February 28th, 2009
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Chrys Tobey
THE LOSS OF LEMONS
A woman had lemons in her head. It’s not that she wanted to make lemonade. She simply had lemons in her head. She could feel them in her head the same way she could feel a star dying. The woman insisted on getting an MRI. She wanted to see X-rays of the lemons. She imagined it would be like looking at the moon suspended in the night sky. The technician gave her Bocelli to listen to. The woman smiled as the conveyer belt slid her into the machine like luggage in an airport.
The woman had no idea what Bocelli was singing. Estoy muriendo amor porque te extraño. She imagined the words were something about lemons. Te extraño, te extraño. Perhaps he had lost lemons. The conveyer belt shook back and forth, jiggled her body, as though she were on a motorboat. Te extraño, te extraño. Then the woman saw it: the ferry motoring towards Capri. She looked closer and saw her husband. The woman looked closer still and saw her husband smiling, his one missing tooth, on a tiny bus winding its way up the roads of Capri. And then she smelled the lemons. She saw the lemon orchards, lemon trees stretching for miles, wrapping around Capri like the gold ring that once wrapped around her left finger.
–from Rattle 29, Summer 2008
February 27th, 2009
J.R. Solonche
THE LOVER OF STONE
The lover of stone must be old,
for there is no such thing as a young stone.The lover of stone must be strong,
for he must be able to climb up the mountainand the summit of the mountain
to find the beginning of stone.And he must be able to climb down
the mountain again to the valleyand to the bottom of the valley
to find the ending of stone.The lover of stone must be a genius at unrequited love.
He must be a connoisseur of the cold.The lover of stone must be a saint,
for stone will no more return his lovethan does God return that of the saint.
The lover of stone must be jealous.He must be jealous of the water that loves stone to smooth.
And he must be jealous of the wind that loves stone to death.
–from Rattle 29, Summer 2008
February 26th, 2009
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Timothy David Shea
LOOKING AT A PHOTOGRAPH FROMWAR TIME
I WILL BE THE NEXT HIT BY FIRE
There is the one with his boot sole propped on a frame of sandbags, and the
one holding a baseball glove,
lips puckered in conversation. There is the lucky one on one knee who still
smiles like a building of light,
and the one, palms to hips, whose father crouched in this photograph thirty
years ago and whose son will soon.
But where the eye is drawn, and where the picture will tell its story this time,
is to the silent one
moored in the doorway, and above his head, the faint trace of road running
to Long Binh. Aphasic and alone,
the young MP, whose eyes are two wet stars dripping in the barracks
shadow, wears monochrome fatigues
darkened with sweat, shirt open at the chest. Were it two years earlier you
would find him shooting jump shots
below the raftered silence of a New York City gymnasium, but it is 1969, and
he cannot think of basketball.
Only of the rains that will come, how they will puddle and slow everything—
the furrows in the terraced hills, the flames
that step, like rivers, down their sides—and how he is part now, of it all: he
is part of the rain and the smoke;
part of the story the Vietnamese man beside him will never tell—the one
about trading whispers from both sides
for cash to save his children. How, one by one, he swam them half a mile to
the rescue boats, under fire.
How the men on the boat dropped the motherless infant, twice, back into
the water, and how one hungry woman,
then the next, breastfed him on the three-week crossing to San Francisco. But
this father, whose crisp, white shirt sleeves
are rolled to his elbows, and whose hair, today, is wet and combed in a style
of dignity, has about him
the calm air of understanding. He understands that the young MP he has
befriended, who plans to marry
a girl called Eileen, will drive tonight and will be the first one hit by fire from
a cemetery to the right of the road,
and he understands an informant’s fate—two brothers and one uncle
dropped from helicopters—
so he finds it necessary to be photographed one last time, to appear
memorable and worthy.
Each morning, on my way to work, I see a young girl of about thirteen in her
front yard. She listens
to her headphones and glides, first toward my car, then away from it, on a
rope swing suspended from a tall oak tree.
At first I thought this boring. Then, that she must keep a quiet census of the
neighbourhood.
These days, when I turn left around the exhausted corn and pass the girl, I
see the Vietnamese man
dangling from the helicopter braces before his twine is cut, and I say out
loud, I would have done the same thing.
Then I think of the photographer, a Texan named Steve who swore this
blunt image of six strangers
he would never again see, into time, who was not injured in the accident but
was shot and killed in the crossfire,
and of the young MP who works, now, with vending machine contracts, who
someday soon,
will read this poem, fold it, as always, in half, and claim he does not
understand.
–from Rattle #29, Summer 2008
February 25th, 2009
Review by Ted Gilley
ALSO IN ARCADIA
by Andrew Mulvania
Backwaters Press
3502 North 52nd St.
Omaha, NE 68104-3506
ISBN 978-0-9816936-3-7
2008, 67 pp., $16.00
http://thebackwaterspress.com/
Andrew Mulvania’s present-day Arcadia lies in the southern part of the United States, just as the Arcadia of legend lay, similarly isolated, in the Peloponnesus of Greece. Rural Missouri, while less remote, nevertheless qualifies as the kind of place out of which genuine, if obscure, legends might arise. In Mulvania’s hands, the life of small towns and a family farm, conducted in a somewhat somber pageant of narratives balanced by near-perfect lyric elegies, carves a chapter into the black earth of southern literature with the sureness—and occasional unsteadiness—of a horse-drawn plow.
The poems of how-to and make-do, of fishing by lamplight, of picking blackberries, exploring creaky barns, of county fairs and country characters in church basements, are rendered at length in unrelenting, determined detail. One’s pleasure in reading about the childrens’ Halloween celebration (“All Hallows Eve, Solid Rock Baptist Church”) is diminished by the lack of pleasure the poet seems to feel in describing it; the poem has the timbre, pacing, and studied affect of a dutifully delivered sermon. In poems of similar tone, such as “Osage County Fair” and “Putting in the Garden,” Mulvania takes such pains in description, you wish he’d move along a little more smartly, only to discover in the end that description was the point. Is that ever enough?
February 24th, 2009
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Rainer Maria Rilke
SONNETS TO ORPHEUS: PART 2 #13
Anticipate each goodbye, as if it were
already behind you like a winter that’s passed.
Because underneath these winters is such an interminable
winter, that only by hibernating can your heart survive.Always be dead in Eurydice—climb out the way a singer climbs,
in a voice rich with loss and celebration of that pure connection.
And here, below with the ghosts, in the empire of bitter endings,
be the clinking glass that, even as it shatters, rings.Be—and at the same time—realize your inescapable non-existence
is the unquenchable root of your deepest resonance.
And just this once, be all you were meant to become:To those already used and discarded, and to the numb, mute
stockyard of bloated nature—to that unspeakable sum—
count yourself gladly in and nullify the count.—tr. by Art Beck
–from Rattle 29, Summer 2008
