Is there nothing then
inside this charred heart?
Something trembles
like a door hanging by one hinge.
But a heartbeat?No.
Down river, an ice jam masses
under a railroad trestle.
Who's on that train?
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Issue 55
-
Editor's Note
-
Poetry
- Abayomi Animashaun
- Justin Skylar Belote
- Brenda Butka
- Melisa Cahnmann-Taylor
- MRB Chelko
- Marcus Civin
- Susan Comninos
- Rebecca Cook
- William G Davies Jr.
- Russell Susumu Endo
- Victoria Givotovsky
- Ashwin Kannan
- Anja Konig
- Leonard Kress
- Tim B Muren
- Jeffrey Perkins
- Gretchen Primack
- Billy Reynolds
- Austin Smith
- Joseph Stanton
- David Thacker
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Fiction
Issue > Poetry
Small Rain
I could move and see the sea,
but I do not.
This morning a green tree
intrudes its many leaves.
A west wind blows.
I wait for the small rain.
(ii)
I would move and see the sea,
But I cannot.
My limbs are rooted to the bed.
The west wind agitates
a thousand, thousand leaves.
Stillno small rain.
(iii)
I could move and see the sea,
but I will not.
The sea is for the dreamer.
Wind rips the tree.
I have no dream,
hear no small rain.
Lament
As time passes, as what's called life
returns, as days begin again
to differentiate themselves
into yesterday, tomorrow
and today, I now find myself
vulnerable to lesser sorrows:
his voice, but pianissimo
he never spoke that way before,
even as a child his voice was strong,
but now, being dead, he whispers
from unshut drawers, or partially
open closet doors, words hard
for me to understand so few
so pianissimo.
returns, as days begin again
to differentiate themselves
into yesterday, tomorrow
and today, I now find myself
vulnerable to lesser sorrows:
his voice, but pianissimo
he never spoke that way before,
even as a child his voice was strong,
but now, being dead, he whispers
from unshut drawers, or partially
open closet doors, words hard
for me to understand so few
so pianissimo.