Friday, September 30, 2016
Soodabeh Saeidnia writes
Hangover
I hang my tired shoes
on a power line
with the height of tireless hopes
Not to fall down again
Not to be worn by a naughty kid, whose life-time running has not quenched her
playing thirst
Madame Gautreau Drinking a Toast -- John Singer Sargent
Christopher Hopkins writes
Lime
the drink talks to me,
in such beautiful rhymes.
I try to write it down,
with little success.
The traffic calls and the raise
rumbles like a drum
and my coffee cup shakes
and I whistle the tune all day.
Your beauty pokes and kicks,
and luck and love is
as lucky as I am.
To be, with you.
I could lime the outers
of my life
ready for the fall,
but
love,
loving with you
Joseph Lisowski writes
RULER RULES!
“Repeat after me!” Sister Mary Ludmilla shouted, as she beat time against her
palm with a heavy wooden ruler. “A noun names a person, place or thing!”
The class dutifully complied but the response was merely a murmur to her
roar. Everyone obeyed, that is, except Jesse who sat slumped in the back
of the room, his vacant eyes fixed on the window where a heavy rain
beats. He was a recent transfer from Central Public High School to this 9th
grade English class at St. Francis Academy. Actually, he was expelled;
the Catholic school recently began accepting problem students as part of their
ongoing commitment to community service. Jesse had very little sleep the
night before. His mother’s new boyfriend decided to suddenly take a
parental role with Jesse and his 8 year old brother. The guy’s idea of
discipline to was to use the steel end of a flyswatter against the back of the
legs on the young boy immediately and often when the youngster demanded his
mother’s attention.
“Young man, I asked you a question!” Hovering over him, brandishing her ruler, Sister Ludmilla screamed. “Answer me, you dummy!” Her voice rose to eardrum breaking decibels.
“Huh?” Jesse uttered, his eyes still fixed on the rain.
“I’m talking to you, dumbkoff!” She stabbed his shoulder with the instrument.
“Sit on a fork,” he mumbled as he tried to sit more erect.
“How dare you insult me?” She demanded.
The first blow she landed on the top of his head was perhaps the last time she would apply that rule as her standard of measure. Jesse grabbed it out of her hand and pitched it to the front of the room. Then in one fluid motion, he rose from his seat, his right hand formed a fist and shot straight into the hairy wart on the nun’s chin. Sister Mary Ludmilla crashed into the window pane, and in what seemed to the students an endless cascade of black cloth, she slid to the floor.
Gerónima de la Asunción García Yánez y De La Fuente -- Diego Rodriguez de Silva Velázquez
[The motto on top reads, "It is good to await the salvation of God in silence" ]
GRACELESSLY WAITING
Now, hum, chant, dust off the altar.
Calf's already gutted for slaughter.
All I need now is the priestess.
All I need now is the priestess.
"Just hold me in honor, hold me in awe,
my fine and gaudy mistress.
I pray you, Make me your god."
But you released me, to wander
beyond the range of my hymns.
And left me here to conjure
you, incarnate, back from a dream.
So, carefully, I detail our temple
with incense to be purified.
But I'm running low on these candles
while watching the calfling putrefy.
Keith Francese writes
the growing overuse of lens flares
and the bandings
rent
opaque
gossamer
acquainted
with time
and time
having reached a
long pause
comes a moment
appropriate
for quiet
elongated along a
wide, pale hall
…
this winter has
been aired out
of reaches
gypsum
and unharried
a lifetime of
voyage
vaguely
dreamt,
ages upon ages
cast diminutive
japed, sun
swept
[Lens flare on stairs of Borobudur temple, Magetang, Indonesiato enhance the sense of ascending]
Jason Gungabissoon shoots
'This is the only country in the world where the stranger is not asked 'How do you like this place.' This is indeed a large distinction. Here the citizen does the talking about the country himself; the stranger is not asked to help. You get all sorts of information. From one citizen you gather idea that Mauritius was made first, and then heaven; and that heaven was copied after Mauritius." -- Mark Twain
Heather Jephcott writes
The
Beauty of a Smile, Wear a Smile
Smiles
snippets
that fit the lock of each person's heart
snippets
that fit the lock of each person's heart
Smiles
the beginnings of love
and hearts at home
the beginnings of love
and hearts at home
Smiles
pure,
opening glory
pure,
opening glory
Smiles
flying by
faces showing happiness
flying by
faces showing happiness
Smiles
pretty things
don't forget to put one on
pretty things
don't forget to put one on
Smiles
help to stop another's tears
help to stop another's tears
Big Smile -- Yue Min Jun
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