Nothing

could have seemed more mundane

than an accidental Safeway run-in

after you simply stopped your pursuit

and, instead, went after groceries.

You wore brown, reminding me

of New Yorkers I used to watch,

in grey flannel flesh,

seemingly unfamiliar with sun.

Nothing more mundane.

Just grey and brown and we had to,

or I did, speak. You had been the sun,

the foreign flare, bursting last time

we met with life.

 

You saw me again and your hands

hung from your jacket

like leaves dead early on branches

in another fall. Nothing of life

was left, neither precious gold or warmth,

or Spanish rhythm. Only packaged meat

and bagged produce. Hands off,

and an explanation I had to buy.

 

by Alita Pirkopf

 

Alita’s work has appeared or is forthcoming in The Alembic, Caduceus, The Chaffin Journal, The Distillery, The Griffin, Haight Ashbury Literary Journal, Harpur Palate, Illya’s Honey, Lullwater Review, Quiddity, RiverSedge, Ship of Fools, Westview, and Willow Springs Review.

The Molassacre

Boom!
Rivets from the 50-foot distillery tank busted from the flimsy
metal sheets exploding with molasses onto Boston’s North End.
The two million gallon wave thrashed people
into billiards, freight cars, and stables.
Children who had once collected the seeping sucrose off the tank for
suckers were trapped under its girth and met their gooey graves.
Teamsters and librarians on their noonday lunches sitting in the balmy
climate were strangled by its syrupy brown glaze and swept under it like trash to a dustpan.
The trotting of horses through the city hauling goods came to a stop –
their hooves stuck to the street as bugs to flypaper.
Houses and stores didn’t go unscathed either – being wrenched from their
roots and ensnaring electrical poles, trucks, and the firehouse in its glutinous wake.
Twenty-one died and another 150 injured, but to this today
the air still lingers of the sweet smelling
molasses
.

by Arika Elizenberry

Arika Elizenberry is a native of Las Vegas, Nevada. She has been writing poetry for over ten years; some of her favorite writers are Richard Wright, Maya Angelou, and James Baldwin. Her work has appeared in the Silver Compass, Neon Dreams, Open Road Review, and East Coast Literary with forthcoming works in ZO Magazine, 300 Days of Sun, Blue Lyra Review, and Aspirations. She currently has an A.A. in Creative Writing and is working on her B.A.

Internment In An Urn of Hell

“To write poetry after Auschwitz is barbaric. And this

corrodes even the knowledge of why it has become

impossible to write poetry today.”

                                                                        -Theodor Adorno

Follow me,

from fields of white Asphodels,

to Tainaron’s gate,

now open like Hades’ heart.

Hopeless darkness,

fires at our heels,

the brass walls of hell sweat

bullets when we flee,

Me from you, you,

my Eurydice

 

And if all my love could not turn back

to see such beauty, then I am ghost,

I breathe the airs of hell.

Turn back, turn back, I wish to see

the beauty of Eurydice.

 

No longer can I write poetry

for all my loss

has stopped my hand just inches from the

parchment. And the songs,

once played for all,

have been lined up, and

damned, one by one,

to the pits

below.

With all my heart I plead

To take back Eurydice.

 

No Virgil can help my art start bleeding

from the lands I’ve once known so dear,

Mount Helicon’s foot.

In that hell where ash rained

like sand in time,

I try to free myself

from Eurydice.

 

by Nicholas McCarthy

Ashlie Allen

Terrifying winter night

 

Plum fog drowns

the winter sky

and frost makes furniture

on the ground for insects

I stagger through the forest,

having just buried 12 possessed puppets

and 17 bloody jabots

 

by Ashlie Allen

 

Bees and ghosts

 

Blue hues of winter

flicker against your pale skin

I remember when you were a child

screaming in the garden

because there were too many bees

and too many ghosts

Now the garden is dead

and the ghosts and bees

reside inside your eyes

 

by Ashlie Allen

 

Cactus balloons

 

Her ghost whimpers

in the flower pot

as I pop balloons

against the cactus she held

the day she sighed, “Sayōnara.”

 

by Ashlie Allen

 

“Gothic colors”

 

The shadow of bats

through mauve fog,

the rattle of violent violin music

through skeletons and wood

I weep beneath

a dead woman’s window

as I pretend the world

is a funeral and I am a ghost

trapped in gothic colors

 

by Ashlie Allen

Ashlie Allen writes fiction and poetry. Her work has appeared in The Birds We Piled Loosely, Blink Ink, The Assonance Literary Magazine, Literary Orphans and others. She plans to become a photographer in the future. Her greatest influence is Anne Rice.

Jennifer Wesle

The Gypsy

 

Green solar plexus envious

fastidious and plagued in dis-ease

 

 

bikes to ride past your house

eye balls on springs and wide open

 

 

glued hairs in scrapbook

voodooed photographs and bottled tears

 

 

grimaced grew cats teeth and whiskers

grew a warm layer of fur

 

 

scratched you+me on my bedpost

and voodooed that too

 

 

stole ten dollars from the grocer

stole ten persimmons and thirteen oranges

 

 

sold persimmons and oranges on the bridge

sold collages of voodooed photographs

 

 

sold tears as divinity potions

glittered the cement with golddust

 

 

grinned despite green chakras

and hid envy underneath my shawl.

 

by Jennifer Wesle

 

 

portrait of the lady in a big blue hat

 

so this squishy underbelly fleshy tender

pescanoce-nectarine tummy

your pink-white fruit

juicy

dangle gently

swaying

with the movements of limbs

arms    like snake trees

long limbs

fine form         of genetics

praises and salutations

to grandparents with good family planning

generations of high cheekbones

thick shiny hair

straight legs

& fine noses

 

like thoroughbred

you are agile and conditioned

high strung

high society

with hat (bridle)

hanging precariously

tipped over one dainty ear

you careened

on heels of crocodiles

on carpeted boulevards

into studio

out of navy blue diane furstenberg

you undressed

splashed onto canvass

and became

immortal.

 

 

by Jennifer Wesle

 

Jennifer Wesle is a Canadian writer/artist/musician. She is working on a poetry manuscript and studying English and Psychology. She leads a semi-nomadic life and is currently living, finding inspiration, learning Italian and eating in Italy.

Laws of Motion

I. Every object in a state of uniform motion tends to remain in that state of motion unless an external force is applied to it.

Annabelle constructed her dreams in a globe,
glass surrounding the dream-world like a cell’s membrane.
What do you make of this world?
Do you think it’s truly impermeable? Do you think anything
is truly impermeable?

Annabelle constructed her dreams deliberately, precisely
following the rules of uniformity with each daily addition.
Inside the globular world were fairies, and ambitions, and
the perfectly quantified fruits of her mind. In this dream world,
nothing was left to interpretation.

Annabelle constructed her dreams with her own hands
for the fear that someone else’s would corrupt them.
Addition by addition, part by part, she assembled the pieces,
the starry ambitions, the broken thoughts, the half-hearted wishes.
Soon, she had something to put on display.

Annabelle constructed her dreams with the purpose of putting
them on display. Contained in the globe, they would never break;
she was sure of it. Once her hands had finished constructing,
she exposed the globular dream-world to the human world.
Only her hands, grasping from the outside,

could make the fragile world
and only her hands
could break the fragile world

Shattered, broken, permeable–
permeable–this
world of dreams.

II. The relationship between an object’s mass m, its acceleration a, and the applied force Fis F= ma. Acceleration and force are vectors; in this law the direction of the force vector is the same as the direction of the acceleration vector.

F=ma
How else would you put it?
The force vector and acceleration vector
progress in the same direction:
forward.

Annabelle grew sick and tired
of the word. Forward. As if direction
were something quantifiable;
as if forward were the only
means to success

What would happen
if in this law
the direction of the force vector and acceleration vector
moved in was backward?
Would anyone object? Who would
dare say it was not the direction
of a world moving at the speed of light (299792458 m/s)?

Who would object to the pausing of output,
to the ceasing of heartless production,
to the prevention of time’s relentless effects?

But time, according to the laws of motion, continues
to gain F as the mass of the world increases
and soon our hearts get a little heavier
and Annabelle’s thighs are creased with stretch marks,
and her skin fades into nothingness,
and her lips evaporate into thin air,
and her eyes metabolize into liquid
and she no longer knows how old she is, how old she was, how old she will be,
and time keeps on going,
keeps on accelerating, and is the only variable we know.

III. For every action there is an equal and opposite reaction.

Picture Annabelle:
She is seventy-two,
lying breathlessly on the ground.

Dissect her:
Tell me what you find.
Perhaps you find a broken globular dream-world, perhaps you find remnants of an accelerating life.

Rummage through her:
Veins, stories, cartridges
of dying ink.

Picture her birth:
Bright, calm, serene.
React

Picture her death:
Dark, quiet, passing.
Produce

Today
somewhere
Annabelle is being born,
fresh and new and alive,
and somewhere too
Annabelle is dying.

by Meghana Mysore

Meghana Mysore is a junior at Lake Oswego High School in Lake Oswego, Oregon, where she is Editor-in-Chief of the literary magazine and Opinions Editor of the newspaper. Her work has been published in Crashtest, Canvas Lit, Stepping Stones, VoiceCatcher, The Writers’ Slate and more and recognized by the Scholastic Writing Awards.