Monday, January 18, 2016
Three Poems by Ken L. Jones
If You Find Yourself Anywhere Near Real
The luminous sparkle of what endless hour
When the red diamond stars became a silent flute
With all the strength and endurance of smoke on the water
That was borne of the whip cream institute and
Now while I call forth the tatters of your kingdom by name
I find that I will still remain beckoned by all of this
That is empty and will soon be forever blotted away
Like a Spiritualist without Oxygen
The gate of morning opened to a garden full of light
Where my youth spoke in birdlike greetings
To the fruits and flowers there
Back when the highest wisdom was the sun
As it was seen on that tangle of a river
Still oh so fondly remembered
In the train wreck of this my final winter
And yet I still long to gorge myself
On the absinthe of the lingerie
Once worn by specters of the warmest colors
Born and bred to beauty
Who have no hung up their wings
Leaving me alone in these years like Oz
While she kept working on her spiced rum time machine
That can never carry her back to anything
And in her hot yellow fervor was released the reaper
As I awoke an elderly old gentleman much too soon
And though her intent was that she was poised to leave me
She left behind instead this beautiful tune
The White Rabbit has Gypsy Secrets
Burnt sienna late summer dances through Crayola lilies
That are as ajar as van Gogh ever was
The nectar of the morning breeze is a mobile scented cocoon
Like some Egyptian mummy gleaming like a firstborn sunburst in bloom
Lightly into the wings that enshroud her long and raven hair
That will always be daylight savings by that shriveled butterfly of a sea
Now that summer melts me down and recasts me into the creaking body
That lately is my jail as I am haunted by visions
Of when the scent of alchemy dissipated dreams have become my only bedfellows
As I watch on my bedroom screen for the two thousandth time
Little Ricky Ricardo's birthday party which has aged like the finest of wines
For the past thirty-five years Ken L. Jones has been a professionally published author who has done everything from writing Donald Duck Comic books to creating things for Freddy Krueger to say in some of his movies. In the last six years he has concentrated on his lifelong ambition of becoming a published poet and he has published widely in all genres of that discipline in books, online, in chapbooks and in several solo collections of poetry.
Sunday, January 17, 2016
Three Poems by Ken L. Jones
Seek and Find
The telltale red plasma
Subway cars still linger
In the echo of the dance of
The whiff of earlier days
While a lithe standup bass
Purrs haven't we lived this moment before
Or is it just one strand of many
That contains the multitudes
Of all that sadness has to say
The air smells of wet drywall and woodchips
As my memories as mysterious
As a pair of prehensile needle nose pliers
Pry open some alternate reality
That peels away like the layers of an onion
To where mewling dreams are illuminated
And only become grimmer
As the summer moon sheds tears of motor oil
In the finely spun rain
And I find myself damaged
Bewildered and forgotten
An ever rolling explosion
Of backward splicing in zero gravity
A black velvet painting of
An exploding computer mainframe
An Area 51 who is now merely
Zombie guitar strumming
And you won't like me when I get angry
For I am all that is buried deep in a dreamer
I am the one that the Ouija board foretold
And I must indeed warn you
Do not stand in my way
As I transmute from lead into gold.
Travel to Awaken
In the daredevil imbalance where insomniacs make origami
Out of the rigged chess match that is waking life
I try to contemplate all that I have known
In my centuries old frontal lobes
Corroded by too much of the diet Dr. Pepper
Which helps get me through each day somewhat alive
The night weaves tapestries out of human blood
Distinctive amber pods of Johnny Mercer's Jeepers Creepers
Howl like telepathic werewolves
In the no heart beat of the elegant silver phases of the moon
The Swiss cheesy total sleeplessness
I have known for years
Reminds me of Karlheinz Stockhausen
Who had the curiosity of a magpie
And I remember listening to his symphonies
While strange snowflakes that had all the mutability of a chameleon
Piled up on the ground in a slow dance
That was like my love shedding her white satin pajamas
For only me to wonder at
It was all torn from the surf of splendid Grateful Dead album covers
That spoke to me in a tongue that was like Zap Comix
Before a gloom that was darker than any inkpot
Transformed my zodiac animal the lion
Into a foaming at the mouth pitbull
And on this muggy night that is like Green Lantern's power ring
Traversing the depths of space as it carries him to Oa
Against the beautiful hand cut color of these mountains
I realize and acknowledge that I am trapped forever and always
In what's going on in the upside down.
Arrived Perfect
There is the shiver of empty highways
In the dirt and bones of my visionary states
Where dried corn voices dance in the sand
Swaying to the strains of waning daylight as it takes command
Twinkling in the wasted blood
Of bleached white ghost creatures
Who strayed in from the soft beautiful voices
Of the albino wilderness of forever
Drowning us in the formaldehyde of their tattered glances
That engulfed us like a rushing river
While she ran her fingers through the new moon's rising
As we were caught up in the undertow of spinning away
On the waves of a beach that never spoke any given language
Entwined in the regrets of our identical dreams
That luckily for us ran in tributary streams.
For the past thirty-five years Ken L. Jones has been a professionally published author who has done everything from writing Donald Duck Comic books to creating things for Freddy Krueger to say in some of his movies. In the last six years he has concentrated on his lifelong ambition of becoming a published poet and he has published widely in all genres of that discipline in books, online, in chapbooks and in several solo collections of poetry.
Saturday, January 16, 2016
A Poem by ayaz daryl nielsen
And maybe a cat
Together
is two.
Two placemats,
two pillows,
two sides
of the bed.
Two closets,
one hers, the
other hers, too.
Two moans in
the bedroom
two tear tracks
in living rooms.
A lid on raises,
and the other,
grumbling,
lowers.
Two towels
hanging from
two towel racks.
Together
is two.
Together.
ayaz daryl nielsen, x-roughneck (as on oil rigs)/hospice nurse, editor of bear creek haiku (25+ years/125+ issues), homes for poems include Lilliput Review, SCIFAIKUEST, Shemom, Shamrock, Kind of a Hurricane Press and online at bear creek haiku.
Friday, January 15, 2016
Three Poems by Johannes S.H. Bjerg
Litany
The thread of hearing
I
from the sound of falling buildings our bones are made
from the hardening of our bones envelops are made
from envelops the flight of swallows comes
the swallows leaving it behind
like threads that make up the weave of grief
from grief comes holes and blind fish
from blind fish gods spring
from blind gods descend the stairs we walk
when it's raining
from our walk is born the far end of dirt roads
from the rain is made windows and pain
and from windows bells manifest thus ending that line
from pain circular movement is made
from the sense of sight the color blue comes
and the sound of the flute
from the sound of flutes comes clouds
from clouds come time and feet
from feet comes sunsets
from sunsets come the mandrake plant
from the mandrake root comes screaming
and so does trees that grow when no one's watching
nothing of this is not sacred
II
from the moth-and-flame connection stones and rocks come forth
from rocks and stones four-winged insects
from four-winged insects the concept of future
and soft shoes and the tangible offspring
from soft shoes hope is made
and from tangible offspring the need to hold oneself
in the dark
comes
what springs from the concept of future no one knows
from the need to hold oneself in the dark
cities spring
from cities loneliness is made
and round fruits
(here endeth the line of loneliness)
from round fruits comes the sense of warmth
from the sense of warmth comes the birds named swan and sparrow
from swans and sparrow come prayer
from prayer comes the awareness of the other
from the other comes keys, keyholes and silk
with key and keyholes creation pauses
all is one
all has come
III
from silk comes green grasses and sweat
from green grasses come hills
from sweat comes penguins and the weight of absence
from hills spring forth that place where the hip and the thigh meet
and from there white roses come
from penguins come vending machines and from the weight of absence
poetry comes
from white roses comes dances and stringed instruments
and from poetry comes the fluff that will make dandelions
from dandelions come invincibility
from invincibility comes dances and stringed instruments comes hinges
from thence sugar and lizards
from sugar comes a high that's fun
from lizards comes the desire for power
from the desire for power comes the sound of falling buildings
and then it starts over
thus ends the first breath
and the thread of sound
nothing of this is not sacred
Litany
The thread of seeing
I
from the sight of flames comes oak trees
from oak trees come tinned beans and fingernails
from fingernails come, as the Edda says, ships
and from tinned beans come the obsession with lost love
thus endeth the lineage of tinned beans
from ships comes the four winds and their intercourse
from the intercourse of the winds come the ability
to remember songs
from the ability to remember songs horses are made
from horses come the sense of direction
from the sense of direction our brains are made
and from our brains slugs come
from slugs come paper
and
from paper comes nothingness and there it is
we are one
we have come
II
from the sight of waves our fingers are made
from our fingers clay is made
from clay is made bars and in bars plans are made
from plans come plains by fermentation
and from plains come loss
from loss comes maps and globes and string
and from maps and globes and string come cake
cake gives birth to rulers that don't smudge the drawing ink
and from rulers are born the loss of memory
from the loss of memory refrigerators are made
and from refrigerators camels spring
from camels speed
and from speed forgetfulness
[the reader will now cough]
nothing of this is not sacred
III
from the sight of burning eyes whales come
from whales screws and nails are born and all metallic things
that can go into walls
from screws and nails rivers are born and their unquenchable appetite
from rivers and their unquenched appetite the color yellow comes
and from the color yellow the wish for being somewhere else
from the wish of being somewhere else
flamingos are born
from flamingos sprouts things that go upwards
from things that go upward comes farmhouses and heavy chairs
from farmhouses comes long Sundays
but heavy chairs remain barren
from long Sundays comes eyebrows and hairs that grow in odd places
and they produce every name that begins with an A
which in turns gives rise to confusion
from confusion comes the beetle called a scarab
and from scarabs springs warm night
from warm night comes rail road tracks and all who follow them
and here resteth the lineage of the sight of whales
nothing of this is everything
Litany
The thread of smell
I
from the smelling of bumblebees' warm backs come our femurs
from our femurs come the names that begin with an I
from the names that begin with an I spring squirrels
and from thence machines that cut bread into even-sized slices
and from machines that cut bread into even-sized slices comes
transportation sickness
and from transportation sickness comes reeds
from reeds comes the need to be secure
and it in turn gives rise to bunions on our feet
from the bunions of our feet comes printing ink
and from printing ink comes crows
from crows come the notion that the horizon is where the world ends
and from thence comes chili
chili gives rise to things that go bump in the night
and from things that go bump in the night comes instant coffee
and that was a mistake
here we rest with our feet up
II
from smelling the whining sound in the right ear comes back pockets
from back pockets the need to explore space comes
and from thence paper clips
from paper clips the urge to scratch your scrotum (if you have one) arise
from the urge to scratch your scrotum (if you have one) comes hip-hop
and broken elastic bands
which remain barren
from hip-hop comes the need to settle on distant mountain tops
and from thence nail clipping devices
from nail clipping devices come the planets you cannot see
and from the planets you cannot see come photo-booths
from photo-booths comes acne
from acne to top of clouds come
and from the top of clouds we get our liver
from our liver the need to revise the signs of the zodiac comes
and from thence lemon squeezers
and from the spaces between tiles various mental disorders
now we breath
now we don't nothing of this is not sacred
III
from smelling various mental disorders we get strawberry licorice
from strawberry licorice we get the urge to talk to stones and household appliances
from thence we get the hair on our heads
from the hair on our heads we get bridges
and from bridges come nostalgia
from nostalgia comes 35 mm film (now a rarity)
and from 35 mm film comes the animal called giraffe
from giraffes come the ability to be obedient by choice
and that in turn gives rise to twined rope
from twined rope comes the idea of Paradise
and from the idea of Paradise comes ice-cream
from ice-cream comes the old dance called the Galliard
and from thence comes tight trousers
from tight trousers we get the plant called Aloe
and from Aloe springs typographical symbols of pauses
from typographical symbols of pauses we get the muscles of our thighs
and from them spring the population of amphibian animals
if there's coffee drink it
if you have a favorite song sing it
nothing of this is secret
Johannes S.H. Bjerg was born in 1957, and writes mainly haiku and related forms.
Thursday, January 14, 2016
Three Poems by Jack e Lorts
Ephram Pratt Basks in Silver Moonlight
Disembark immediately
on the advice of
a winged serpent
lying dormant
in a cavern aswil
with anxiety, bile
and a nightshade
swimming in silence.
Let august lanterns
slip indecisively
into oblivion,
basking in moonlight
while dangers
slip into deep seated
anger and dissonance.
Is it because
of the juices
filling the veins
of high flying votives,
eager to enter
into agreements with
soft boiled eggs,
grasped firmly
by velvet hands?
No one knows!
Only the fairy handlers.
Ephram Pratt Sings of the Solid Air
A miraculous virginity
struggled across
a lonely open space,
like wilted lettuce
lingering in a cold sobriety,
fenced in and spacious,
while deftly delivering
verbal molasses
across tightly guarded
borders of solid air.
He winced as
he drove slowly
into downtown darkness,
like an elephantine
scream, witnessed
by jailors and jurors
as they sang
unknown Bach cantatas
with vacant voices,
into the silence
of shackaleers
reciting a voiceless poem.
Ephram Pratt Paints the Granite Eyelids
The fence posts rowing
discreetly into wheat fields
define insanity
with soft strokes
of rosemary, lining
the gossamer wings
of angry seraphim,
sleeping under bridges
and along the arid roads
of eastern Oregon.
They deliver soft pillows
of incense and joy
to the sand painters,
weeping openly
while they plant
their eyelids firmly
on bracken, gold chains,
large enough to
remove granite pedestals
from sink holes
found in small cities
lining the Great River
as it meanders
slowly to the sea.
Jack e Lorts is a retired educator living in a small remote town in eastern Oregon. His poems, particularly his recent Ephram Pratt poems, have appeared widely in print or online in such places as Haggard and Halloo, Elohi Gadugi, Clackamas Literary Review, Fault Lines and elsewhere. His earlier work from the late 50's through the early 2000's was published widely if infrequently in such places as Arizona Quarterly, Kansas Quarterly, English Journal, Abbey, Agnostic Lobster, Oregon East, High Desert Journal, etc. His most recent chapbook is "Dear Gilbert Sorrentino and Other Poems" is from Finishing Line Press. Active in Democratic politics at the local and state level, he served as mayor of Fossil, Oregon (population 479) for many years.
Wednesday, January 13, 2016
Three Poems by Ken L. Jones
Dragonfly Words that I Once Swallowed
How does one fathom a dream
When all of my females were merely Cliff's Notes
In the Cafe De Seahorse where I recalled my youth
Which was like a Disney sonnet
Whose rose petals nodded at me
As oh so bone white they sighed
Heaving and sad and like a spinning wheel
While the fog held a seance to communicate with my dreams
That dissolved like some Cocteau film
As it pulsed from the Painted Desert
To Alpha Centauri and beyond
And then morning tore my ticket into a stub
While a rusting symphony of the frogs in the trees
Turned all this into a bewitched womb
That tilted and quivered like a playground swing
Near and freshly plowed fields that like pendulum clocks
Led me to the midway of the black b irds
Where gold fish swam in its carnival light
And where with the benediction of the clouds
Summer boarded up for winter in front of me with a sound most loud.
A Tarnished Whirlpool
Driving along in my father's speeding pickup
A thousand times I dreamt of flinging open the door
On my side and repelling out of it
My legs tucked under me cannonball style
Sure that I would magnificently fly before I died
When gravity finally did an Icarus on me
Many times I tested the door handle on my side
Wanting so badly to do it my mouth and throat gone dry
My blood pressure throbbing inside of me like a trip hammer a'pounding
Only to abandon such thoughts at the very last sweaty palmed moment
Then back to the pile of funny books I always carried
In the canvas overnight bag with me to day camp and everywhere
It always smelled pungently of peanut butter and jelly and suntan lotion
And bubble gum and of the four-colored comics it had made to bleed
I haven't thought of any of that in years without number
Then this morning it swam up from the depths to me
While I listened to Tchaikovsky's Russian sadness
Which was still engulfing me like some forgotten summer.
As Comes Snow
Goodbye is not gone as long as it floats you
To those few hours when she was an imposing beacon to me
And made me first believe in the portents
That turned her ginger cat into an old lion or so I believed
And as long as I was cloistered in those irrepressible footsteps now long gone
I trod on a ship's deck of different rhythms and envied
Those who dug in the soil that could play a violin if it so chose
My thoughts as surrounding and comforting as childhood jammies
While I made a wish as I sat down on the rooftops of those red lipsticked mansions
As the pink light rubbed a magic lantern that quivered through
The windswept catwalks of the somewhat eternal seaside's rocks.
For the past thirty-five years Ken L. Jones has been a professionally published author who has done everything from writing Donald Duck Comic books to creating things for Freddy Krueger to say in some of his movies. In the last six years he has concentrated on his lifelong ambition of becoming a published poet and he has published widely in all genres of that discipline in books, online, in chapbooks and in several solo collections of poetry.
Tuesday, January 12, 2016
Three Poems by Heath Brougher
Grunge Poem Get Well Card
Sleep precious my pretty pneumonia;
my rag-doll of bloodstream; you can
cough on me anytime you want
ever since I heard the life-rattle of the flu
in your bronchi; the hospital
is spilling out with patients like over-poured milk;
may your ribs not be razed by your incessant coughing;
may dusk work its way into this epidemic;
may the medical community invent a flu shot
that is strong enough to overpower this current string;
but most importantly, my pretty little pneumonia,
may you please wake up from your current state,
stretch your arms out wide, sigh a morning sigh,
and begin to feel like rain, that is, right as.
Burning Leaves
Something else after the fact rolled down
the sleeve unlike a raindrop or ball; more square
and untrustable than misshapen lies . . . this weaving path
leads nowhere, you may as well just let go now . . .
pig's vomit at the rainbow's end, the slaughtered leprechaun
(they're evil anyway), so we euthanize
their poor green goldless suits so flammable; feed them
dopamine and set them ablaze with flambeaus;
voids and vacuums and empty spaces are primary
to us today; the here and now is discombobulated
and confuses the senses, the sinus reaches through dense blockages,
for clarity, anything goes and nothing is right and relieved
and unveiled, the insane things . . . the sodas we shake and throw
into the air to explode and take off like rockets into power-lines
leaving them dripping sticky as we walk back inside
across the gluey ground
beneath our shoes. Anything; anything at all to turn off this tedium,
anything so I don't just nod off . . . nod off . . . nod off . . .
nod off and gone forever.
A Nightmare in Purple
Down hollowest hill
a path twisted; born in the palm
of frigid gale, she wore a dress
that flowed through the fingers;
hard and high in the violets,
her face was a snapped-out-of-a-dream;
petite legs walking to the threshold
of a frightened wake.
Heath Brougher lives in York, PA and attended Temple University. He has been writing his entire life but didn't begin to submit his work for publication until March of 2014, so he feels like he's got a lot of catching up to do. He recently finished his first chapbook and has two more on the way as well as a full-length book of poetry. His work has appeared or is forthcoming in Diverse Voices Quarterly, Mobius, MiPOesias, BlazeVOX, *Star 82 Review, Otoliths, Of/With, experiential-experimental-literature, Van Gogh's Ear, 521 Magazine, Stray Branch, Carnival, Indigo Rising, Inscape Literary Journal of Washburn University, and elsewhere.
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