Friday, December 7, 2012

Odysseus

Thought about how Odysseus' wife must have felt when hearing about his adventures.

I know I'd be pissed.

Ottava rima completed for DFC '12 day 3. Again, not entirely happy with it (I'd love to spend more time getting to know these forms a bit better, but I'm still behind, so I'm still simply trying to catch up at present!), but I think it's better than the Isaac Asimov one I did the other day...

"I am no Witch-Queen, but I Bide My Time"

I waited for you, my Odysseus.
For ten long years I waited, all alone.
Men have called for me, lusty, pitiless -
and you, yes, you passed beyond all you've known,
found comfort in other arms - delicious,
weren't they? Distractions from the voyage home.
And, love, I'm no Medea, no witch-queen,
but I will bide my time, and act, unseen. 

Qualia

This is a canzone for day 2 of DFC '12. 11 syllables per line, rhyme scheme abab cdcd efef aa

Those two mathematical sets TOTALLY DON'T COUNT TOWARD THE NUMBER OF STANZAS just sayin'. I wanted to space the lines out to reduce the temptation to make this too singsong-y and keep the rhymes spaced out a bit.

Used the idea of set theory. See Georg Cantor (sneaky use of his last name, no?) if you'd like more info. I don't really feel like trying to explain math at the present...

Hope you enjoy! I'm not entirely happy with this, but there you are, I suppose. 

"You and Me - Set Theory"

{0=n-n}

"Truth," he said, "truth is pure multiplicity,"
and I suppose he was thinking of sidewalks—

I've been chasing concrete cracks round the city,
planting face, hoping for the growth of beanstalks

to clear out my heart-cracks of your name.
My cheek against the sun-warmed slabs of concrete

touches your cheek, sets my whole body aflame
with you—here, I see where earth and heaven meet.

{Ø{Ø,Ø}…}

My mathematician, if only you could sing
to me about the universe, my Cantor,

could tell me of the pavement to which I cling;
we are a set in stones, small and granular.

Though truth cannot be found in simplicity,
still, like sidewalk cracks, truth's in infinity.

Tuesday, December 4, 2012

Isaac Asimov

A rispetto! In iambic tetrameter. I chose to go a bit silly ^^
Despite the minimal imagery...I hope you enjoy, haha.

"A Love Letter, Written for but Never Given to, Isaac Asimov, From Mars"

I am still new to writing verse.
Forgive me, I know it's ghastly,
But you're my entire universe,
My love, you're the laws that bind me.

Mars is lovely this time of year,
Please, my love, come visit me here:
The red dust in our eyes like dew—
My heart-gears will turn just for you. 

Carbon

WHOA ANOTHER FIXED FORM PIECE? Crazy talk. This is an alliterisen, base syllables 11.

I'm doing a fixed form challenge this month, so expect more posts! I hope you enjoy reading these as much as I enjoyed writing them, internet. I'm finding the challenge of fixed form to my taste :)

"Carbon Winter Heart"

I welcome winter with still, stalactite heart,
a new creature of carbonite, mirrored and mirthless.
I grow grizzled and old, December-dead,
diamond-dreaming, but graphite-grained and losing myself,
organic only by carbon content.
Lacking heart-valves, void: free of my changeling-child,
I am fully frozen, a newly caustic queen. 

Buddhism

So. I wrote a sestina. It was hard.

The end.

Enjoy!

"December Buddha"

December cracks open like hazelnuts,
crinkled brown and brittle, dry from the fire,
cold-crisp and crunching as needles of pines.
As usual, wisdom comes just in time,
reminder to hold on to my forest,
to my stories, to make myself buddha.

I am lacking, no quiet rain-buddha,
born, as I was, a tight-curled hazelnut,
but I do send roots into my forest,
and in summer spread Colorado fire.
I find that more and more I pass the time
among the kings that are my totem pines.

In North Carolina, December pines
not for sun but for a softer buddha,
a figure to remind the month that time
ends not with January; hazelnut,
it curls in on itself, warm with the fire.
It is my roots, winding through the forest.

Some days I wait for rain in my forest.
I love how it trickles down my crown-pines
to soften days and keep away brush-fire.
In the spring I am not a flame-buddha,
want only streams for floating hazelnuts:
all my riddle answers are, "time, time, time."

The mackintosh flesh marks the passing time:
it still remembers which of the forests
was its home, that the roasted hazelnuts
were its brothers, and softening, it pines
for who I was in Virginia, a buddha
of spring, among the hay bales, soothing fire.

Then, I was water to cool the fire,
too small a paragon of space-time,
not seeing myself: quiet wind-buddha.
Now, December returns me—my forest,
in a whispered winter of silver pines
that will birth me again—a hazelnut.

I embrace my fire, my sprouting forest,
the water that with time stretches the pines;
settle as my buddha, my hazelnut.  

Sunday, December 2, 2012

PUBLISHED!

I'm so pleased to announce that my poem "Divination as a Means of Finding a Way Back" has been PUBLISHED! So so so many thanks to the wonderful staff at Alliterati!

If you're interested in reading the piece, or seeing some of the other WONDERFUL visual and lit pieces that have been included, take a peek at the emag version:

PS. This week's music:

Tuesday, November 27, 2012

Bogota

This piece was inspired by the lovely Natalie Royal's song, Chimbote.

monachopsis
n. the subtle but persistent feeling of being out of place, as maladapted to your society as a seal on a beach—lumbering, clumsy, easily distracted, huddled in the company of other misfits, unable to recognize the ambient roar of your intended habitat, in which you’d be fluidly, brilliantly, effortlessly at home.
(For similar words, see this page:http://www.dictionaryofobscuresorrows.com/)

As you notice, I took some inspiration from the definition ;) I'm planning on recording myself reading this, because when I write in Spanish, I write for the sound. The problem with writing in Spanish, is I'm really trying to write for native Spanish speakers, so I'm trying to make use of all the possible meanings of the words I've chosen, if that makes sense. I suggest that those of you who don't understand Spanish look at the original and the translated version together.

"Santa Fé de Bogotá"

Simón Bolívar found you como una Flor de Mayo.

I know that in your swelling city heart
you long por el mar, por la sal del mar,

but instead you straddle the roads,
hunker down over your landscape and breathe
your car fumes, inspiras las fumas como sombres,
espiras tranquilidad inquieta.

Colombia, madre, you have become
bloated in your old age, have grown your
ankles, pálidos e inflamados;

you should have been a sea lion,
morena y rapida y a la cresta como la espuma.

Mi alma, I will bring you the sea salt to run through your hair,
diamonds with which to crown your sea-mane.

~~~

Simón Bolívar found you like an orchid.

I know that in your swelling city heart
you long for the sea, for the salt of the sea,

but instead you straddle the roads,
hunker down over your landscape and breathe
your car fumes, you breathe the smoke like shadows,
breathe calm restlessly.

Colombia, mother, you have become
bloated in your old age, have grown your
ankles, pale and swollen;

you should have been a sea lion,
brown and quick and cresting like the sea foam.

My soul, I will bring you the sea salt to run through your hair,
diamonds with which to crown your sea-mane.

Monday, November 5, 2012

Hinduism

Feels like AGES since I've written anything. Played around with style a bit, so I don't feel COMPLETELY lazy about this piece.

Composed during Ara Batur by Sigur Ros
Imagery inspired by this gorgeousness:

Firestarter
I know I didn't mention much Hinduism, but...there's a kind of wistfulness for Shiva here that I'll claim counts ;)

I should add:
Pyrokenesis is the psychic ability to create and manipulate fire (essentially).
Spirography was a toy I had as a kid - you used little interlocking gears to make cool designs with your pen.

"Spirography and the Gift of Pyrokenesis"

Already I feel stiffened,
wrapped-round with my wedding-bangles—
circumscribed, a horror amidst spirographs,
the ballpoint-pen circles that have transcended themselves
into curling picture frames or paper cages.

In my gown I am become a pillar,
I have not tasted curried air,

but already a river will still my tastebuds,
the mirror into which I shall be sunk, prow-like,
with the ship,

and the curling pen-lines that drift in my eyes
prepare the currents that will wash over me
and make of me nothing.

Shiva I would rather be—
would that I could pour my flaming heart
over my ashen and lace body,
leave its embers in the grass like seeds;

I would go up in smoke, no Helen for Troy,
only gasps making their own way for
Calcutta.  

Monday, October 15, 2012

Voodoo

I dunno how I feel about this one. I was feeling the pine trees, but I also wanted to write something for the topic "voodoo," which I've written into a lot of poems, but which I haven't had as the main sort of "theme."

Comments appreciated!

"Totems and Godhood"

i. Confronting giants.

I take the pine tree as my totem,
learn to love the nakedness of its nether-regions
and its northerly fibers stretched and waiting
for the weft to its warp.

Girlhood is still a part of me as the
learning what I am. In the end,
I haven't climbed a tree in a long time;
I am small, and scared, and ringed round with walls,
and I beg the moon to teach me
to use my pine trees as a ladder.

ii. Young love.

You, sir—
you are pine chips, and I carry you
like a fetish in my mind.

You are a vampiric sweetness
to suck the breath from my body:
unknowing, the feeling of yearning;
I am fibrous—celery stalk,
pale and clutching my thread self together.

iii. Transmogrification.

Watch as I become a giraffe,
stretch until my bones
will not bend to let me drink.

With age I become a god,
brittle-boned and cackling; with age
the osteoporosis will leech my fibers dry
and my pine sap blood will freeze in my chest
to keep me warm in winter.

My fingers—blue-green and spindly,
and though never-married my insides
are ringed-round with bands.
And I'll settle down with a cuppa,
tinged with the whisky my grandmother loved so much.

iv. The autumn comes to lead me home.

With no god to forgive me my ghosts,
I sink down into November brown,
and let the wood-rot take my roots. 

Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Divination

Wow, I just realized I was a LITTLE late on posting this one. It was written for a lit-mag theme of "Tabula Rasa," and received recognition on the art site I belong to! :) I'll probably update when I hear back on whether this has been accepted to the journal or not.

I'm not sure the piece is evocative enough or flows well. All comments most welcome!

"I Have No Names of All My Teacup Babes"

I feel always like I am starting over.

As a magpie I gather trinkets under my pillow,
bay leaves and bags of herbs to bring the next lover to me,
to call the next dream-face forward—a picture
painted in the tea leaves.

But truth be told the start-again
is never clean, is never gentle,
and the sweat of all that labour
is a fire on my skin, telling me
I will never resist its wind-cry.

The moon comes when I call, to help me;
midwife, she is, and she carries into being my new selves
like the babes they are, teaches them to
fill long footsteps like hers.

Truth be told, I tire of the destiny
I was given once—I am a teacup,
and I cling close to my china womb,
to my cup tipped over, upset
by careless elbows.

I imagine Mother Moon climbing her way back to me
on the backs of pine trees, sweeping across the Appalachians.

South by Southwest

For this topic, I couldn't help thinking of the wind, somehow. The wind and the Grand Canyon.

Written for a Halloween contest! I'd love any and all comments ;)

"A Kiss for a Ghost, Not Given"

I remember the bar in Ocracoke,
the chill that came like a wind from the Southwest
as he told me where he was from.

There was a moment when he looked me in the eye
and I could see my walk
one morning along the southern edge of the Canyon,
my hurried scramble from the oracle-birds
that had guided my steps

—and a moment of realization in the car
when I had rejected him, and, heading for the highway,
found my eyes searching the rearview mirror,
hoping not to meet his gaze.

Monday, September 3, 2012

Flightless Bird, American Mouth

I challenged myself for this piece by following a prompt that asked me to compose a poem backwards. This poem was quite a challenge. Ultimately the way I did it was write a poem, then reconstruct it roughly backwards (though I've obviously taken some license with the phrasing so that it makes SOME sense when read this way).

I'd REALLY love some critique on the piece:
1) Title - I've tried to come up with a title that signals to the reader that the chronology of the piece is backwards, but I'm not sure I've managed it. All advice to this effect would be IMMENSELY helpful.
2) How much sense does the piece make as it is? Do you like it as is, or does it still feel like it should take place in the other direction?
3) Punctuation: Do you like it? Does it work?

"End to Beginning, Lived Life"

Christ.)

to the dying of the light
and to Hades to pay my respects
my solemn flightless way
make I ,Ophelia and Virginia Woolf

.the sea to the lifeblood
mountain stream ,followed I the path
that burnt had been ,cold and clean

,to Georgia ,lonely and looking
at my own wingless bird-back
,bore I myself as a pilgrim

.(shuffle I may my Merlin feet
,but never still will I be 

Sunday, August 19, 2012

Ice

From fire to ice. Huh.

Short piece this time. Not something I REALLY like, but it's something I needed to get out.

"Winter-Heart"

 Still, I can again feel the growling winter
     dawn over my thawed insides,
     can sense the sweep of the Arctic
     and the crystals that will build me,
once more, into who I was.

It has been a long summer,
     but my heart is a season
     and you, my dear, are gilded
     and brown.

I only hope you say the words before I do.

Friday, August 10, 2012

Bonfire

GAAAAAAAARRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRR

I'M STILL NOT HAPPY WITH THIS! PLEASE LEAVE CRITIQUE!

CRITQUE IT! CRITIQUE IT INTO THE GROUND!

The flow of this thing is just driving me nuts. I feel like gnawing my own fingers off in frustration.

I wrote this for a contest with the prompt, "color": "The theme is "Color". You can choose to write about one color, or many. You can describe a situation, person, object, scene - anything, but describe it in color(s). How it looks...makes you feel."

 I decided to approach the prompt sort of like a painting. I suppose another title for this piece might be "A Study in Brown [and orange]". I'm worried I didn't quite address the prompt, though. Thoughts?

As usual, all comments appreciated. Enjoy!

"Hunger"

Fire in the wild isn't the color you think it is.

It's all amber and umber and
terra cotta, one great roaring tower of orange
like the Wrath of God in a chestnut tree.

I can't go back again to Devil's Hollow—
just like so many wolves he will wait,
until I am ready, blazing burnt sienna and shining,
all teeth.

But I'm not ready to give up the ghost yet,
I'm still waiting for an excuse
to travel the galaxy empty-handed.
I want to see those bronze nebulas
gleaming like forest fires.

Oh, lover—I have watched you swim volcanic craters,
have seen your flaming eyes amidst the snow drifts
all brown with dirt. Dragon, mine, you bring
the mists in the morning, set the roads to smoking
after the evening rains, and you came to me as
a henna dawn that time when I
opened my sleepy eyes.

But this really isn't about you, you know.

I am always hungry and like a forest fire
I am eating the cedar crowns brown and bare
just like me, and one day I will call you a fool

And then the sepia, crackling gods will return
from the ends of a caramel sky and race roaring
to meet the great wolf and his brother serpent
and I will go down to die in the heroes' hall,
and become russet, stinking, crow-picked
on the exhausted battlefields.

And then: my hunger at last will die ash-like
and I will not be left to gnaw on the whitewash bones
of the post-apocalyptic paradise, and I will leave you like a widow
tanned and sunburnt and empty of me, hungry on your own.

Sunday, August 5, 2012

Barefoot

UGH, Sonnet, I HATE YOU. I'm so terrible at fixed-form poetry, but a poetry group I belong to convinced me <a ref="http://my.deviantart.com/messages/#/d59gy0a">it was time to have another go at a sonnet</a>, so here I am.

I think generally I did pretty well. Except for all the places I didn't....SONNETS ARE HARD. Gah, for me just getting rhyming and iambic pentameter was hard. RAWRAAWRAWR :iconspazattackplz:

Anyway...enjoy?

"Hold, Youth"

You are verging on knife edges, wild youth:
The pricking of the blade in your bare steps
Marks trees of paper cuts, spells out the truth
that like lime juice keeps the wounds fresh -

You're not yet the person you'll want to be,
And that boy 'cross the room for whom you long,
Wild youth, will swallow you down like sweet tea;
You must feel your bones curled 'round, and all wrong.

Tightrope walker, do not let yourself slide -
Sense the vice-fear like spikes beneath your skin;
Use them well, cliff-walker, toughen your hide,
cling still to the walls, hide even from winds.

Hold - hold, for a boy who shall not, Grendel-
like, crush you warm and wet, small and spindle'd.

Thursday, June 28, 2012

Elementals

Ha'adam is the Hebrew word for "earth-creature," and was the word used in the Hebrew version of Genesis when describing the first being that the Abrahamic god created.

All comments appreciated! Enjoy!

"Ha'adam"


I was born beneath the sign
of the hazel tree, ideal for
wands or divining rods.

On my bad days, like Merlin I
look backwards on the days that are to come,
carry the memory of my future forest-prison.

But on days when I am fearless,
I become Morgaine and I
turn my lacy leaf-petticoats
to face the sun.

Where Our Destination Lies

Holy mother of god. This thing is huge. It originally began as my response to a contest prompt. It is my attempt to write in the style of my amazing friend's poem "Lay Bridge": http://azizriandaoxrak.deviantart.com/favourites/#/d4po01j.

However, after several hours of working on this piece and pouring my heart and soul into it, I have decided: this piece is for me. You are most welcome to comment on it, but for once I will not be accepting a critique on a piece. There is so much about this poem I want to improve, and perhaps at some later point I will go back and really try to hammer it into something. But for now, this is for me. :)




"Divination as a Means of Finding a Way Back"


            1.  I SAY NOTHING I AM THINKING.

For twelve years I have wanted
to do exactly this but suddenly
pronouncing my own name calls up
the question of who it belongs to
in the same breath Like
Solomon I was born a singer
but in the wrong key and my
chords will not carry me
hither and thither Will not
summon the wolves to me only
packs of hungry dogs
stupid with domestication
but nearly feral And like
a hungry ghost I have learned
not to speak against those
who will give me food

            2. A SKETCH OF MYSELF.

                            He says I must have been born
in the wrong culture, he says. I got a taste of
the crackling heat here, heat to drive you crazy,
and suddenly I open my wide arms for
New Orleans, find myself needing the wind from
the Great Plains. Like a buffalo I have the spirit
of the Sun and I carry it with me. I am a plant
of burnt umber,

                            brown, ready and waiting like
sage bushes, like the hill you go to that is best
for collecting juniper sprigs and telling stories. I
fill myself like a teakettle, dress myself in the
handmade poncho from Guatemala that my
mother hates but

                            that I can read with my fingers,
a kind of multicolored Braille, gathered into
sunset, stories that say I don’t really know what
it is I want to do with my life. I told my friend so,
one night when we’d had too much to drink
of beer named for a line of mountains like
Satan’s spine and I said I can’t remember
what it’s all for,
                            can’t find my way back and
there’s a side of me living for future generations
and one side living for the ancestors that fill my soul.

            3. I SPEAK AS A SHAMAN BECAUSE THE SPIRITS LET ME.

An yenow. An yenow th wrst part
sI can’ en remember when I stopd.
When I stopd wanin wateveritwas

in th firsplace. Anislike—Im old,
Aluvasudden. An Im middleaged.

An I really wanna new car, an Im
waitin on the divorce papers, yenow?
An all I really wanna do is tell stories

but slike, there someone tellin me
I can’ do it thaway, thadIm stuck.

            4. I SAY NOTHING I AM THINKING.

It’s just that sometimes I think
it’s psychosomatic Something
I do to myself like yawning or a
headache or the feeling of spider legs
against my skin after I’ve walked
through its web And I am Loki
or Iktomi or Anansi always
bringing it upon myself Like Saynday
I want to be able to dictate
that my stories must only be told
in winter after dark But I am always
fleeing before the forest fires watching
wolves take my nice fat goose feast
away at dusk And I can feel my age
starting to show like Thomas Eliot
once did Can feel the pressure
of childrearing over my head
like a cold front in the
summer mountains Can feel it like
little peaches in my hands
fuzzy little peaches

            5. I SPEAK AS A MEDICINE MAN BECAUSE THE SUN GIVES ME MY WORDS.

                            They will all come to me at some point,
I think. I’ve always had an aura for gathering little chicks
about me, and though I talk some days like coyote I’m
really Momma Bear.

                            I picture my future in many colors. One
in bright blue, pastel like the sky, and in it I keep everything
separate. One side of my toast is buttered, the other plain.
throw it up and it lands always, as luck would have it,
face down. Another is gold and red, the color of earth
and heaven as I sit among the saguaros and learn to sing
again. The last has the colors of the earth, browns and reds
and greens, and in it I choose neither path and both paths
and I stride beaded and gasping across the Plains.

            6. THINGS I ALWAYS SEEM TO SAY.

I have taught myself most rules.
Poe has guidelines for short stories.
Aristotle has requirements for plays.
They all seem to end up like sauces.
Introduce characters, plot, simmer
until reduced to the proper length.

Add ground sea salt to taste.
Fairytales, too, must always begin—
Once upon a time, in a land
far, far away—; conclude:
happily ever after.

There are better rules for horror films.
The Virgin survives, always.
The slut is always the first to die.
Jocks are never intelligent,
but seem nevertheless to have
a talent for leadership.
He will kill everyone, eventually.

I analyze myself like Faulkner.
I am a rage and a thunderclap
and like his novels the most
terrifying parts of myself are
the chapters I least understand.

But still there is something
horrifying about the chapters
that are written in crisp English.

At twenty-five I will marry.
At thirty I will become pregnant
with my first child.
At thirty-three I will give birth to my second.
Tenure achieved like a magic charm by forty.

Live forever in North Carolina.
Travel for two weeks every summer
in a foreign country.
Keep my camera in my fanny pack.
Fill my house with photographs
of my trips, because I lack the will
to describe them otherwise.

            7. AT LAST, MYSELF, AS A PERFORMANCE.

How my morning dreams always look like giants up
on the mountains and how I’ve felt as they said I would

the trial starting and the call like a white wolf’s howl
rising cold and reverberating against the snow

casting the pine dust into my lungs and how I’ve
never told you of all the faces behind my eyes

in the evenings and the ones that rise to greet me
in the mornings just like so many lovers.

            8. I SAY AT LAST WHAT I AM THINKING, WITH TREPIDATION.

Since I moved here, I’ve come to feel this Southern-ness
not like a single culture that can be boasted by a flag
but like a psalm. Like that feeling as you drive the last
thirty miles up the mountain sides and your ears pop
as you crest the last rise to see the thunderstorm that’s
been there all afternoon, waiting for you, waiting to
fill your lungs with heat, and scour them of their dust and
collected pollen clouds.
                                   
                            God is here. He is here and he draws
me and my sense of the South westward, and I can see
it fan out like a map in my head. I think of all the money
it would take to get me to Phoenix, get me to the
Grand Canyon again, and its beautiful red dust that
runs in my blood and calls to me across the distance,
get me there alone.

                            And out of the horizon my in my mind
comes the memory of how I began this poem thinking of
my fear of childbirth, of the nightmare I had when I was
sixteen about telling some future-husband I wanted a divorce.
And how I began this whole poem to say I’d rather write
like Isaac Asimov, and how I wish I didn’t write so
damned much like Wordsworth.

Sunday, June 17, 2012

Complexity from Simplicity (Emergence)


 I am currently reading Neal Stephensen's The Diamond Age, or, A Young Lady's Illustrated Primer, so my head was stuck a bit in Victorian imagery. First decent piece I've written in a while, so it felt nice to do some good writing :) Comments appreciated!

"Raising Girls"

There is nothing in the world but hope
that our children will group up to better us all.

Little girls are a force unto themselves;
in groups they generate their own universal laws,
demonstrate hitherto unknown patterns of gravitation.

We must grow them properly, create their
simply darling little angelfish dresses and teach them
to flee,
daintily, without running and creasing
their starched skirts,
from the cloying, pink jellyfish tentacles:
            their barbs are black and purple, spells
                        bursting open like hydrogen bombs over
                        the Pacific islands,
            black magic, sea ink,
            a body shape too thick to be proper,
            mouths painted red and wide with too much laughter.

“One musn’t—,” and
            “it is rude to—“

Hardest of all is to be the mother
that teaches them;
reminds them that to thrive in this world
their plumage must match the season—
but underneath, they should wear
brightly-colored knickers, and should
always let their hair down once safely
in their own domestic cocoon again.

It is hard to be the mother
that teaches them a debutant emergence,
the delicate language of flowers;

so that they might grow up to become
masters of double entendres (with the French skills
to know what that means), so that with time
they might learn the puns with which to say, secretly, to each other—
“you and me, we know the exact speed
of the rotation of the earth, the temperature
of the water at the bottom of the Mariana Trench;
and we know, the pair of us, that this fish is the kind
that breaks lines and heartstrings.”

But the words that pass between two friends say merely that,
“he is quite the catch…”

Thursday, May 31, 2012

King Arthur

Inspired by a week at Wrightsville Beach, NC.The title is a play off "La Morte d'Arthur," with the word "Slumber" instead of "Death."

"La Sommeil d'Arthur"
 
Transubstantiation always has
the shivering tint of cannibalism.

I partake of his flesh by the sea,
by the sea I gather his bones—
sea shells, like coins.

I am green, still—
grass green, and my King
has grown green as limestone
with waiting.

These many years, I have been searching
for a way to wake Him, for a way
to call his mer-men forth on Neptune’s steeds
in search of the Grail once more.

Wednesday, May 2, 2012

Hermaphrodeities

Wow, this thing is a MONSTER, but I'm really, REALLY pleased with it. I still feel like it needs polishing, but I managed to get my partner, who isn't a big poetry person, to call it "powerful," so I'm PSYCHED. Written based on my 100 Poem Project theme, "hermaphrodeities." You should totally go check out the book by the same name, written by Raven Kaldera.

Written (much faster than I could have anticipated) for :iconlacoterie:'s Transgressions: Vices and Virtues Contest. The prompt: "In keeping with the theme of "transgressions", your topic this year (if you hadn't guessed) is virtues and vices. Is there really a difference between them? Can one person's virtue be another's vice? What makes something fall in one category and not the other?" I promise this is within the 60 line limit! I promise!

SO MANY REFERENCES. Parts of this are meditations on the definitions of "virtue" and "vice" as listed on the contest article, particularly:
vice
1
a : moral depravity or corruption : wickedness
b : a moral fault or failing
c : a habitual and usually trivial defect or shortcoming : foible
4
a often capitalized : a character representing one of the vices in an English morality play
b : buffoon, jester

virtue
6
: a capacity to act : potency
7
: chastity especially in a woman

Other references (because I think they're actually important for understanding the way I played with virtue/vice in this piece, and keep in mind that I DO NOT DO THIS OFTEN) include, in order:
  • The Virgin Mary. One of my middle names is Mary, and my mother chose it because she had great difficulty conceiving, and prayed to the Virgin on the Feast of the Immaculate Conception for a child. Nine months later: TA-DA! Me.
  • Spirit Animal: I am not talking about Native North Americans in this case, but indigenous Central Americans. Many Mayan people (NOT EXTINCT, they still live in Mexico) draw a line in the dirt when a child is born and lay the placenta on it. The first animal to cross is the child's spirit animal, and the child's well-being will be forever tied to that creature.
  • Yarrow: this is a plant often brewed into tea to help improve clairvoyance and is associated with divination.
  • Robert Frost's birches: "Birches" is one of my FAVORITE FAVORITE Frost poems (read here: [link]). One of the interpretations of it is that the birches in the poem are actually phallic symbols. If you want to know more about that, I'm sure you can find that analysis online somewhere.
  • Fourble: IS A REAL WORD. I was so excited. It's a piece of mining equipment, also spelled "forble," but I liked this spelling better :)
  • Heaven help you if you don't know where "fe fi fo fum" comes from. Or the Big Bad Wolf. Go look up Jack and the Beanstalk and Little Red Riding Hood.
  • Victoria bones: Queen Victoria, thanks to constantly wearing a corset, had a waist of only 16" in circumference. Women during this period often used fans to help them breathe.
  • (Light brown hairs: technically a reference to my favorite poem OF ALL TIME, T. S. Elliot's "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock.")
  • FINALLY: Legion comes from the Bible. "Legion" is what a man possessed by multiple demons calls himself. Mark 5:9:[link]

OKAY. I think that covers them all. No wait, one more: the concept of people who are "two spirit" comes from the Navajo. They believe that there are people born with multiple spirits in their bodies, who are both man and woman, and because of this are blessed with greater spiritual power. If there is any gender identity I think fits me most, it is two spirit.

I hope you all enjoy! Sorry for the lengthy explanation >_<

Questions for critique:
1. What do you think of the flow? I feel like some of the imagery might not have a strong enough tie to the rest of the piece.
2. What do you think of the sections? I felt like they needed to be separated out somehow, but I feel like this could still be played with more. Thoughts?
3. I remain skeptical of the opening couplet. Comments appreciated.
4. HELP ME WITH THE TITLE! PLEASE!

All comments welcome! Thanks for reading!

"Poetry is Simply a Way to Stretch Myself Skyward"


In the end we’re all myths, hermaphroditic deities.
Our names are the most real things about us.

i. My mother named me for the Virgin
and I carry her legacy in my blood—

she is my spirit animal; the creature
who crawled first across the placenta line
outside my home. In truth, I imagine all
are wolves or coyotes drawn by the smell
of fresh blood.

ii. There is no purity in childhood:
we are simply jesters with blistered feet
and the purple skins of blueberries under our fingernails.

We feel no remorse.
Our bodies have not yet been burdened
with the weight of other hearts.

iii.
potency   portency   portents   ports

Before I make my tea I’ll watch my
little yarrow plants unfold themselves
fleshlike and phallic, petite bent men
hoping for heaven—a row of Frost’s
birch trees. Hardly potent in the dead of winter,
but witchly I will drink their secrets down.

iv.
foible   fourble    feeble   fable
                        fe fi fo fum

If power is measured by the air
with which we fill our lungs,
then call me Big Bad and scratch me
behind my furred triangle ears—these large teeth
were not made to bite
[you]—

if power is measured by lung capacity
then this great big ribcage of mine
cannot be contained by white Victoria bones;
I will need no laced fan to breathe,
my virtue is not the geometric shapes
of clothed bodies. I go about with

uncovered ankles, dusty and decorated
with light brown hairs.

I am a breathtaking Navajo tapestry.
Stick figures I may be, but I,
Legion, am many, and we wear the sun
as our crown.

Hark all ye who lay claim to only half yourselves—
on your wedding days, you shall speak
with breathtaken voices.

Mine will always rise in song.
 

Saturday, April 28, 2012

Cliff Diving

Hmmm. I like this, but then I don't. Totally came up with an awesome idea for a setting for a dystopian futuristic novel today. Now I just need to actually write it...but let's be realistic here, I'll never have the drive to actually FINISH that idea.

NaPoWriMo day 26. Almost done!


PS. Why yes. That *is* a reference to Bladerunner. Oh, Harrison Ford. So beautiful at that age.

"The Plunge"

What have we to look forward to
but a dystopian future,
lives of running along knife blades,
lives like cliff-diving
and searching for our seeds in sand—

will they be balls of string, leading us to the sea
or minotaurs ravaging our bones?

—seeds that we will christen ourselves:
deserts devoid of sun.  

Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Satellite

This went....somewhere

I meditated on a prompt to think about something that didn't happen. And this resulted. What the hell?

No, I have never been fitted for a wedding dress. But damn, did I have to fend that one guy's mother off.... It was a near miss, let me tell you...


Comments appreciated!

"Trajectory"

I wonder what would have happened
if we hadn't awkwardly made out on my couch
that night.

What I most dread is that there was something
inevitable about it, that your mother
fitting me for her old wedding dress
dragged the whole thread of my life
inexorably forward.

That we were somehow built as
satellites; and all I can do
is think about all the other stars
I might have seen if some NASA scientist
had calculated the trajectory of my flight
just wrong enough, and set me free
of the earth's gravity field. 

Sunday, April 22, 2012

Puzzle Pieces

NaPoWriMo day 22: OMIGOD A LONG POEM? NOWAI!


I feel like there are pieces of this poem in other poems. I've directly lifted my "poem" from yesterday. I thought it needed a place in a larger piece.

I'd love to hear any and all comments, but I am especially interested in how the piece flows, and in how well you think the three sections work.


"Puzzle Child"

i. Childhood Memory
As a child, I took my world in
through my palms, took in monkey bar splinters

and made myself for the first time as a weed beside
Walden Pond, as a clump of tenacious leaves fearing anthills.

My philosophy began as a collection of wood posts
marking the limits of a man's life at a time in mine

when names were simply the sounds that belonged
to people, not the other way 'round, when the stories

didn't yet blossom from my head, were still
daisy buds or infant Athenas. But I have always been

a mottled creature, a moss growth of
corresponding shapes. As a third-grader, I

marked these shapes on a world map with
brightly-colored pins, without understanding their names.

ii. Blood Memory
In my mind, Eastern Europe is
a black forest drowned in mist.

It stretches across the Atlantic
to the mining towns of Pennsylvania

where my great-grandfather filled his lungs
with black dust. It is the bodies of my great-aunts,

those earth mothers with their cliff bodies and witch laughs
and I am sure they all must polka in their graves.

Sicily is the bone-deep nourishment,
the roots of tomato vines and basil plants

tangled in my veins, crawling into my chest
through the recipes we only know through our blood.

Ireland's softness—its songs and its stories
have crept their delicate way into my breast,

but I see them only as a coastal village—
a stone church on cliffs overlooking the sea

and the raised voices of my family members
as we sing our laments with pressed palms

and say an Ave for those who are already gone:
We sleep no more in Ireland's sunshine or shadows.

iii. Earth Memory
Virginia is always tinted with red clay.
I was a deer, then, flashing frightened through

the wooded stretches of paths to avoid the demons
that waited for me. October brought piercing cold,

mackintosh apples and a harvest fair when I
buried myself face-first into a haystack labyrinth.

I fashioned myself as an elf-child, sang of
fifteen birds in five fir trees and gathered

sprigs of holly in winter to hang at my doors
and windows, to ward off the evil faces in the dark.

North Carolina came as a shock, a wave of stifling heat
and humidity that broke against me, swept me up

in its arms and dragged its feet in my wake.
I waded through its eddies and swirls

and coughed up whole trees of yellow dust
in August, waited for its thunderstorms in

hurricane season, the balm to soothe our
collective parched throats that rarely came.

Ultimately, I took in my home through my palms,
through sawdust and not doing handstands so I could

avoid the red ants' nests. I have given up trying to
sculpt myself, have let my many selves run riot,

let even my sweat run like rampant animals,
clear and quiet, burrowing into my armpit hairs.

I feel most at home in the summer,
when the years-long drought possesses the land

like a herd of horses, when even the rain that comes
flashes over my land too fast to do anything

but run with the dry brown horses
away to the sea, when the clouds

gather their electricity, slowly,
like a crown over my head.

Always, it is the thunder that heralds my homecoming,
the thunder that calls me homeward.  

Thursday, April 19, 2012

Terraforming

I actually am quite pleased with this. Formatting it has been terrible, though. Augh. Still working on formatting. Any advice on how to justify text would be MOST welcome.

I also appreciate all comments and critique!



"Terraforming"

i do not know what to say to the moon when i
wander between the mesa shelves, a cliff
dweller and an unwanted library book
passing from hand to hand and never quite
brown or red enough to hide myself from the
coyotes. i remember something of the south-
west—my hands sticky with desert powder
and cactus sap, and a feeling i can't explain
without the gleaming scrub brush beetles to
draw my nazca lines. i can tell you, though,
of when i willed myself to fit within the
cracks of canyon walls and tried to sink my
toes down into the colorado river. terra will
not fit my form, so i must longingly fit mine to hers.

Monday, April 16, 2012

June Flowers

WOW I actually got this poem done EARLY today. Probably because I am trying to put off work on this final essay. *sigh* NaPoWriMo day 16!!!

Based this piece off the LOVELY photograph:
http://browse.deviantart.com/photography/people/expressive/?order=9&offset=24#/d23klyf

I'm not sure what I think of the piece. So much of what I've been writing lately feels like bits and pieces of something bigger. Hmm. Perhaps for my final day I shall take all my scraps and fit them together?

Anyway, written for the topic "June flowers" for my 100 Poem Project. Check out some June flowers from my part of the world here: http://www.exploreasheville.com/seasonal-fun/spring/flower-bloom-schedule/ (click on the reddish "June" button just below the description.)

"Losing my Head for the Summer"

I am wildflower,
a flame azalea drawing
its roots up from the asphalt -
an ox-eyed daisy,
ox-blood and whirling,
hair like the tops of cogon grass
caught in a
westward wind.

My head will come back to me
in September,
chased by the tornadoes
from across the Plains;
it will catch me up in time
for hurricane season

when I will don my hat again
to keep my head from spinning
and to ward off further freckling.

Sunday, April 15, 2012

James Taylor

Now the first of December
was covered with snow,
and so was the turnpike
from Stockbridge to Boston.

All the Berkshires, they seemed dreamlike
on account of that frostin',
ten miles behind me,
and ten thousand more to go...


Oh, James Taylor. I love you :)


So yeah. Bit of a play on "Sweet Baby James." NaPoWriMo day 15! Two weeks complete!

"On Account of that Frosting"

My mom can't help chuckling
when people wax poetic
about the Smoky Mountain slopes in October.

Says they must've never seen the Berkshires,
glowing dreamlike and bonfire-frosted
in the autumn sun.

Saturday, April 14, 2012

Particle Physics

Helen's Bridge in Asheville is said to be haunted by a woman who hung herself from the bridge after losing her daughter in a fire. Apparently she is still looking for her daughter. If you wish to summon her, you must say "Helen, come forth" three times while sitting beneath her bridge. Those who do so say that their cars refuse to start after the fact, and some claim they have captured this ghostly lady on film.

I don't care, I was just intrigued into writing a poem about it :)



I was trying to work in some particle physics imagery; not sure how much I like it/how well it works. Thoughts appreciated.

"Helen's Bridge"

Helen, come forth.

You never went as far as Greece.
Hell, you never left the mountains.
I found myself drawn to the road
that runs beneath your bridge,
my fear like an electric charge
dragging me in ever smaller circles to you.

I should tell you:
I am afraid of heights. The thought
of a single length of rope suspended from the bridge
as all that keeps me from crashing against the asphalt below
makes me shiver.
I am not your daughter. Do not take me with you.
Perhaps I may discharge the energy that keeps us bound
with burning sage, a respectful nod and
a quartz crystal thrown into the ravine.
May it fill your gaping heart hole and
let me go.

Helen, come forth.

But I cannot chart your wave and function—
I may never know the time and place of you
at the same time.
I dread you following me home,
looking over my shoulder in the mirror
like a particle seeking its mate.
We are opposites, and were I to
press my fingers to the glass
we would evaporate in a flash of light.

I will not summon you,
I will be careful to only ever
speak your name twice, and beg you
to let my car start up again normally,
let my headlights lead me faithfully home.

Sweet lady who will never see Troy: rest in peace. 

Tuesday, April 10, 2012

The Universe

FAKE LATIN TITLE! YAY! Seriously not even close to real Latin. ANYWAY.

I created my own poetic fixed form for this piece. This was TOUGH. I wanted to do something that was a combination of haiku and vilanelle, and THIS is what I got.

For those who are interested, the structure is thus (note that I have followed the rules for haiku as far as syllables are concerned, therefore the syllable count is more of a guideline):

A (5 syllables)
B (7 syllables)
C (5 syllables)

A (or close variation, as you see above) (5)
X (5)
X (5)

B (7)
X (7)
X (7)

C (5)
X (5)
X (5)

X(5)
X (7)
Bv (7)
Cv (7)
A (5)

Xv indicates a variation on the wording of the line. Because of this, I am titling my poetic form "Variation on a Theme," 'cuz why the hell not? Please note: X simply means whatever line - it is a stand-in for "other line."


Here it is! Comments welcome, except I'm not going to change anything 'cuz this form is HARD TO USE.

"Microcosmia Universa"

Microcosmic:
prepare yourself for the plunge.
Now—take a deep breath.

A microcosm,
silent iceberg tip,
silent like stars.

Prepare yourself for the plunge.
Lacking the stamina of
sea lions, you may drown.

Now take a deep breath;
heart as nebula,
as hydrogen gas.

The oxygen leaves
lungs flat as comet tails.
Preparing for the plunge,
lacking air for a breath—
micro-cosmic.  

Change

I have been dwelling quite a bit on death lately, haven't I?

NaPoWriMo day 9! All comments welcome!

"Pygmalion's Bride"

We're all fixated on death—
arrows, all, streaking towards our targets.

Ovid understood it,
understood the metamorphosis
of sinew and bone to soil.

A one hundred foot long
pink lightning smear stretched
along the highway
where the reaper reached out his hand
and plucked a rabbit from the side of the road.

The day when target, arrow, bow and hand become
one and the same—
transformed to something more than stone
and less than flesh—
for now is small,
a mayfly I may swat away
     with a complaint about the open window.  

Saturday, April 7, 2012

Boundaries

NaPoWriMo day 7! One week in!!!
Completed based on the prompt from the official blog today. I did a purple poem :)


"Figs"


We dragged ourselves from the earth's
purpurous hollows,
with pomegranate seeds in our bellies,
the violet light of dusk blinding us.

Marked, we were.
Purple as death—
slathered with mulberry juice,
fresh as the womb.
We pressed potpourri to our eyelids,
crushed lavender in our fists
and drowned our fingers
in the quiet amaranthine soil.
Our fingernails came up
        dyed indigo.

And one day we blossomed figs
and cried
when we split them open and realized
we still had pomegranate seeds inside.

We are barely a shallow line in the sand
between here and never-been-born.

Friday, April 6, 2012

Weaving

So far this piece is untitled. NAPOWRIMO DAY 6. Spending the weekend down at Wrightsville beach with my partner's family :)

All comments appreciated!

"Untitled"

Grandmother used to sit me in her lap and tell me
the story of how Momma Moon taught our ancestors to weave,
how she sent her drop-spindle down to us like spider's silk.

And I imagined Momma Moon climbing her way back home
        across Appalachian pine trees.

Thursday, April 5, 2012

Vincent Van Gogh

NaPoWriMo day 5! I am off to Wrightsville beach this afternoon. Looking forward to chilling out a bit (more) :)

Had some fun with this one!

All comments welcome.

"When I am Old I Shall be Like Vincent Van Gogh"

When I am old
I shall go about in an old straw hat
with my ears bandaged, for I will not need to hear.

I will lie in hayfields
and watch the crows fly into a sky so blue
it reflects the hell that is waiting for me.

And I will cackle to myself
and wait to become an ornery old scarecrow
with a stick so far up my ass it keeps my aging spine from slipping.

At last,
when the darkness comes for me, I will put on my purple funeral dress
and lay out tea and cakes for the reaper, for I can't see a reason
not to be civil about the whole thing.

Tuesday, April 3, 2012

Down to Earth

NAPOWRIMO DAY 3!!! :) (For day 2's poem, look here.)

WOO HOO! MORE ORAL LITERATURE!

I created my own fable :) This was fun. I was inspired by today's NaPoWriMo prompt, and by Peter Gabriel's Down to Earth (from the end credits of Wall-e!).

I had fun creating an Aesop-esque fable, but I tried turning it on its head a little bit. See if you can figure out how ;)

Not entirely sure about how smoothly this reads. Oral literature is so different from simply prose or poetry, but I was still definitely trying to write a poem. Any comments to this effect are greatly appreciated.

I'm also worried about the flow in general, in terms of the balance of story and imagery. Thoughts?

All comments welcome!

PS. YES, SPARROW AND FOX ARE BOTH MALE. The point of the story isn't their sexuality.

"The Wedding of Sparrow and Fox"

One morning,
Fox left his den in search of food.
He searched the ground and found nothing,
and searched the trees and found nothing,
and finally looked to the sky,
where he saw a sparrow with lovely, shining feathers.

For a while, Fox simply watched, gathering his courage,
then finally he stepped forward and called out,
"Hello!
What are you doing up there?"
Sparrow whirled and wheeled and called back,
"I am enjoying the feel of the wind in my feathers
and the sun on my back."

Then Fox asked, "Won't you come down to earth and speak to me?"
Sparrow looked at Fox's lustrous, russet fur
and thought of Fox's kind, soothing voice.
But Sparrow remembered the stories Grandfather Aesop told,
and so he also saw Fox's gleaming teeth.
"No thank you," Sparrow replied,
"For the breeze is too lovely and the sky too blue."

So Fox thought for a moment, and then said,
"Then why don't you sit on the top-most branch of that tree?
Then you can enjoy the blue sky, and still talk to me."
And Sparrow couldn't see why not,
so he flew down to the highest branch of the tree
and together Fox and Sparrow laughed and talked.

---

And from then on,
every morning Fox left his den and went to the tree
and Sparrow came down from the sky.
And every day,
Fox would say to Sparrow, "Why don't you
come down one more branch? The sky is just as blue
and we will be able to hear each other better."
So every day, Sparrow hopped one branch lower.

And things went on as some things do,
and as Sparrow moved closer to the earth
he also grew closer to Fox,
until one day Fox asked Sparrow to marry him.
Sparrow ruffled his feathers with pleasure and embarrassment
and said yes.

Then on one fine spring day,
all the woodland creatures came together to celebrate.
The ceremony took place beneath garlands of
Queen Anne's Lace and Black Eyed Susans,
dandelions and daisy chains.
Choirs of birds sang hymns,
Great Horned Owl performed the union,
and Grandmother Grizzly prepared a wedding feast
of salmon and honey.

After the ceremony was over,
Fox and Sparrow met by their tree.
Sparrow perched in the lowest branch,
and Fox looked up at him adoringly, and said,
"Now that we are going to live together,
won't you come down to the earth
and join me?"
And with a smile, Sparrow did.

Fox went home happy to his den that day,
with new feathers for his pillow
and new bones to pick clean his teeth.

And the question we must ask ourselves is not,
"Why did Sparrow leave his branch?"
but rather,
"Why did Fox wait so long for his meal?"

Sunday, April 1, 2012

Gothic Style

Woot! NaPoWriMo poem 1!!!

Written for my 100 Poem Project, for the topic "Gothic Style." I played off Edgar Allen Poe's poem "<a href="http://www.poemhunter.com/poem/annabel-lee/">Annabel Lee,</a>" generally considered to be a pretty creepy poem...

Poor Ed. :(

Anyway, I'm not entirely satisfied with this. That last sentence: oh, my, it goes on FOREVER. And I'm not QUITE sure about some of the imagery....hmmm....

All comments appreciated!

"Oh, Ed: I am not Your Annabel Lee Anymore"

You have learned to move
with the silence of ghosts,
the tense noiselessness
of bricked-up walls
—shut out the night, and
shut out the night.

I, too, have changed.
I am a mausoleum,
my darling Poe—
you curl up inside me like a child.

But there is hardly anything left to hold;
all that is left of me
is a house of moth-eaten lace,
green as arsenic,
collapsing amidst purple lightning flowers,

falling wingless over cliffs
that crash like waves against a dark sea.