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Issue 72
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Editor's Note
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POETRY
- D.M. Aderibigbe
- Sebastian Agudelo
- Bruce Bond
- Fleda Brown
- Nick Conrad
- Ellen Devlin
- Fay Ann Dillof
- Peter Grandbois
- Danielle Hanson
- Mark Heinlein
- Karen Paul Holmes
- David M. Katz
- Laura McCullough
- Michael Montlack
- Aaron J. Poller
- Mike Riello
- Eric Paul Shaffer
- Kenneth Sherman
- Phillip Sterling
- Laura Van Prooyen
- Jeremy Voigt
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FICTION
Issue > Poetry
Surrounded by People
Someone has overwatered the peace lily in the foyer; now
it's yellow and drooping and the leaves have blackened edges.
And people, especially people with sleek sports cars, are parking
in the handicapped spaces. Meanwhile I have been reading
Crime and Punishment, re-visiting Raskolnikov in the grip
of his idea (from his reading!) that if one breaks through rules,
he can be Napoleon and triumph over the mundane, so he murders
the vile old pawnbroker (who cares about her?) and her daughter
(accidentally!) with an axe. But no, he's not superman, he's
wracked with guilt, not that he cares for the old woman, or
anyone, it seems, but still, this act is as much degradation as his
(previously unrecognized) soul can bear before he breaks through
to love—for Sonya, the prostitute! This is the basic architecture.
I've poured the excess water from the peace lily, but about
the parking, there's nothing to be done except complain silently.
We're all full of ideas, even the poems have an idea they sometimes
let fly at the end in a white passion, as if it were an axe. Then they
listen for what's out there afterward. Like Raskolnikov, they wait
on the other side of the door, ready for anything, with their prepared
reasons, excuses. Where is the meaning in all this? It's all trying
to Live in some grand way while the actual living was going on—
the novel, the poem, and at the end certainly, nothing more, it's all
done. There's nothing more to say, the page runs out, the effort,
holy or unholy, to see beyond. It's all personality, all these people
living in their apartments, carrying their groceries up in little carts.