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Showing posts with label Canadian poetry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Canadian poetry. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 14, 2015

Featuring Allison Grayhurst



Needle

Would it be power or the soft faith
of idolatry that brought you empty-handed
upon this Earth?
Because your history is poison to my heavier
heaven, I should be running parallel to your great
evolution, but I am not.
Your moods are total, obsessive as fungi -
growing shallow until everything is blinded
under your curtain. I used to love you - the facts
in your brain, your anti-cultural immaturity, your freedom
from the process. You, only tied to the result. I used to stay
up all night, half-a-human, fumbling through books for a deeper
education. I used to be becoming, not this hard
calcified thing dependent on your reflection - a slave
to your dragon, to your brutal needs.
You used my brokenness to mould yourself a follower.
I followed you, but now that
is over.




Little

In the little things
that fatten a day with petulant
injustices. In the basic things
like the lies in a newspaper or the
nonchalant acceptance of privilege,
history sinks and degenerates – a little
something, a base something growing to encumber
the oval whole without constraint. Patronizing as presents,
given gifts from the world-travelled to the poor who are stuck with
store-bought cans and hardships that leave no space for frivolity or
such easeful distractions.
A little now to the right, and symphonies that neglect the dark muse
of its creator. Van Gough on placemats, and there now, there now,
smile for the camera and make yourself as someone
special, worthy of your elitist smirk – a masterpiece of fiction –
one side, one belief, a derelict of denial to the little things
that demand so much courage to just muddle through.



Last Beat

It is a prolonged death,
a rotted tooth that hasn’t been pulled.
Evenings of blasphemy, steeling bitterness back
to inhabit my upper gut.
I fumbled, then ripped the barriers – better off
hard and sure of the fire I was stoking.
Then softness crept in, like a pregnant mother
falling prey to a sentimental moment. Love
I called it. But it was a city of angst I unleashed,
twisted veins and cramped-up toes. Let it die
and be done with. I will not be owned by obligation
or highways and highways of mundane houses and the people
that live in them – insensitive to devotion, to savage need
and to pilgrimage. Joy
is where I am free. Beside the crystals forming,
savouring the voice that always guides me. And it
guides me to tear off my clothes, relax my arms and to
yes, yes, please
let go.



Crowned

The large June light
is woven with the clouds
like a wind to steal away all breathing.
And on the moving earth, lawnmowers
roar and little snails crawl across
the wet pavement.
There are no more dreams, only this
woodchip swallowed and the bright water
cared for.
The fog has shown me my substance.
I eat my plums whole and wish
for my child everything tender and alive.
I feel the breeze through the window, taking
the curves, turning me over like a patch
of rotted grass. I am now beginning to be collected,
to answer to this new name and see my past
through a fearless eye. I feel the kick
of a new vision formed and feel the gentlest mercy
roll down my chest like a kitten.
This is lunch, an autumn leaf waxed and the laundry dried.
Give me birth. My body skips across the edge,
and all good things are finally waking.



Allison Grayhurst is a member of the League of Canadian Poets. She has over 690 poems published in over 325 international journals. She has eleven published books of poetry, seven collections, seven chapbooks, and a chapbook pending publication. She lives in Toronto with her family. She also sculpts, working with clay; www.allisongrayhurst.com

Tuesday, March 10, 2015

Featuring Wolfgang Carstens



i was daydreaming

when i stumbled
upon the
large Australian
cockroach
on our
driveway

i scooped
it up
in an empty
paper cup
and brought it
inside
the house

i remember
my wife
screaming
bloody murder
before i
had even
shown it
to her

she must have
sensed
its presence

but that’s how
it goes

one night
you’re sitting
alone
on the couch
watching TV
when suddenly
bugs arrive
to eat you
up

—from CRUDELY MISTAKEN FOR LIFE



it was

the middle of the night
when my daughter started screaming
about the bugs in her bed.

i entered her room
and found one solitary ladybug
crawling across her blanket.
“don’t worry, honey,
it’s only a ladybug,”
i said, “besides,
a ladybug in your bed is good luck.
you’re a very, very lucky girl.”

as i released it
outside in the dirt
i thought about all the bugs
waiting for us—
the many bugs that will come
to feast in our beds
when our good luck
finally runs out

—from THE ABYSS GAZES ALSO



every September,

Thelma and i would drink a few beers
then prune the apple tree
that we’d planted together in my front yard.  

i remember her bright pink sun hat,
her long brown cigarettes,
and how she was always humming
a Patsy Cline tune.  

it was a tradition that spanned twenty years.  

today,
i’ll prune the apple tree alone,
lay a single yellow daffodil
by her grave stone,
then stare at these pictures on the wall
and drink beer

until her memory starts to sing
“Crazy” to me.

—from FACTORY REJECT



Sarah

is dying.

she
started
a bucket
list.

after weeks
of contemplation
she couldn’t think
of one
single thing
to add.

good girl.

you
are
ready.

—from THE STENCH OF FAILURE
           


           you

were born
the seventh son
of a seventh son,

yet
you did
nothing 
special
with your 
life.

you 
were King Midas
in reverse—
everything
you touched
turned 
to shit:

your business,
your marriage,
your relationship
with me.

you
died at 63,
throat cancer.

Dad,

i guess
you weren’t
special,

after
all.

—from ENJOY OBLIVION



my first day

they put me to work
in the deli
where i was forced
to wear a hair net
and beard guard.

at lunch,
i raced home
and shaved
my face clean.

the only thing
worse than wearing
a beard guard
is working
in a deli.

the only thing
worse than working
in a deli
is working in a deli
at MegaMart.

the only thing
worse than working
in a deli at MegaMart
is working at MegaMart.

the only thing
worse than working
at MegaMart
is starving.

—from RENTED MULE



we were drunk

in the heart
of the Vegas strip
when we stumbled
into the piano bar.

it was in the middle
of the most gorgeous
Chopin concerto
when i realized
the pianist
was playing the keys
with his dick.

“holy shit, Honey,”
i said,

“that guy’s cock
must be at least thirteen
fucking inches!”

my wife
just chugged her beer,
laughed,
then said

“yeah,
and he plays
a better piano
than you
too!”

—from SAVAGE LOVE



Note that the cover illustration is by the Swedish artist Janne Karlsson.

Wolfgang Carstens lives in Canada with his wife, five kids, grandson, dog, mortgage and death. His poetry is printed on the backs of unpaid bills. More information is available at: http://www.wolfgangcarstens.com/