ancestry [Irish/Italian/Paugussett-Shawnee] she was born
in Qld., Australia. Stefanie has been nominated for The Pushcart & her latest
poetry book “The Vanishing” [2015] was published by Walleah Press & is
available from Walleah Press, Amazon & Fishpond.
 
 
 
ANYTHING GOES: for Macaque’s Menagerie   
 
Moving house:
The snails
Are out
In droves –.
 
 
 
PLAINS’ DRIFTER   
 
... Upon my
Grasshopper
Friendly
Work-table
It’s 3
Hops
To breakfast
And back.
 
 
 
PERCHANCE    
 
The tortoise waits
For the post
To shift
Of its own
Volition...
 
 

Noel Negele- A Poem


About My Good Friend John

It happened usually
at dawn, while the sun started to come up
and we all wished the night lasted for two days-
when we came down from
the drugs hard,
our feet feeling like truck tires
instead of feathers
that we talked about the really serious stuff-
Syria, Hamas, immigration problems
world hunger, pharmaceutical companies
extremists, conspiracies, enviromental downslides
and there was always this bold guy telling us
about economical wars going on
and that we were really close to something awful-
this in truth was only a way of coping with sadness
talking about worse things
though we were, and still are, poorly educated
and the majority of us with criminal records.
But anyway, this is about my good friend John
leaning over the plate- a plastic straw jammed into his right nostril
just after I've told him to it call it a day,
that we had done enough self destructing
to last us for two life times,
my good friend John falling on the ground
flapping like a fish out of water,
foam coming out of his mouth
his eyes nowhere to be seen-
death rocking him hard before
taking him from us,
my good friend John
the more good looking one
the kinder one
dying in front of our eyes
bringing a flash in my mind
of him laughing at fourteen years of age
all rose-cheeked and careless,
remaining still, suddenly, at last
like a puppet whose strings were released
as if someone up there got bored
or disgusted more than the usual,
my good friend John
who is no longer
like so many good people out there
leaving us behind, remorseful and horrified
for all the chances of kindness we missed,
for all the love we came short.
 
 

John Pursch- A Poem


John Pursch lives in Tucson, Arizona. Twice nominated for Best of the Net, his work has appeared in many literary journals. A collection of his poetry, Intunesia, is available at http://www.lulu.com/spotlight/whiteskybooks. Check out his experimental lit-rap video at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l33aUs7obVc. He’s @johnpursch on Twitter and john.pursch on Facebook.




Clockwork Dogs

It turned out to be dogs coughing, all this time, these eons. They were patiently, steadfastly, marking the minutes as a sort of public service, keeping time for humankind. A best friend, not so easily replaced by wristwatch after all! How fortunate that bark was far more accurate than bite. The dilatory canine phlegm fixation, day by hidden hour, by translucent sunrise silhouette, by carefully shepherded human trundle into pewter fasting, hobbled by irregular rhythmic groans and mottled cream in cobbled cacophonous dialects of interspecies interface, relying on denormalized unitary lurches of penny-ante lorries, waxing wagon wheels, turpentine evaporating in midday sun. Meanwhile, way out west, random bipeds were slinging lead at a thousand feet per second, staggering from dry deserted ghastly wooden towns to rivers full of foolish pyrite wishing wells, pressing fat of hand to iron butt of cigarette polonium, speckling the years with flecks of splintered wood, bleaching bones, quiet horses, and the vast uncounted dispossessed of canyon, plain, and forest; shrouded wanderers who calmly went the way of coughing clockwork dogs.


Michael Ceraolo- Two Poems



At the Ball Park (2)

Eventually,
the parks' public-address systems
were done away with,
                                leaving
the fans at the park with three choices
of how to receive game information
(and the constant music,
                                     though
some of the choices allowed one
to reduce or eliminate the music,
                                                 and
there were those few who chose
to eliminate the information):
                                       
                                           one,
to read it off the many smaller video boards
that had replaced the single giant board
(ever-declining literacy levels
made this the most esoteric choice);
 
                                                       two,
audio/video apps for one's mobile device(s)
(the most popular choice);

                                        and three,
audio/video streams implanted
directly into the brain once a person
had reached the age of majority
and could legally choose to do so,
                                                  though
of course there were those who didn't wait
and had it done illegally
(this was the least popular at first
as the bugs in the new technology
were worked out,
                          but it eventually grew
to be solidly the second-most popular choice)




At the Ball Park (3)

Another innovation
was the excess section
This was not for standing-room fans
once the park had reached
its seating capacity,
as it had been in the old days,
                                             but
rather a special section
for those dedicated to excess,
whether food or drink or real or
simulated game situations
There would be vomitoria,
overnight accommodations for those
no longer able to drive or teleport,
                                                 with
those who chose this section
knowing they would be subject
to strict scrutiny of their sobriety
if they wanted to leave
(it has never been noted
how much wisdom was found
by those who traveled this road)
 
 

Michael Keshigian- Three Poems


Michael Keshigian’s tenth poetry collection, Beyond was released May, 2015 by Black Poppy.  He has been widely published in numerous national and international journals most recently including Poesy,The Chiron Review, California Quarterly, and has appeared as feature writer in over a dozen publications with 5 Pushcart Prize and 2 Best Of The Net nominations. (michaelkeshigian.com)



SALUTE
 
On a quiet night
I saw a dying star
streak to its demise
behind a moonlit hill
bordering the horizon.
 
A wolf immediately began to howl
a lugubrious taps
and the universe stopped twinkling
for a moment of darkness
in honor of the fallen comrade.
 
 

ESTRANGED
 
Midnight and he walked
the narrow trail away from the lake,
becoming aware of night’s blackness,
isolation and mystery
surrounded him upon the winding path
as the breeze followed, its breath chilling,
sending a shudder to his core.
He gazed up, implored the stars for comfort,
but was astonished at their minuteness
within the immensity of ceiling.
Life is more meaningful
when he ponders beneath the leaves
of the great oak in his yard,
his children enhancing gaiety
instead of the smallness
that now invades his being,
this infinitesimal, singular particle
meandering in the dark,
lost in the complexity of an explanation.
There have been times,
under the same set of stars,
when his eyes widened
and the folds of his brain absorbed
those blinking messages from the universe
that transformed him into the nature
of all things, belonging
to an existence much larger than himself,
a child of the cosmos, his mind
a tiny compression of space dust
that saw beyond the veil of all things
without a need for explanation.
But indeed, on this night,
the invisible hand has dropped the curtain.
He is afraid to float, perhaps drown
in this sea of black without notice.
He searches for the moon or a guiding light
for passage, perhaps the sun will arrive early
to show him the way.


STAR BRIGHT
 
After all these years,
through all these nights, 
dank and dim,
moonlit and starry,
it happened,
a new star was born,
another bright light appeared
and he witnessed its inception,
a potion, a power, ignited
in the midnight sky.
He glanced upward
through the window of his room
to see the distant candle flare
as it illuminated his surroundings,
fantasies dancing upon his pillow,
around his head,
warm breaths of possibility
enraptured his bed.
Even this late,
his heart buried deep,
exploded and the evening’s black mesh
blazed into joy. 
 
 

Saturday, November 28, 2015

Alan Catlin- A Poem


      The Vampire

 "There was this guy that
 hung out in school who always
 dressed up like Bela Lugosi.
 You know: complete vampire deluxe
 attire including white face and
 cape.  Rumor had it, he slept
 in a coffin and went to class
 always dressed in black.
 Someone told me, they saw him
 drink a glass of blood but I
 thought that was a bit extreme
 even for Ithaca.  He was weird
 though, no doubting that.
 No matter how late you staggered
 back toward the dorm you might
 sort of see him tinkering with
 the hearse, of course, he had
 a hearse with wall to wall carpeting
 and quadraphonic sound.
 God only knows where he got it all
 because it was like new.
 I guess his people had money,
 old money, if you know what I mean.
 Let me tell you that was one campus
 that didn't look forward to Halloween."


Chad Repko- A Poem


Short BIO: Chad Repko is a poet from Pottstown PA.


The Evolution of Self

it's true what they say
it's not the years,
it's the mileage
to grow
and gain such knowledge
of self
the struggle between
the soul and the mind
with the body being the battlefield
that gets weighted in time

they say you look old
but i still like to fuck in the rain
some things change
while others stay the same
Surviving
through capitalism
the zombie filled cannibalism
that sick one-eyed Willie green
pump caffeine into the machine
see your time flushed down the latrine
and school pride
scrapbook
of friends and family that have died
east side
where the rival towns collide
I don't need that damn divide
for as I am grown
that hatred need not apply

across time I have traveled
through books, through timelines
by the skin of my teeth
I have battled
through constants and variables
through love, through love lost
through space and energy
back to love's synergy
but never blinking off course
because there has always been a source
the eyes, the stars, the galaxies
upon galaxies
that do not end
but yet a planet
that rests on our tiny shoulders
how beautiful our short life grows
before the dirt begin to enclose
love
grab your friend and fucking love them
we have already seen it all
it's been hard-linked to the brain-stem
with our little time here
we can stop the train
that's quickly headed for the cliff
so that our children
won't have to see this abyss
but luckily
your rules do not apply to me

and you ask
"what do you see when you look in the mirror?"
I see mileage

and my future


Friday, November 27, 2015

Stefanie Bennett- Three Poems



Stefanie Bennett has published several books of poetry & has poems appearing in
Dead Snakes, The Provo Canyon Review, The Mind[less] Muse, Shot Glass Journal,
Ink, Sweat & Tears, The Lake, Eskimo Pie, The Plum Tree Tavern etc. Of mixed
ancestry [Italian/Irish/Paugussett-Shawnee] she was born in Qld., Australia in 1945.
Nominated for The Pushcart, her latest poetry book “The Vanishing” is published
by Walleah Press [2015] & is available from Walleah Press, Amazon & Fishpond.
 
 
 
APPEASEMENT     
 
... Told to “get off
My high horse”
I tried:
 
The horse flew
And so
Did I –.
 
 
 
TALK THE WALK     
 
The tree that
You felled
Was mine!
Please
Put it
Back...
 
 
 
SPACE ODYSSEY 2    
 
Surrounded by
Grey days
You lose
 
When love’s
Lost
In the wash.
 
 

Richard Schnap- Three Poems


ORPHANS

I remember their eyes
Windows that revealed
Cold empty rooms
Lit by dwindling candles

And I remember their lips
Muttering the words
Of childlike songs
Set to funereal music

And I remember their hands
Clutching the remains
Of scavenged cigarettes
And cheap bags of dope

But I forget their names
For they’d invent new ones
Aliases to deceive
The harvester of souls



AS THE CANDLE DWINDLED

In the evenings I’d sit
On the balcony and watch
Trains slowly passing
On the nearby tracks

While inside my wife
Shed her heavenly costume
Revealing the serpent
That lurked deep inside

And as her rage grew
Like a gathering tempest
The men on the boxcars
Would wave and smile

As I waved back and wished
I could somehow join them
To be carried away from
The fangs of my night



ANTARCTICA

I remember the crimson candles
Set in their shining brass sconces
The dark and brooding landscapes
Shot through with a lukewarm light
The shelves of books of wisdom
Penned by the world’s great authors
Forbidden to ever be opened
Like tombs that were sealed shut

And I remember the windows
Covered with layers of curtains
To impede any rays of sunlight
From finding their way within
For this was the house of shadow
Reflecting the mind of its master
A man who built an empire
As dark as his endless night

Tuesday, November 10, 2015

John Pursch- A Poem


Hyphenated Dreams

The map of Watchingstoned, T.V. was imprinted in her head decades ago, as part of a general lobotic neural restructuring, preparatory to the final invasion of most of this quadrant of the galaxy. With trillions of brains entrained on a countably infinite stream of hyphenated dreams, escape was limited to strictly stowaway comportment, behavioral nuance confabulation, easily detected by the overseer routines. Omnipresence had become de rigueur, state of the artiste, swelling before the central directorate’s dusty bureau of watch fob patina and purple montage casualties of sworn honesty, slowly penned into franked openness, country spacemen daubed with just a tad of traditional broomstick welt, cardboard cutout personalities gone sour in the wind, sockets deftly stroking the saliva off youthful digits, flinging prospective recon agents carefully to windswept aisles in landing pattern disarray; frazzled forelocks singing of ashplant Wednesdays, swollen begonias, and torment tarnation trapezoids tripping on idiosyncratic lassitude.

“All in a dazed shirker’s sunlit path,” Lola mused to sweeping swoon of bifurcating bundled data bleed, frost congealing into lost memories of the Old West, of cottonwoods and hickory pipes in fragrant sage, stagecoach rodeo assemblage fonts of memorized acculturated dustpan towns, saloons in jumpy finger twitch to ball-peen clamor’s noon surprise, peritonitis steeping in sundown stew. She shook the cobwebbed images of aging misty cowlick swirls, revealing new galactic arms in fully granulated precision, looming huge in sudden sod approach necessitating wave collapse, the slam of shoulder straps against her clavicles (how many had she snapped in early breathless simulator rides as just a girl, if only she could swap retain rescind the rain of endless soporific days again in tunneled time mache) absorbing shock to drain in rivulets of wicking perspiration into fetal nonchalance beneath the huddled millions.



John Pursch lives in Tucson, Arizona. Twice nominated for Best of the Net, his work has appeared in many literary journals. A collection of his poetry, Intunesia, is available at http://www.lulu.com/spotlight/whiteskybooks. Check out his experimental lit-rap video at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l33aUs7obVc. He’s @johnpursch on Twitter and john.pursch on Facebook.


Alan Catlin- Three Poems


Death on the Installment Plan

“I have learned that Jesus loves me
because the TV tells me so.”
      Daniel Jones, “After forty-six days on the Psycho Ward”

The script he was a character in
had him tricked out like some
vagabond mountebank without
a license to sell, all his wares lost
in the apocalyptic ruins of the place
he was stumbling out of like Steadman’s
Macbeth carrying a locked suitcase
full of heads leaking blood on a ruined,
rutted road, ace archer’s arrows instead
of a necktie, shafts bent where they
hit his chest, or like a refugee from
a burning wood, Bierce characters
from The Wilderness trying to escape
the conflagration and finding an original
Twilight Zone episode of the Holocaust,
a Dresden bombing like Slaughterhouse 5,
one that never made it from a cutting room
floor, a young Robert Redford as Death
with a medicine bag making house calls
in the tenements, ghettos of a vanishing
world, handing out vouchers for his
treatment, down payments for a layaway,
pay as you go installment plan.



The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse

The headline of The Weekly World News
proclaimed: 4 Horsemen of the Apocalypse
Photographed in Arizona just days ago!
And all I could think of was: Where else?
The badly out of focus picture of the boys
accompanying the headline suggested some
bad dudes, pissed off riders of the purple
sage hell bent for a tour of duty exacting
rage, retribution and revenge.
At first, the picture suggested nothing
more exciting than every other fraternity
party I had attended, in another life
as a college student, but looking closer,
the one riding with the mace held high
over his plumed head reminded me of body
language peculiar to a certain kind of
Neanderthal who majored in weight lifting
at the local university.  In fact, the whole
crew could have been the front line of any
college football team and hadn't I just
waited on them, collectively and alone?
               Wasn't I rude, as well, recently, even? 
And wasn't it here, with the lights low,
the clock with its frozen hands stalled between                          
early morning hours, that I had raised my voice
to ask for last call, and these same men
had emerged from the shadows, the names
of the living and the dead escaping from
their lips?



The Dead Man Walks His Dog

He should look older
but he doesn't,
he's been dead too long.
His skin should be wrinkled
but it isn't,
his face is as smooth as a silk sheet.
He should be emaciated
but he's not
Let's face it, his body odor is unbearable.
He is, well
something of a dead issue
even now as he walks his favorite dead dog
down main street
holding the leash near soiled fire hydrants
watching the traffic with a stiff, vacant                                       
stare.

All the neighbors comment:
"What's he doing now?”
“Walking his dog?”
“He should know better
and keep to his own kind."
That old dead fool
walking his favorite dead dog
this one last time.