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Issue 81
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Editor's Note
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POETRY
- Michael Bazzett
- Lana Bella
- Nancy Bryan
- Lauren Camp
- Cyrus Cassells
- Lucia Cherciu
- Richie Hofmann
- Juleen Eun Sun Johnson
- Rebecca Lehmann
- Greg Maddigan
- Marilyn McCabe
- Dunya Mikhail
- Alex Miller
- Julia Anna Morrison
- Jeremy Radin
- Supritha Rajan
- Nicholas Reading
- Brad Trumpfheller
- Kara Van De Graaf
- J. S. Westbrook
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FICTION
Issue > Poetry
Solar Eclipse: Self-Portrait in Silhouette
—inert, the dark
center of her eye:
a sphere
ensphered, burred
like the sun
mured in the heat
of middle-age
and jelled to a stillness
that accretes
and into further stillness
declines—
true motion
is pause, the break
that silence makes
in speech
when emotion moves
outside its reach
and mute
lives all dispute
in souls that hide
riot and wreckage.
Call this quiet then
my first language—
a hyphen
suspended in
oblivion
like a beam
on which my thoughts
would tilt and slide
toward the orbit of
her eye—
that small black sea
where my stares
did hook, turn
back at me and look
or skitter like stones
with wonder and wander
until stunned with sky
they fell—elsewhere's
starling, bedded in the far
flow of under.
I remember
this: my little head
mirrored in hers
in verso
like a page
on whose back I read
an ageless story
of the I
as lack or endless
vertigo.
But how could she—
mother of
nothing—rear in me
such excess song?
Something, somewhere
went wrong.
Or is it memory
that spills in me
the moon's lunacy,
occults all liveliness
in her face
and leaves me
in its eclipse
standing
but erased
to a briefness
that to me is
totality?
In which case
the fault lies with me
(not she) if
like the starry sky
I one day die,
loaded for bear—
purest of airs—
shot through
with sun.
Self (III)
Two bees,
twinned in form
and force,—
(above
the lavender,
above the crabapple
tree blossoms),
at times in near
embrace, at times
in zigzag or spiraling
pursuit paused
at sparring distance—
climb
the ladderless air.
There is no
unfastening them
from the ongoing
ongoingness
of nothing
to which their bodies
cling, so
committed are they
to their quarrel,
to the pure gold
that drifts
steadily down—
a wealth
so well dispersed
as to sleeve us all
in sameness.
It is May.
The month that speaks
in the grammar of
permission,
and they are
with a happiness
that exceeds
their daily allowance
afflicted
and, in the swarming heat
of early Spring,
make from bitter, dirt-
sweet pollen
a purer
sweet for store.
Nature is instinct
with the tempo of
the intentionless—
here a petaled mouth
opens
to say something
of little or no
consequence,
and here another empties
onto the tongue
of strangeness.
So much happens—
unknown
and unknowable—
in the sleep of reason,
an openness
and delivery into harm
past breaking
that is everywhere
both end and hidden plot.
This must be why
everything falls
in the morning light
toward the edge
of the lawn,
why we wake
fed with finishing
and done for.