The Literary Review
Mesmerized by Messiaen*
* Oliver Messiaen: French composer: 1908-1992
Ascension Day Mass
concludes spectacularly
with an organ postlude
full of lightning speed notes
crackling with thunderous
atonal dissonance
attacking mental demons
rattling my brittle mind
as battered ear drums
absorb arpeggios
of brash scalloping sound
peeling out of metal pipes
vibrating church pews
as angels & cherubs
in ferocious flight
dive-bomb off wooden rafters
surrounding penitent mortals
silent in abstract
cerebral concentration
hearing chaotic crescendos
from farting bass pedals
until finally—
a major chord unleashes
musical resolution
- Davidson Garrett
Poem Beginning With A Line By
Emily Dickinson
Death is a dialogue between the spirit and the dust—
a quiet discussion
rather than rambling chit-chat.
Soothing reminiscences
recalling the pros & cons
throughout mortal days
conclude with a brief analysis
of The Life—
as if Doctor Freud himself
fielded questions.
The dust squalls like a baby
asking for the kind of forgiveness
only a lover might bestow
as the spirit smiles
listening to these contrite sobs
with the freed soul
looming ebulliently above—
yodeling in the wind.
- Davidson Garrett
Amaryllis
Bursting forth
from the Dutch-patterned flower pot
like an erect green penis—
I eagerly anticipate
your orgasmic explosion
of scarlet blossom. An excited bud
prepares for quick release
to briefly suspend winter doldrums of gray—
then a graceful withering away
until next year’s yearnings, gently germinate.
- Davidson Garrett
Farewell Peggy
(In Memory of A Memory)
Shock never comes gently. It electrifies
& tingles every hair on one’s body.
Without warning—your unexpected passing
was a seismic shift burying the long ago past.
Although you transitioned in October
when pumpkin faces & ghosts decorated
front doors of houses, it’s taken weeks
for the loss to process in my baffled brain.
Today is St. Stephen’s Day, the first
Christian martyr, brutally stoned to death
by an angry mob. My mind metaphorically
stoned—peering at the wilting poinsettias
& wrapping papers from yesterday’s
Christmas. A holiday disturbed, painted
with the color of death—in the middle
of manufactured joy. Pretending to engage
with the light of the newborn Christ
during this feast of yearly gift giving—
a hollowness shrouds the tinseled tree
recalling your Irish face under stage spotlights
glowing as a real-life Blanche Dubois—
graciously smiling, bowing for one last
curtain call, phantasmagorically
transforming into dazzling dramatic energy.
- Davidson Garrett