Summer afternoon, fixing to storm.
I can almost hear the hands adjusting the clouds,
fingers fastening each drop
to its line of air.
When I pluck a blade of grass and twist it
between my fingers,
a smell rises,
clean, clandestine.
I begin to feel I am being watched.
I look around and hear only the heat
under the dark clouds
crackle.
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Issue 64
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Editor's Note
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POETRY
- Jose Angel Araguz
- Weston Cutter
- Liz Dolan
- Andrew Grace
- Elizabeth T. Gray, Jr.
- Alex Greenberg
- Carolyn Guinzio
- Kathleen Hellen
- Susan L Kolodny
- Daniel Lawless
- Susannah Lawrence
- Cynthia Manick
- Lyndsie Manusos
- D Nurkse
- Merit O'Hare
- Kryssa Schemmerling
- Sara Slaughter
- R. T. Smith
- Nicole Tong
- Marcus Whalbring
- Mimi White
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FICTION
-
ESSAY
- David Rigsbee On The Poetry Of John Skoyles
-
REVIEW
- David Rigsbee reviews My Tranquil WAr
by Anis Shivani
- David Rigsbee reviews My Tranquil WAr
Issue > Poetry
Where It Was Dark
You could hear the trees
when I brushed my hair,
in each downward stroke
cypresses.
My child once asked if she could hide there
during a storm,
that the color was darker
than when she hid under the bed,
said that where it was dark
nothing was there.
Now where my hair once was
short strands
bow.
I see them in the mirror.
Behind me,
dark figures
slack,
crouch—
pray,
pray.
when I brushed my hair,
in each downward stroke
cypresses.
My child once asked if she could hide there
during a storm,
that the color was darker
than when she hid under the bed,
said that where it was dark
nothing was there.
Now where my hair once was
short strands
bow.
I see them in the mirror.
Behind me,
dark figures
slack,
crouch—
pray,
pray.