December 16, 2024

Chase Twichell

SOON

When I say the word walk, or even spell it,
the dogs leap up with flailing tails.
Since they don’t understand the concept
of “later” or “soon,” I say it only
when I’m almost out the door.
 
Soon there will be no words for my slow
meanders in the woods in search of chanterelles,
while they run miles of scent trails,
nostrils flared, circling back to keep me in their ken.
No whistle even deaf old Nan can hear.
Just ash, scant handful of the world’s one body.
Soon—still in the future, for now.
 

from Rattle #36, Winter 2011
Tribute to Buddhist Poets

__________

Chase Twichell: “I have a very low tolerance for decoration in poems. And some people love it; they want to read pages and pages of how the everglades look in a storm and so on and so forth. But I increasingly am of the school or the belief that we don’t have very much time and poems should do their work fast and get out.” (web)

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December 15, 2024

Stuart Watson

BIG HEAD

They carried the big head
through the streets, detached
from its neck and its body
but spilling all its evil
everywhere they carried it,
puddles for the people
to splash their happy feet, its jaw
flopping open as they adjusted
the angle of the big head
and its weight, the tongue
lolling out (what tongues do)
and then retracting between
teeth stained brown by too much
smoking or lack of scrubbing
with Ajax like the bottom
of the toilet bowl, people
growing tired of putting up
with the big head one more
second, and falling away
and new people joining
the people working so hard
to keep the big head up above
their own heads, to keep it
where other people could see
what a truly big head it was
and how it was no longer
attached to heart and lungs
and any of the many cruelties
that lived inside what it was.
 

from Poets Respond

__________

Stuart Watson: “This poem was inspired by the image of joyous citizens of Damascus carrying the severed sculptural head of what I assume was once part of a statue of Bashar al-Assad. Nothing in all the coverage captured for me the essence of the story.”

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December 14, 2024

Jenneva Scholz

THE FAMINE OF LOVE

After his mother forbids him to marry Psyche, Cupid puts down his bow and all living things on earth stop mating.
First the fruit flies fell around the fruit bowl and the air was still,
the figs and apples ripened and then were gone. The end of bees
means the end of plums and roses, the end of rye and amaranth.
Soon, no mice: we noticed their silence after the years of traps
and scratching in the ceilings, no droppings in the flour, no footprints
in the butter. I found an owl dead in a glade. Takes less
time than you might think for horse feed to look like food
if there is no food. There are our orchards, there are
our fields, empty of hum and buzzing, empty of peaches
and wheat. The male swan left the lake, just flew away,
and his mate made widening circles over town, 
honking her grief until we shot her down. 
The goats stripped every bush of leaves but bore no kids,
no cats birthed kittens, no kits for the foxes, no goslings,
no grubs, no nymphs, no infants. My son now prefers the empty 
woods to the dancing girls—it’s true that they’ve grown bony, 
and though I go to watch them they don’t stir me. I’m hungry. 
At the town council we address the issue: how long can we survive
on leaves and boiled bark? Two months, if we eat our seed corn
and slaughter our horses. One month if we save some corn, 
save some horses to try to plant in the spring. My wife
once rode that horse fifty miles just to see me
for an afternoon. Once she rode over a river in winter, 
the ice spackled with rabbit tracks
and filled with unlucky fish, just to marry me. 
Once we made love in the garden, under the bean trellis; 
in our bed we made a child. I make a list 
of her good qualities. I try to find my love for her
in things, wearing the clothes she gave me, reading 
notations she left in my books. Re-reading her letters
I think, I’m so hungry I could let you starve.
It’s hard to know yourself anymore
when you can think a thing like that. 
Some things might outlast this. Tortoises, maybe.
But look at them: each grooved to fit smoothly with the other, 
built to heave those heavy bodies together and lock in. 
See how his belly is arched
to cradle her shell. 
I keep thinking: I don’t need her.
I keep opening the cupboard to find nothing.
 

from Rattle #42, Winter 2013

__________

Jenneva Scholz: “I teach ceramics, which helps me feel connected to the earth, and write poetry, which helps me feel connected to the sky.”

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December 13, 2024

Lew Watts

ON A TEAR

Lost: one mind. Last seen in childhood. Answers to nobody. Limited vocabulary. If found, please rip out its tongue and return with the last word uttered.
 

 

from Rattle #85, Fall 2024

__________

Lew Watts: “In my school in Wales, a poem was read aloud each morning before lessons. And I remember clearly being mesmerized by Dylan Thomas’s ‘Fern Hill’ at seven years of age. Nowadays, though the rhythms of ‘Fern Hill’ have stayed with me, I’ve become increasingly drawn to starker prose combined with haiku. I write haibun for its ability to release memories. Sometimes of joy. More often, those buried in the past.”

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December 12, 2024

Craig van Rooyen

READING EXODUS

after Marie Howe

The thing about the Old Testament is that
at least metaphorically
 
God has balls. If Pharaoh can’t make up his mind fast,
he’s looking at a world of hurt:
 
“You don’t think it’s time to let my people go?
Well maybe it’s time for me
 
to open up a whole can of frogs and boils, asshole.”
That’s Yahweh for you.
 
A guy who wears the pants in the family.
Sometimes I fantasize
 
about saying to the woman I married: “Let my
people go,
 
or frogs will multiply in your eight-hundred-dollar
Italian motorcycle boots.”
 
By “my people,” I mean primarily me. But if
history is any lesson,
 
that would only lead to years in the wilderness.
Not to mention
 
an unnecessary sacrifice of children. As a minor prophet once said:
“Wherever you are,
 
there you are”—whether that’s turning circles
in the desert for forty years,
 
or paying a mortgage in the suburbs and making
small talk on date night.
 
Remember the story of the Golden Calf? When all the people
took off their wedding rings,
 
thinking they would get a second chance at love?
They danced and threw their lives
 
into the fire. Look at the poor bastards there around the flames,
faces glowing, while Yahweh gathers himself
 
on the mountain top. They feel the desert on their backs,
they feel the sky is ready to collapse.

Look at them. They’re dancing.
 

from Rattle #37, Summer 2012

__________

Craig van Rooyen: “My father is a preacher and I grew up strong on words and Southern cooking. I think the old stories in scripture still can give shape to our longings if we let the words live in our imaginations. The ‘I’ in ‘Reading Exodus’ is not autobiographical. I live with my wife of fifteen years, happily married, on the Central Californian coast—maybe not the land of milk and honey, but pretty close.”

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December 11, 2024

Wendy Videlock

THE WAY IT GOES

Driving by
our old home
on Mayfair,
 
the cairn was gone
the tire swing
still floating there.
 

from Rattle #85, Fall 2024

__________

Wendy Videlock: “It’s always seemed to me that there is really nowhere to turn but the arts. Poetry in particular bypasses the dominant culture’s insistence on fragmentation and polarization, offering us instead a sense of integration and wholeness.” (web)

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December 10, 2024

Kelly Bennett

ALL THE FIXINGS

My grandmother saved the butts.
The butt of every bread loaf
went into the freezer for stuffing.
One stale loaf makes 8-10 servings.
Chicken, duck and turkey butts
were saved for stock,
onion and celery butts, too.
Roasted, they result in richer flavor.
 
When she passed, my grandmother’s freezer
was stuffed with hoarfrosted butts
awaiting the oft-promised return
of prodigal family.
Use a slurry of potato water and flour
to thicken gravies and soup.
 
The first time I left my children’s father,
I stuffed my trusty tank-green Cadillac
with kids and toys and their clothes.
Kids go through clothes faster
than grass grows.
Fueled by fury, drove Route 66,
the subject, if not the butt of song, drove
one thousand six hundred, seventy three,
point nine kickless miles—not looking
pretty—Tulsa, Oklahoma to Amarillo, Gallup,
New Mexico, San Bernardino.
Stopping only long enough to gas up
and drive-through.
 
Burger Kings are spaced a meal apart.
Kid’s Meal prizes change at the state line.
Drove Freedom Boulevard to Oregon Street,
straight into the long, fuchsia-lined driveway.
The ballerina flowers waved, so did she.
My grandmother saved my butt, too.
 

from Prompt Poem of the Month
November 2024

__________

Prompt: Write an ode to the first thing you remember being thankful for.

Note from the series editor, Katie Dozier: “There’s immense beauty in plain-spoken poems that skim off the all-too-common fat of highfalutin language from the gravy. No butts about it, this poem functions as a micro-memoir with an unlikely binding agent. In the end, the title sets us up for a George Bilgere-style revelation, where the title’s meaning evolves throughout the course of the poem. How can we help but go back for a second helping?”

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