I remember the tall, lean frame
Of my Grandfather
Who wanted to grow teak
Instead of the puny bananas
And fibrous dribble of sugar cane,
On his loamy, ancestral land.
He wanted a tree to match his bearing,
To carry forth his nobility.
No mere fruit could assuage his ambitions.
He desired the very thigh of life
The joints and backs of tables,
The frames of buildings.
Split into planks on the carpenter's block
It's arid tapestry
Revealing the rings of years,
Expanding into the eye of decades.
When he died, his beloved trees
Were still saplings.
Green with the many envies of youth.
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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
Los Angeles
The tallest of the palm trees here are all bent
At the very top they camber to the right or left
As if the thin air has made them dizzy.
Or as if they have peeked over the top of some invisible fence
And horror stricken by what they see, start to droop.
But it's too late for them to avert their eyes,
These bone thin monarchs with anemic crowns.
The creaking earth wants to whisper her secrets to their roots
As the ocean and desert on two sides link arms
To form the nystagmic eyes of the lemniscate.
At the very top they camber to the right or left
As if the thin air has made them dizzy.
Or as if they have peeked over the top of some invisible fence
And horror stricken by what they see, start to droop.
But it's too late for them to avert their eyes,
These bone thin monarchs with anemic crowns.
The creaking earth wants to whisper her secrets to their roots
As the ocean and desert on two sides link arms
To form the nystagmic eyes of the lemniscate.