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a journal of literature & art

The Literary Review

Issue 10           Page 32

This Morning

          When

  the light came down

on the yellow building

with the red roof

  it came down softly

  pushing the shadows

       away

Sitting at my window I

asked old

   unanswerable questions

   And thought of Heraclitus

   and his ever changing

              stream

And I Thought of how I have

  traveled through years

  of streams and brooks

seeing shadows on the

             water

And I wanted to be

(this day) always grateful

for the light

   knowing the darkness

   it so skillfully hides

And grateful too for

     the shadows

Grateful for the cool water

of the stream on my feet

after so long a journey.

Teen

We’re too old to be silly, too young to be mature
Our futures are unknown, everything is left unsure.
School is tough, no time for a break
If you aren’t getting A’s, you’re making a mistake.
Hours are long, sleep is scarce 
You’re told “we understand, can’t you see we care.”
These are the best years of your life. Go out and party.
What about school? What about grades?
What about making sure you stay safe?
You’re told to be careful. You’re told to have fun.
Stop telling us what to do.
We’re teenagers don’t you know.
We’re not listening to you. 

Villanelle

To be a ghost is a marvelous thing.

You can live it up when you’re truly dead.

And dance macabre as the vampires sing

You take your head off and give it a fling

For you know mid-night is nothing to dread

To be a ghost is a marvelous thing.

Now hear the death bells in the graveyard ring

As you lay in your comfy coffin bed

listening to blood-songs vampires sing

Look how the slimy worms around you cling

Busy little worms waiting to be fed.

To be a ghost is a marvelous thing.

Come, weir wolfs, and goblins are beckoning

Come, dance the macabre the moon is red

Dance to the requiem’s vampires sing

And rise from tombstone as the bats take wing

Come and shout, “Boo!” to the owl overhead.

To be a ghost is a marvelous thing.

And dance macabre as the vampires sing

No Fighting, Please

They were coming on strong Peanut butter And Jelly.

They had a fight In someone’s belly.

They said bad things to one another

        “You’re smelly Jelly, said Peanut Butter

        “You’re a flea butt Nutter.”  Said Jelly in the belly.

 

“Now stop this row.” Said a piece of bread

Stop it now or he’ll eat tuna fish instead of                

Peanut butter and jelly because no one wants

                     a fight going on it their belly.

 

No one wants a fight going on in their belly”

Corrections

In my poem: Antidisestablishmentarianism,

the following words were spelled incorrectly:         

                        rabbit,      poltergeist.

In my Sonnet:  To a Norwegian Basketball, the line,

           “Should have been born a banana,”

              should read, “Should or could have been born a

              peeled banana —also the words,

fiscal responsibility, belong to another poem.

Finally, in my poem:

The Only Reliable Babysitter On Clinton Street, a line in the poem

misidentifies the innocent bystander holding

the Book of the Dead in one hand and a hoagie sandwich

                      in the other

                     while four men in bikini mask ran from

the department of Motor Vehicles

shouting curses in ancient Etruscan as          James Joyce.

It was actually, Henry James.

© Phil Temples: Coloring-Piano

May 28th

On this day in history Steinbeck’s Tortilla Flat

was published and Mr. X sat in the automat

                  drinking coffee

                 and everyone wore hats.

Jim Thorpe was born, fire was invented and Mrs. Y

wondered why the subway was so crowded.

On this day in history The Duke of Windsor died,

the first lie was told by a politician,

a king burped, the 1st indoor swimming pool opened,

                       and four sisters

                        got stuck in an elevator.

On this day in history four pounds of Brussels sprouts

were eaten, the wheel invented, the big bang banged

and  Severinus began his reign as

Catholic Pope, and said nope in Latin twenty seven times.

And on this day in history, Fire in Cincinnati nearly

destroyed the Reds’ grandstand,

                      bread was baked for the first time,

                      writing invented, and Mars began drying up.

Fred Landry (aboard The Parader) won the 26th Preakness,

Margaret Truman played the piano for the first time

to her father…

and

            this was the day the Attorney General said

            it was legal for women to wear trousers anywhere,

the 1st night game was played at Washington DC’s,

Griffith Stadium (Yankees 6, Senators 5) and

Thales Miletus predicted a solar eclipse,

            and Rockefeller sang “John Henry” 

            oh yeah,          and Morse sent the first

                                        telegraph message and

this was the day the first joke was told,

the missionary position invented,

the first fish crawled onto land and

                                  Chrysler Corporation merged with

                                   Dodge Brothers, Inc.

On this day in history Elvis Presley performed

live in Fort Worth, TX.

The U.S. sent 400 Stinger missiles to Saudi Arabia,

toilets were invented, the first song sung, the first

handshake shook, and Ian Fleming  was born.

On this day in history GOD was born,

art was created, a dinosaur got

sick, it rained, snowed, the sun shined and

hats were invented  — and later.

everyone wore them.

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