The sun has grown gruesome
and given consent
to keep harvesting
the burnt field.
We haven't learned
to say no.
An indifferent tractor
kicks up ash
and crow shadow.
We thank upward
outside us
and stone.
Within this shared body
it's civil to believe in
a fallow and burning word
for green. Let's say
verdant. Let's say
impossible return. A hole
in the center of every word
shaped like an exit.
There is no shame
in not speaking it.
That
there is no word for the act
but an alphabet of consequences.
The existence of crows
understood by their shadows.
I don't know what I've done
to the field.
But I do not own it.
The wall
I don't remember erecting
around my home
is still a wall.
I cannot choose
the side I'll die on.
-
Issue 67
-
Editor's Note
-
POETRY
- Jean C. Berrett
- Sally Bliumis-Dunn
- Aozora Brockman
- Catherine Carter
- Elaine Fletcher Chapman
- Alice Clara Gavin
- Michael Homolka
- Josh Kalscheur
- Dore Kiesselbach
- Brandon Krieg
- Peter LaBerge
- Steve Lambert
- Jennie Malboeuf
- Peter Munro
- Joe Pan
- Simon Perchik
- Nora Hutton Shepard
- Matthew Stark
- Vivian Teter
- John Sibley Williams
- Matthew Wimberley
-
FICTION