~~~~~~~~~~~~   (the poetry)  WORM ~~~~~~~~~~~~ 32




 
 
 
 
 
 
               Prospero At Breakfast

               Top-billed, you might expect a grand hotel
               while cast and crew make do with B&Bs;
               but no, you're stuck in 'Braemar' (vacancies,
               bathrooms en-suite). You wake to Prospero's cell
               spruced up in Laura Ashley; Ariel
               deflowering Miranda next door. Please
               Do Not Disturb, some hope! Breakfast, you squeeze
               two cups from one tea-bag, slick hair with gel,
               then enter with rehearsed panache; a head
               or two might turn or whisper to a friend,
               "Who's that?" "Not Alan Bates, I think he's dead."

               Still, you tame the matinee; gradually
               the sniggering kids are hushed, and by the end
               applaud enough to set an old magician free.
 
               © Alan Wickes
 
 
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
 
 
 
 
 

               Mars Poetica
 
               He wants accessible, wants to peer
               into the cupboard with a thousand watts
               of light, wants to see the cans and boxes
               labeled in simple block letters—"BEANS,"
               "TOMATOES," "SOY MILK," "TOOTHPICKS."
 
               He hates those moments when the door swings
               open and all his eye can grasp is color
               and geometry—blank white cartons, gray steel
               tubes, amorphous blobs in transparent wrappers.
               Suddenly he’s two years old at Macy’s with Mama.
 
               When it comes to poetry, he wants his strophes
               unambiguous as ants climbing the honey bear,
               lines digestible as baby food, words tasty
               to tongues of thought as chocolate candy bars.
 
               Naturally, this segues straight to Mars and
               Percival Lowell. In 1895, Lowell gazed through
               his telescope at the Red Planet, saw the ordered
               lines streaking across the plain, then pulled
               and tugged at the pliable dough of enigma until it
               cracked into canals—and spoke of aliens.

               © Fred Longworth

( Mars Poetica : Editor's Choice of Matt Merritt, ' I liked the changing points of viewfrom the mundane, through the creative mind
to an imagined other world—the gentle message about the dangers of a rage for order, and the deadpan way the poet passes off the final,
surprising connection as entirely obvious..' )
 
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
 
 
 
 

               Lingua Franca
 
               We speak of linguistics
               at this table of lettered folk,
               the more letters, the better in this game.
               We range from etymology
               of testiments and testifying,
               to vegetable pigments mutandis—
               root crops that were too lingam-like
               in their state of grace—
               to Celts, to languages
               that live and die and half-live
               on sign-posts.
 
               A joke to pass the salt
               stops conversation mid-thrust.
               A puzzled embarrassed look
               at what ‘salth’ might be,
               or indeed whath mighth might be
               for those who thoughth
               a soft Irish t
               was just the breakfast variety.
               The crispness of exchange,
               tight, precise, now stalled
               by the lingering, moist
               half-sybillance of another culture,
               of another rooth crop
               mutating in full view.

               © Nessa O'Mahony

 
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
 
 
 
 
 
               A Murder of So Many Words

               Sweep these words away, so they will stay
               unread, unknown, will sway no one's opinion.

               Sweep them from the stairs, as if they were light
               amber glass and ashes from a bash the night before.

               Sweep them into the tattooed arms of a belligerent Chicago wind,
               into the eyes of a south side mob, into the old Comiskey Park.

               Sweep them clean across state lines, into blue grass
               clad Kentucky. Paint them black and hang them
               from a yellow poplar.

               © K.R.Copeland


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
 
 
 
 

               6 – 23 – 1422 

                    once
               A  cold Christianity grumbled and toiled;
               its proud fundamentalists sailed overseas. 
 
                    later
               The sun-seeking empires of Europe, embroiled
               in Das Kapital industry, fell to their knees.


                    then
               From out of the sunset, on unlikely steeds
               New Worlders rescued their old fatherlands.

                    and then
               As though they were buying up New York with beads,
               they conquered by ownership—contract in hand. 


                    now
               In their world and their idiom Mammon’s twin towers
               defy the gold sun of a heaven-sent day.
 
               They have the capital; we have the power
               to take their own symbols and blow them away.

               Praise to the maker of future and past,
               to the potter his pot, to the cobbler his last.


            
© Peter Stewart Richards


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

 
 
 




               War of the Worlds

               Driving to work that morning, I was struck
               by something funny on the radio:
               a prankster claimed two planes had run amok
               and shut Manhattan down. Perhaps this show
               paid homage to that hoax by Orson Welles
               in '38? The newsmen played it straight;
               impressive parody! Such bagatelles
               so often carry unintended weight.

               The novelty worn off, I turned the knob
               to hear the same report on other stations.
               Arriving stunned at work, I did my job,
               seeing no point in tears or lamentations;
               preferring to go on just as before
               but loving what I loved a trifle more.

               © Rose M. Kelleher

 

 
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
 
 
 
 
 
               Mary Jane Anderson Lies Awake at Night
 
               Stars contemplate her fate in whispers and winks,
               somewhere beyond Orion, they spell out plans
               for chance encounters, jobless weeks,
               rocks thrown her way, another love …
 
               Another love. If only the stars would be quiet.
               Not even the moon can shut them up,
               herself a meddler par excellence,
               thoughtless as only gods can be.
 
               Mary Jane devises ways to slow her heartbeat
               at will, avoid the eyes and hands of men,
               trick the stars into believing she is dead.
 
               Still she knows falling in love is unavoidable,
               like cutting yourself when shaving your legs,
               mini-skirt already laid out on the bed.

               © michaela a. gabriel


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
 
 
 
 
 
               The Nervous Bride Receives Instruction From Her Guardian Angel 

               Enough cowardice. No chicken
               ever won the Kentucky Derby.
               No chicken ever got to be President.
               No chicken ever discovered uranium.
               Orphans cry. Cripples. Anyone
               ever thought "God-looked-down-
               and-gave-me-nothing," anyone
               stuck in it. Things to do instead of crying:
               cancel the wedding! jump bail!
               kite checks! head south; or, continue
               just as you have been but wear
               your hair up, maybe a small
               cocktail flag, Denmark, or Chad,
               stuck in the bun—we’ll know then
               to take you with us to the stars.
               We’ll know you ain’t chicken,
               that you have strength to resist
               the radiation of tears. Enough.
               Chickens don’t fly. Chickens we eat.
               We know a great many ways to eat them.
 
               © Marc Pietrzykowski
 
 
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
 
 

 
               In-Flight Passenger

               Here the pasta dinner is a coagulation
               of errors: the keys you forgot inside
               the house, stubbing a toe against
               hard luggage, the mistaken seat and
               someone else's vegetarian meal.

               How much turbulence does it take
               to turn your stomach? Like the use
               of semi-colons, it's individual. We are
               defenseless after removing our shoes.
               Afterwards the earth moves for days.

               The stewardess was a World Literature
               graduate long before her long legs placed
               her on intercontinental flights, before
               her waist thickened to something like
               your tongue after two rounds of whisky.

               The hand on your knee is your ex-wife,
               her voice slurred by the ringing
               in your ears. There was a time when
               you could laugh at Tom and Jerry.
               So far, this doesn't seem the moment.
              
               © Arlene Ang
 
 
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
 
 
 


               Have You Forgotten

               Have you forgotten the dark piano bar,
               the cloud-dimmed dusk, the steady drip of rain,
               the sheets and clothing scattered near and far,
               the shower, room service, the morning star,
               champagne?

               Have you forgotten Niagara's rumbling roar,
               the crack of calving ice in Hubbard Bay,
               the gaudy light's long Key West sunset shore,
               the one last day in Paris just before
               it's May?

               Have you forgotten it all, and all so soon,
               and not recalled the sussurating sea,
               the beach, the stars, the driftwood fire, the moon,
               the wine, the bread, the cheese, that sad, sad tune,
               and me?

               © Marcus Bales


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
 
 
 
 
 
               Soundwaves Crashing

               Time has dragged its feet through centuries
               of our romance. Blue glass veins tunnel up
               through parchment pleated skin, my beauty
               dismantled, left for dead.

               Elevation and azimuth duke it out for wall space
               at the local museum. Floors tilt in this house
               and the space curves: we're going to be late.

               Words play hard to get, just like mama said.
               If you synchronize data, compare rhyme to reason,
               latitude to longitude, and watch whatever moves

               between your ears, the force that swivels your head
               toward her hips is the whereabouts of your desire.

               The once-over you give her swerves past me
               like a fastball.

               There's a sound when symmetry is broken. What next
               for the refugee pitch? Does it break away clean
               or lie crumpled in a cone of confusion?
 
               © Cheryl Snell

(Soundwaves: Editor's Choice of M.A.Griffiths,' I found this a subtle exploration of a disintegrating relationship. I savoured
the juxtaposition of the specific and the general, which reinforces the sense of disorientation in the poem.' )
 
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
 
 
 

               Inside her house he built his house of tears
 
               According to his law every door
               stays shut. Inside, the chill is dangerous.
               It freezes the balls off those visitors
               who still call. They don’t stay long. Icicles
               drip on their heads. There isn’t anywhere
               dry to sit down. In the absence of chairs
               he offers them one of his bicycles
               as he free-wheels past. His mother despairs.
               So what? He drinks. Don’t expect him to care—
               bring an umbrella. He made excuses
               once. Now he savours bad form, refuses
               to go out. Secretly he plans to tear
               out the landline, swing from the chandeliers.

               © Helena Nelson


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

 
 
 
 
               An Ashlar Wall in Autumn Sun

               I see tomato plants growing by
               a sunny ashlar wall, lush green               
               in the season may never develop 
               with yellow flowers that so late 


               to ripe fruit. The tomato plants
               in Grandad's Aigburth greenhouse
               fifty years ago: the muscular
               finger thin stems, minute hairs.

               I run my fingers down a stem,
               smell the pungent sweet odor,
               remember his wrinkled
               hands in the summer sun,

               the wreathed strands
               of his gold puzzle ring. 

               © Christopher T. George

An Ashlar Wall in Autumn Sun : Editor's Choice of Matthew Williams, 'I like poems with hands in. So, my choice for: the hands/plants
exchange, the simple verbs, touch and smell, and 'ashlar'.' )

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
 
 
 
 
 

               Ingeborg

 

               Inge tried to take to the climate

               but after just over a year

               they packed to move back to England.

               She left her willow-lipped bowls with me,

               Bavarian plates smattered with peonies.

               From a pile of boxes she pulled a book

               she thought I would like,

               a Hungarian novel about a girl

               whose mother runs off—

               on the cover, an empty chair on an ocean.

 

               I liked the telling. I miss afternoons

               spent thumbing her husband’s library.

               Between two books—he may have forgotten—

               a photo of Ingeborg facing away in bed,

               long back rising from blankets

               like an ivory vase, chignon

               pinned at her nape;

               her petite frame lit the page.

               When, on the evening before she left,

               we discovered the cupboards empty

               of biscuits, she let the children

               eat sugar cubes

               to keep them from crying.

 
               © Sarah Sloat

 
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
 
 
 
 

               She Tells Him She Misses Vienna

               But name the things it gave you that you miss.
               Depressions? Headaches? Now and then a kiss
               from uptight Austrian men? Or Schiele's doodles?
               Recall the glares from women dressed like poodles.
               You hated them, but still you miss the place:
               its Habsburg grandeur, its rococo grace,
               its old-style European air, of course—
               a carriage creaking through the streets. Its horse
               will not escape, but loves, what holds it penned.
               Nostalgia is a captivating friend.

               © Geertjan Wielenga


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
 
 
 

               Beginnings.

 

               The impact of my sudden arrival

               strums like a loosed bow string

               between our masks of politeness.

 

               The proffered letter of explanation

               plucks a hum of curiosity

               from the somehow-from-nowhere crowd.

 

               We pick our way with delicacy

               through thickets of diplomacy

               up to the missionary’s house,

 

               past the shallow depression

               of his grave, unmarked 

               beneath the banyan tree.

 

               The house is empty, gilded with a fine light,

               it bleaches, fades back into the bush;

               bougainvillea grapples with the verandah.

 

               I stand in the dusty room,

               where sunlight prises at sprung seams

               and leaf patterns flutter on the floor.

 

               A convocation of geckoes

               debate a mouldering Faulkner on a bedside chair;

               scutter away from the threat of my shadow.

                                                         

               A soft scuff of sandals:

               a girl slips along the boards 

               and through the billows of curtain.

 

               Rice and a plump mango

               are placed on the table, covered with a cotton cloth.

               She leaves a smile, supple and shining in the air.

 

               Time and the smile

               swing through the gloom.

               Alone again, I explore.

 

               Two metal boxes that will not move;

               two smoke alarms, unopened;

               a pair of boots, greening with mildew;

 

               Sandburg’s biography of Lincoln;

               a paper angel spins over a child’s small bed;

               debris of another’s life.

 

               Finger-written in the floor, 

               “Christian Masters 11.2 70", a vain strut of ego;

               a candle that guttered in the gathering dark.

 

               This is a webbed and sullen place,

               a cove where spiders lurk and memories sulk.

               My hands and face are wet

 

               and yet, that smile still shines.

               I uncover the pearls of rice,

               brush away the instant choir of flies and eat.

               © Arthur Seeley

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

 
 
 
 
               Where the Farm Was
 
               an abandoned car folds its hands
               and waits for kudzu.
 
               Noon sun
               finds shards of windshield,
 
               or rain spatters in and soaks the floor,
               the way a drift of blood
 
               wets a widowed uncle's mouth
               during nights in the empty house.
 
               Darkness drips from the eaves,
               the only weather in years.

               © James Owens


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
 
 
 


               Failed Abduction

               When faxed your face I knew it was your Eyes,
               Nose, Cheeks, and Air of study.  Someone shaved
               away your bushy curls, but otherwise
               You were the same, a grinning moon upraised.

               I broke a slew of traffic laws en route
               to You, where the detective held your form
               inside a fire blanket, tugged You out
               and stripped off pink bow ties like colorforms.
               I asked, "Should I check him for bruises, marks?",
               and "Was his diaper changed?"  "He looks OK.
               All that's been taken care of, sir", she barked,
               re-wrapping You.  I checked anyway.

               Back home I joke, "Someone is here.  Look who."
               Who knows the places You have been.  Do You?

               © Agrimmeer DeMolay


 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
 



               Catching the Cock    
               (After a Michael Flynn modern porcelain figurine, "Catching the Cock")

               The piece refers back to Meisson—
               Eighteenth Century, rare, J.J. Kaendler
               Hurdy Gurdy Man in nether land
               where the monkey has hold of the leash
                                          of the grinder of the organ.
               One of a series—common man invaded
               by the toad of work.
               Feel the fishmonger's fingers,
                     the sparkle in the jeweller's eye
               set in the gold of spectacles.
               Glimpse the whisky priest, sealed in the bottle
                        preserving a genial smile.

               "Catching the Cock" gives victory to the chicken—
               dying to inhabit the coop of the huntsman—
               the very torso—to poke feathers
               (kingfisher blue—for palace revolution—
               the rufous Burgundy of cousin Capercaille
               the lemon down of bunting)
               through the pores of the tormentor's skin.
               The hunter's talons almost pierce the naked heart
               they share. Soon come mandibles, cockscomb.
               The clear bright energy of porcelain
               expands the precious moment
               artisan became artist.

               © Philip Burton


 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 

 


               Aide-Mémoire
 
               I think of things of which I haven't thought
               for many years, and rush to write them down,
               on post-its, scraps or sundry business cards.
               They languish in my pockets, little shards
               of fact, without which I would fret and frown
               as evidence once more of "I forgot!"
               It's punishment for years of vanity,
               of gloating that my mind was a steel trap,
               of pride at names and faces I retained.
               But now my data-bank account is drained,
               although, sometimes, on waking from a nap,
               I have a sudden surge of memory.
               And so, until amnesia is fugal
               I'll put my trust in post-its and in Google...

               © Mitchell Geller

 
 
 
 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Acknowledgement: A Murder of So Many Words previously appeared in 'Triplopia'.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Author's contact details:

Arlene Ang............................aumelesi@libero.it
Marcus Bales........................marcus@designerglass.com
Philip Burton........................ burtophil@hotmail.com

K.R.Copeland........................andre-kim1@comcast.net

Agrimmeer DeMolay..............agdemolay@hotmail.com
michaela a.gabriel.................http://members.chello.at/michaela.a.gabriel

Mitchell Geller...................... PMMBOB@aol.com
Christopher T. George............editorcg@yahoo.com
Rose M.Kelleher................... kelleher@ramblingrose.com
Fred Longworth  .................. stereo1@cox.net
Helena Nelson...................... HE11@beatonh.freeserve.co.uk
Nessa O'Mahony.................. nessa@omahony7465.freeserve.co.uk
James Owens ......................anhaga1066@yahoo.com
Marc Pietrzykowski...............qvsaygo1@bellsouth.net
Peter Stewart Richards......... peter.richards@chello.no
Arthur Seeley ...................... arthur007@blueyonder.co.uk 
Sarah Sloat...........................sloatsj@yahoo.com
Cheryl Snell......................... cherylsnell@hotmail.com
Geertjan Wielenga.................g_wielenga@yahoo.com
Alan Wickes ....................... http://www.alanwickes.com


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Compiling Editor: M.A.Griffiths (grasshopper@wordbug.freeserve.co.uk) .
Associate Editors: Matt Williams (matt@poetropical.co.uk) and
Matt Merritt (mattmerritt@leicestermercury.co.uk ) 
 
 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~