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a journal of literature & art

The Literary Review

Issue 9         Page 39

Edith Sitwell Stumbles upon Clumps of Sundew

Still the dew—

translucent as raindrops

sliding down the furry red frills,

the sleek green cheeks

of leaves—will fall

like the rain.

Dark as the bog

from which it came, black

as the moss on a starless night,

soon the moon

will falter

in its course.  Soon, the sun

will bleed at the feet

of starving men, and then

Beelzebub

. . . will know them.

© Eliezer Berrios: IMG_20210308_201032198

Fortitude

What fortitude a mountain

has, like an old man leaning

back in his bentwood rocker,

whittling a chunk of wood,

blond curls dropping to his feet,

each peel revealing layers

of resolve.  Erosion can

do that to a mountain or

a man.  What fortitude lies

within the slope, the foothill,

the hard scrabble of riprap,

the gully wash of pine straw

and last year’s leaves puddling

in the ditch and crevices,

the alluvial complaint

that can be plainly seen from

any distance.  Any man can

stand up the way a mountain

can dominate the landscape,

abruptly upright and present.

Digging into the Mist

There’s no wall to lean a shovel on,

no space to place that pick,

no shade to set that spade.

Might as well be digging potatoes

in the backyard or stones that rise

to the occasion or loose bones

in an abandoned graveyard.

You are never in the thick of it.

The deeper you go, the further

it fades away.  Turn east, turn west,

take the direction you like the best.

Makes no difference.  Mist mystifies,

obscures your vision.  Where you’ve been,

where you’re going look the same.

Just like this moment.  Dig in.

A Summer Kind of Mind

Sleepless with windows open,

we breathe air sifted through screens.

The breeze lifting the curtains,

sneaking a quick little peek

into the gloom of our room.

One of us stands gazing out

into the glow of the night,

listening for crickets and

night birds.  The other of us

watches a halo take on

the shape of a human form

as if an angel had slipped

into the room fully clothed.

We take turns alternating

between all darkness and light,

what is with what might have been.

In Doors

We depend on hardware, waking

from the net of springs and frame,

descending the stairs that rise

and shine into our private

places.  We give no more thought

to the jamb, the knob, the lock,

except when we misplace the key.

We hear, pay no attention

to, the hinge squeaking in its

own corner of self-imposed

isolation. We carry

our own weight and take nothing

for granted that we can’t see.

The latch, the chain, the little

people standing on the porch

as seen through the peephole who

lift the knocker, ring that bell.

Our inability to

open up and let them in.

Why I Write Before First Light

That dark before the dawn is too quiet,
hanging above the house and the treetops,
which my small frail light fails to penetrate.
Cups of coffee, dollops of cream, I breath
the steam before I sip.  Then sift through
the words I want to use, laying them down
thick as bricks.  The trick is to let this self-
imposed solitude drift through themes and memes
and glean some new meaning.  Meanwhile, the sky
lightens, leaves and trunks of trees differentiate
one from the other and some small bird, a wren
or chickadee, begins to sing, signals
the end of my poem, my wall of words,
made small by this wall of sound made by birds. 
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