This twelfth issue, whose distribution started today, completes the first cycle of Poetry Issues. It has been a full year of poetic expression and I hope you've enjoyed it as much as I did. From now on the publication will become bimonthly, in order to dedicate some time to other works.
You can read this issue below:
April’s Fool
It’s a joke, all this rain,
and I’m reminded
only by date that this
is the advent of spring.
And I envy the trees.
They seem to possess
the right time for everything:
Like clockwork they go
through winters and springs
accepting, always in majesty,
each turn of season that I
try, strong-headed and vain,
to manipulate and command.
You refused to hold my hand.
Life Without Temptation
I didn’t die nor resurrect
at the age of thirty three.
I’ve lost my chance.
And now I watch myself
mature to death –
an unappealing apple
without an Eve’s hand
to save me from counting
how many meters
before I hit the ground.
Afterwards
Pestered as they were by what happens next
they left their sentences undone, hanging
annoying as fruit flies, unsure of their direction
overwhelmed by the vast possibilities ahead.
But once, fueled by a whole night’s drinks
they raced into the pink-gold dawn that painted
all their hopes anew. That’s when they learned
that language is redundant when your soul
is smooth and it’s not only youth that burns with instinct.
Letter
I don’t have to tell you
that we are not what we seem.
You know it better than I do.
Your chatoyant eyes reflect some
passion you dismiss. I have proof
in the shivers I get when you come
to have a coffee under my roof
and rehearse your staged words.
Still, I hear nothing but the truth.
It must be an augmented chord,
what tunes us in each other.
Life before you was a chore.
I’m a moth heading to the lantern
for what is love but death, dear lover?
In Therapy
Most days I don’t remember my dreams.
It’s just that I often wake up with a sigh.
I’m quite hard and detest looking back.
Cicadas and lilac skies don’t amuse me.
In my youth I grieved imaginary deaths
far as I was from the need of an afterlife.
I found purpose in the half-time. I was
meant to be the eye of the universe.
[If you would like to learn more about the Poetry Issues project, read this.]