Home Planet News

a journal of literature & art

The Literary Review

Issue 10         Page 97

Shinnecock Canal

“Grace to be born and live as variously as possible.” Frank O’Hara

It’s August in The Hampton’s.

Lime bright leaves breath.

Lush life oozes from tubes, 

cloying candy, wet with sweat.

The Shinnecock and booze

flow thick and slow.

Grace, drunk on tidal phthalo

green, and ultramarine 

in lavish strokes,

coaxes paint into patches. 

All that jazz in the wind. 

She streaks red floral screeds, 

yellow flowers in a pot, 

an open book on the window sill. 

Little things that matter still

echo without a shell.

© GdB Zaum-1

The Piano Lesson: Henri Matisse

In dimmed rooms a metronome 

measures each gray second 

of a boy’s gray hour. 

The measure counts the gray meters 

from the tinged blue bars

to the washed blue apron 

where she–mother? teacher?–roosts 

on a stool, back straight,

hands tucked tight between her thighs. 

No owl in moonless winter is as keen.

The boy’s meter measures 

the distance between the garden’s 

green gravity and her faceless moon.

He measures the pillar of pale blue 

curtain where it parts 

verdant zest from slated task; 

anchoring in opposition, 

the raw sienna shaft 

that unfolds becoming 

the subtly hued geometry of the head.

The black blade is the boy’s dread, 

while the piano’s flush heat stirs a gut 

hunger: a need to master,

that magnetizes the iron eye.

His meter is the space bound by 

blush rose plane and muted blue tablature. 

Black brushstrokes, unfurled in arabesque 

flow and grow, steal right to left; 

sly-eyed music rack to

balustrade and the wide window;

an air to lift a bright sail.

The strain, the candle notes, will not be restrained.

And here at bottom left 

a small nude bronze, 

in rich cocoa patina, 

listens in seated ease                                 

and patiently weights the 

measured metered space. 

Letter to Me From a Painting

To you, Dear Gerald,

To you, I am the lampblack woman,

I am Mars Black. I am Ivory Black.

I am the abyss of the isthmus.

I have no soft pink underbelly.

I was born in intersections.

of avian and human migrations. 

I was driven and derived from India. 

I was looted out of Africa.

I am indigenous.

My hair is blue-black 

to the middle of my back. 

Look long at me

Hear rivers, wind, sails.

Smell sugarcane, and rum. 

Touch your bound naked body. 

See how the white highlights 

my hair. Confirms my bones. 

See how the weight 

of my being 

renders me invisible.

Look long.

You might finally see 

that I am the black slate 

of your own invention. 

A Persistence of Cormorants

I live near Brooklyn’s Gowanus Canal,

a toxic and fetid tidal estuary from its salted 

harbor mouth to its abrupt industrial end. 

It is my pixel of wilderness in the city. 

Tonight I heard the night heron quawk—

Thought it was a ghost. Flight is silence,

a glimpse of white on the wing, a memory 

out of reach, the perfect shadow. 

Cormorants hunt the same water by day

They do not perch. They paddle low 

in the water, wings cupped to torso,

eyes up, sudden arch, minimal ripple.

Disappear into the murky green. 

The plunging pursuit of prey propelled 

by black webbed feet. What persistence 

it must take to hunt in such dismal silt.

Poets know the tired metaphor of truths 

that lie beneath the surface. Know the patient 

wait to snatch a glimpse of glimmer. But 

to swim, to hunt in our turbid psyches, 

where madness lurks, or doubloons wait, 

takes a persistence of cormorants. 

To the Young Woman in the Painting.

Dear Melissa,

You were always bolder than most.

A dare in your stare and behind 

your smile, a sly sneer, like now.

.

Melissa, The Bee Queen priestess, 

an apian familiar hovers near, a subliminal 

hymenoptera hum. Another avatar is 

Jerry

the ladybug on your shoulder; coleoptera, 

the armored wing; the damselfly 

at your throat, odonata zygoptera. 

Warrior woman, I am neither surprised 

you are in your own vignette oval, nor 

that you mock Rembrandt’s Athena.

Your breastplate of cranberry size beads 

is as crimson as your posing lips. 

A ochre armor bodice protects your breasts, 

four pairs of sunglasses are your visors. 

You gaze at me with your clear right 

eye from behind thin blue tinted lenses.

Switch pairs. Alter perspective. 

See everything through new eyes.

To be provocative does not

make you hostile, and though 

the painter has forever made an object 

of you, only part of you is hung 

on the wall, in some well lit hall. 

All your other selves can run free.

Conspiracy Theory 1947

The year doctors told my mother to push push

someone murdered the Black Dahlia, 

then turned on the Doomsday Clock 

in order to start the Cold War.

The first UFO sighting 

by a US sailor, which brought out the rumors 

of Men in Black, 

was followed by the crash 

of alien craft near Roswell. 

That very month 

the National Security Act created the CIA, DOD, 

and Joint Chiefs of Staff. 

Can you see? 

There were devastating explosions, 

a mine disaster, and an anomalous earthquake

in Wisconsin. 

Suddenly,

by August we mastered plutonium fission 

and polaroid cameras. 

Chuck Yeager flew mach1 plus. 

Do you see? 

Someone invented a red scare, 

so a House Un-American Activities Committee 

could persecute artists and writers, 

then, by Christmas, someone invented the transistor, 

killed Al Capone along with Willa Cather, and Henry Ford. 

True—there was The Marshall Plan, 

Streetcar Named Desire; 

Jackie Robinson became a Brooklyn Dodger, 

but sadly,  

The Congress of Racial Equality started 

The Journey of Reconciliation, 

but they’ve never arrived. 

Now, do you see?

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