A city with a history of going up in flames:
Two great fires almost bringing the Quarter to an end.
But many forget a more recent one steeped in more shame.
The UpStairs Lounge never had its fifteen minutes of fame—
just a cozy place where gay men didn't need to pretend.
But even in a city used to its outrageous flames
thirty two would die, three of them buried without their names.
Pastor Mitch, who went back in—found charred, clutching his boyfriend—
reminds us of those pioneers who loved despite the shame.
The detectives never bothered much with assigning blame,
never called it arson, just "undetermined origin."
This city known for its ceremony, more so than flame,
held no memorials. Families left bodies unclaimed
while Reverend Larson, fused to the window's bars, would spend
the night there dead—how did firefighters not feel ashamed?
That first gay church was just celebrating its self the same
as anyone has (and still does) when striving to ascend
from a dark hard history that should be thrown to the flames.
If only they would light our way, disintegrate the shame.
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Issue 65
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Editor's Note
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POETRY
- Thomas Jay Balkany
- Bruce Bond
- Kristene Brown
- Jeff Burt
- Regina Colonia-Willner
- David Cooke
- William J. Cordeiro
- Cheney Crow
- Sharon Dolin
- David Faldet
- Martin Jude Farawell
- Soheila Ghaussy
- Ann Herlong-Bodman
- Michael Lauchlan
- James Lineberger
- John Mahnke
- Neil McCarthy
- Michael Montlack
- Dave Nielsen
- Mark Thomas Noonan
- Linda Tomol Pennisi
- F. Daniel Rzicznek
- Robert Lavett Smith
- Philip Terman
- Randi Ward
- Yim Tan Wong
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FICTION