The September issue is out now. Read it here:
Democracy
In sarcastic punishment
the word hangs from its hinges
like a rusty sign turned upside down
flapping due to unstoppable winds
in the flat desert sands of civilization
losing its meaning like it never had
personal history. Its essence hovering
projecting wraithlike visions
of what might have been.
Evenings with Grandma
Among the reassuring roundness of buttons
in the churchly silence of the haberdashery
I examined with the stern brow of the assessor
treasures in mother of pearl and carved ivory.
Along the hollow spools of silken thread
that tied me to nothing but minuter tints
of damask red and cobalt blue, I contemplated
on their amaranthine possibilities for coalescing.
At home, I danced away to the airy scissors snips
and the fast, unsteady beat of the sewing machine.
On the pincushion I did my little voodoo thing
wore a thimble and pronounced my pointer queen.
Migrating
An acute change of
wardrobe. Never seen flowers
thirsting for the sun.
Guilt
From all the ghosts that
haunt me, the ones I fear the
most are still alive.
A Break-Up in Late Thirties
She tried to gather her thoughts
in a single confrontational sentence
while the children slept in their cots.
She dressed the table in blue polka dots
brewing on her need for acceptance
as she tried to gather her thoughts.
She cleaned the fridge and paired the socks
but her eyes never strayed from the entrance,
while the children slept in their cots.
She decided, dusting her chipped teapots,
that the cheap ones have greater endurance,
and then tried to gather her thoughts.
Under the louder than life kitchen clock
she thought she heard a car in the distance.
Meanwhile, the children slept in their cots.
Petting the faithful, warm-breathed dog,
the only male who was still of assistance,
she tried to gather her thoughts.
Her husband came at midnight and brought
a loaf of cold bread and a bag of repentance.
She was waiting with gathered thoughts
and the children still slept in their cots.
The Monks
For forty years, in utter silence and candlelight
the three of them worked copiously in their cells
with the tomes of hellenistic philosophy.
Their indoctrinated quills were ablaze
while copying Aristotle’s unmoved mover
and Plato’s conforming form of the good.
But on Epicurus there were long pauses
for there was a worm in the heretic’s words
eating out the apple of unquestioned devotion.
The hegumen kept his raven eye on them
sensing how they shook their fatigued heads
in dread and understanding. The rest went about
their common business of trade, intrigue, and prayer.
Longing for the Garden of their secret faith,
in their deathbed they didn’t call for priests
but for one of the agriculturists, and asked
for gardenias and lemon trees to be planted
above their unsung, shameful graves.