The second issue is out, featuring the Greek poet Alexandra Mouratidou, who lives and creates in Malmö, Sweden. Again, if you can't get your hands on a printed copy of the pamphlet, either in The Hague or in Malmö, you can still enjoy its content here:
Panorama
Oh, I get the Flemish masters, now. Why
it’s always three quarters rampant sky or
a biblical sea crashing ships filled to
the gills with apples from China. I get
the art-nouveau postures of disfigured
trees reaching towards the promise of a
future sold through foolproof far-fetched words like
bioscoop and magnetron, and regal
swans chasing seagulls in rainy cobbled
streets – a mental note of life’s absurdity –
the rulers of the waterways losing
feathers like pillows dusted with long rods
letting off shrills carried through loud, defunct
chimneys. This is the place I’ll learn to miss.
Intentions
by Alexandra Mouratidou
I’m scared of secrecy, silence, and sighs
the muted thoughts, the faceless sounds
and what does the unuttered hide.
Do words die out with time like past’s incense?
Soon, “I love you” will become a shroud you wear,
forgetting when or how.
Dad died. But since the years have passed
it’s like the phrase has died.
Words die.
Just like a fallen star, an embryo, that hope,
the tears that have gone dry, the years behind –
Words wear banalities mostly when they’re cold.
Sometimes, they’re bored and tend to lie.
Words fly. At times, they choose to abandon all
their fateful sense.
The rebellious ones diverge:
They fall from poetry’s cliff revived.
Adolescence in Small Town
They were coming back from the church:
None of them believed in much of anything
but it was Good Friday. From around the corner
there ringed the laugh of the easy girls,
a silver bell calling paupers to charity supper.
Eager, the boys turned their untempered backs
on the spring wind, to light hand-rolled cigarettes
bought for a copper and a half each
by some older brother. They were fixing
their baby rockabilly quiffs,
ready to make an entrance and if there needed be
a scene, when a father’s bobbing belly came panting
and chased them down the road
thrusting insults mixed with warm spit.
The poor bastards ran like demons on that holy night.
Morbid Sensitivity
The crippling effect
of human interaction:
I take it all in.
I’m like sunglasses
with no filter to reflect
those carcinogens.
No good can ever
come from a self-image clung
on passer-by frowns.
Dear Contemporary Art Gallery
You are unequivocally clinical,
with blinding whites and cold spotlights,
and your wine is lukewarm and papery dry.
Your Django Reinhardt live nights
are of conservatorial principle
and your well-ironed guests will kindly abide
by smoking only outside. But art is a log cabin
in the thick dark woods, not a sterile science lab
for measuring and tagging pure consumer goods
– and it’s known for being moody and quite cynical.