Tables and Chairs

It’s all firewood now, the scarred, splintered,

broken-apart tables, benches, and chairs piled

 

high far behind a country inn, all the dinner engagements

and family celebrations they’ve accommodated now firmly

 

past, service so demanding as to render this furniture

debris, the owner and his son, keeping a hose handy,

 

igniting the fire, flames swirling the mound instantly,

the crackling from within it at first spare and subdued,

 

then turning resonant and rhythmic as if in recitation

of its own, long, complicated story, the story of work

 

well done, of promises kept and promise redeemed, all

ending in this blaze through which it relives its history

 

of giving, the woodsmoke scent—lingering

long after the fire expires—surprisingly sweet.

 

 

by Mark Belair

 

Mark Belair’s poems have appeared in numerous journals, including Alabama Literary Review, Atlanta Review, Harvard Review, Michigan Quarterly Review, Poetry East and The South Carolina Review. His most recent collection is Breathing Room (Aldrich Press, 2015). Previous collections include Night Watch (Finishing Line Press, 2013); While We’re Waiting (Aldrich Press, 2013); and Walk With Me (Parallel Press of the University of Wisconsin at Madison, 2012). He has twice been nominated for a Pushcart Prize.

 

Dancing with Time

I see corpses when I look at people

they are dancing with the past and dreaming about future

they desperately mark their territory

they scream

yelp

make noise

thinking that returning echo

will be them

or their soul

 

and there is silence

there is nothing

not even as much as blackness

that would have a meaning

 

they are standing squatting

it is very funny

 

one leg here

and there without a leg

 

by Frederick Rossakovsky-Lloyd

 

Frederick Herbert Rossakovsky-Lloyd lives and works in UK. He published nine volumes of poetry. His work can be found in numerous international anthologies.

 

On the Road to Atheism

She looked into the mirror very closely

As she just combed her hair morosely.

 

No doubt she was extremely beautiful;

Beauty dumped on her by the merciful.

A face that could launch million ships;

Eyes that so sent men on ecstatic trips

 

But her life had been a crisis-series;

Crises that chronically really wearies;

A ton of poison for an ounce of gold.

She would not return to the Divine fold.

 

 

She looked into the mirror very closely

As she just combed her hair morosely.

 

by Rajagopal Kaimal

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