June - Poem 22
Good Girl / Kristina Byas
I taste no apologies
on my tongue, but
I remember them,
dry,
bitter,
sour obedience.
Say a word enough
and it breaks apart,
first its meaning,
next its sound,
last its flavor.
I’ve learned a new way to say
I am here,
with a familiar unpalatability,
only not to me.
Blood Harmony / Shavahn Dorris-Jefferson
Childvoice
Heartbound
Fatherwound
Godbite
Throbknot
Smokeglow
Deadhead
Lovestump
Stillair
Motherchord
Kinburn
Mythmold
Griefwork
Faithflood
Blackhush
Blueode
solstice / Jess Tønseth Lee Gleason
summer
breathe sleep out of my lungs
cobweb sun to my eyes
raspberry my heart in blossom
winter
slake air from my glut
swelt red from my skin
slay shine from my eyes
Angel Sonnet 6 / Shane Moran
How the group decided a man was guilty
was first by him being a man, Beryl read
on the first page of a novel entitled,
Our World After Men, sitting on the table
of his friend’s lesbian parent’s apartment.
Gini sees him holding the book and after
asking if he’d like coffee tells him, how
much she loved the book: you almost forget
about the men by the end of it. Beryl laughed,
as he grabbed another book from the table, Psalms.
The dogeared page had a note in the margin, reading:
The women who proclaim the good news are a great army.
──────────────────
6. bulb
gladdened
by
smile
It’s Father’s Day and I Haven’t Called / Jingyu Li
In the dark I walk
from cabin to laundry room to move my clothes out
of the wash and into the dryer—it would be too late
by morning, they would all smell of damp. I felt
a horror, that fear from childhood, of bears and of monsters
restless in the dark. The bear I had been waiting for
in daytime would be something entirely different at night.
The past days I’ve been asking, how do I let myself
feel without the flood? My father used to
cook me noodles at night after a hard day’s work, slim
noodles in a simple broth, abundant with chili oil,
scallions, two poached eggs.
With the trees on both sides and my flashlight
facing forward, I cannot comprehend what lies
around me, how much periphery I cannot see.
The important thing is not to spook
yourself, if you start running you’ll think there’s something
to run from. I keep my head straight, step
by step down those wooden stairs where the banana
slugs like to go. But they are not there now.
I’ve moved my laundry like a good
adult. I’ve burst into my cabin and shut the door.
Can I let myself be afraid now?
Petrified? Sorrowful? In this flood of warm air?
Please Turn Down the Heat / Stefanie Zito
AC units synchronize their blasts
cutting summers dank swelter
drowning out the soundscape
of tunes streaming from rolled down windows.
Neighborhood porch hollers are stifled
as is the incessant construction.
A glass of ice water sweats out a circle
mirroring my own puddles
of effort and release
amidst the thick air of ambient stress.