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a journal of literature & art

The Literary Review

Issue 10           Page 15

1, 2, 3, 4, 5 Escape

Born in your first waking breath

before sanitation trucks crunching sound

makes garbage of, pixelates and 

uploads to your computer, before 

you even know, can’t humpty dumpty back

together, a number you’ll spend your whole life

protecting from every one that follows, 

especially two you’ll crave and fear who’ll

Siamese the life out of you

cat tail around and eliminate;

thinking that two is better than one

try to make a go of what no 

longer exists, only you don’t know it

not yet, and what chance do you

a skinny androgynous stick with 

no curves have against how 

two ties you up in itself, 

and just when you’ve gotten used 

to being hijacked

1, 2, 3, 4, 5 Escape—(2)

two pulls a fast one, drags in three 

those terrible 3’s pulling you

into a raging tornado like twister

backgrounded by a sun-like calm, 

 makes no sense, and you try 

to wake back up into yourself, 

take a deep breath to get out 

of this fake scene when

four pretending to be a new number

is discovered in a fun house mirror

your computer screen has become,

two keeps popping up in pairs 

no matter where you look,

how far your fingers walk, 

threatened storms of 

a climate change crash already 

in the works if you go on which

five is pressing you to do,

but just up ahead 6 is getting ready 

1, 2, 3, 4, 5 Escape—(3)

to brand you with an X from

which there’ll be no escape

you stop short rear ending the number 

behind causing a pile up collision:

The screen goes black; 

a breath let go, a life retrieved 

© Sofía Marrero: Nonconforming

March poem, 2022

today, I needed to see something come up through 

the dirty, twig strewn winter earth, break out

of a crack in the sidewalk, for this unlikely

March sun, to seed a piece of earth caged 

around trees I passed on almost every block\year

of my life, today, when the whole earth is 

being threatened, needed to see beyond 

narrow definitions of sprout, crocus

 and sighting only wrapped bunches of flowers 

outside fruit stores, interchangeable as all those

groups I’ve been part of over the years,

a sign inside another store’s flower display

reads, don’t touch, they’re real…not real enough 

I needed to touch, feel the living warmth

of alive, when getting a request from

 an editor asking for information about a man 

I loved, long gone…like bulbs replanted

that keep flowering…

that night, on the news I watched one

courageous human being

March poem, 2022—(2)

rise up thru bomb bursting blood shed

undeterred: what comes unbidden

from the earth, this planet

Hurt

About the beauty that surrounded him, particularly the moon Coleridge wrote: “I see them all, so excellently fair; / I see not feel how beautiful they are!” From “Dejection Ode”

  felt like a door slammed in her face,

no reason, she said, hurtful another told me

of what she too… 

eating food spiced to hurt she didn’t feel

burned in my mouth, didn’t remember 

doing to someone what they’d done to her

tries not to feel what hurt too much

to think about, all of us on the edge

of a bad time we’re not quite out of

nerves crippled by what we’d 

been through seek out even spicier food, 

war news happening elsewhere

to inch past mind, rid what’s 

 spreading among us like a bug

Hurt—2.

just as the virus, which hurt so many 

out of being, is receding,

that’s life, she said, 

to say something when 

there’s nothing

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