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Vol. 8, No. 1 Spring 2020
Publisher: Nine Mile Art Corp.
Editors: Bob Herz, Stephen Kuusisto, Andrea Scarpino
Assistant Editor: Diane R. Wiener
Associate Editors: Cyrus Cassells, Pamela (Jody) Stewart, James Cervantes
Art Editor Emeritus: Whitney Daniels
Cover Art: Painting is by Thomasina DeMaio, "The Last Tango." It is an
anti-nuclear statement, with the dancers not seeing the atomic blast taking
place to the right off balcony. The piece is 8 ft by 10 ft oil on canvas (1981)
The publishers gratefully acknowledge support of the New York State
Council on the Arts with the support ofGovernor Andrew M. Cuomo and
the New York State Legislature. We also acknowledge support of the
County ofOnondaga and CNY Arts through the Tier Three Project
Support Grant Program. We have also received significant support from
the Central New York Community Foundation. This publication would
not have been possible without their generous support. We are grateful to
them all.
ISBN-13: 978-1-7326600-8-3
Poetry and artwork copyright of their respective authors and artists. All
rights reserved. No poem or artwork may be reproduced in full or in part
without prior written permission from its owner.
Page 2 - Nine Mile Magazine
׉	 7cassandra://ipEs04tXwkXIouQJ3y-LK88Bem4GTwjumVYydHvAo2Q7`̫ ^_;S+׉EContents
About Nine Mile Magazine
vi
Appreciations & Asides
Jody Pamela Stewart
Edgar Is Disgruntled
Pretty Much Ok
The Farmer’s Wife
This Year, Todd’s Spoons
All Saints
Cyrus Cassells
The Bamboo Labyrinth
Blood Rushing To A Knight’s Head
Verse In Which The Poet’s New Lover Carves Him
Into A Sicilian Puppet
The Wrestlers (Caramelo And Guapo Gringo)
Sandra McPherson
Henry, Praying: Sutter Psych Hospital
Mad Boy in the Odorscape: Sutter Psych Hospital
Existentialist, Swimming
Establishments
Names at Land’s End
Finishing
Sandra Kolankiewicz
20th Century Petroglyph, Marietta, Ohio
Bill Schulz
Estate Sale —Eagle Pond Farm
Splinters
Vin Santo
Rita Rouvalis Chapman
Near Salt River Road: An Elegy For S.D.
By These Waters
Katelyn Delvaux
My Mother Starred In M*A*S*H Reruns
People Tell Me I Remind Them Of
After She Died, We’d Visit In Dreams
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Volume 8 No 1 - Page 3
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Gravel Parking Lot
Renner’s Poem
Anya
America
Charles Casey Martin
A House in the Air
Quipu
John Lennon
Los ilegales
Elián González at Ninety
Ralph James Savarese
Face Time with the President
College Trip
The Columnist
Darrah Cloud
Rescue Squad
The Adventurer’s Club Goes To The Track
Hannah Emerson
Teach
A House Made for Dancing
Costume Me
A Blue Sound
Songoing
I Need Lovely Help to Look Very
Paul Eluard
Max Ernst
The Invention
The Unique
One More Reason
Max Ernst
In The Heart OfMy Love
Your Mouth With Golden Lips
She Of Always, All
Martin Willetts, Jr.
What Passes Goes Away
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I Fall Into The Arms of Time
71
Reflection
Linda Pennisi
Self Portrait As Blue Chair in a Mowed Field
Self Portrait As U
Self Portrait As Dinner Party Field Notes
Travel
Marcela Sulak
Spider
Double Life
Two Views of Incarnate: The CollectedDeadMan Poems
1. Of The Resistance Of The Dead Man
2. Of The Pleasure And Wisdom Of The Dead Man
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Page v
Volume 8 No 1 - Page 5
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We publish twice yearly, showcasing the best work we receive from
authors whose work, energy, and vision seem to us most deeply entangled
with life. This includes writers within and outside the mainstream, writers
with disabilities, writers of color, writers with marginalized genders and
sexual orientations, and writers from different cultures and religions. We
produce this magazine in inclusive and accessible formats. We believe that
poetry is everyone’s art.
SUBMISSIONS
For consideration in the magazine, submit 4 - 6 poems in Word or text
to editor@ninemile.org. You can access a submission form at our website,
ninemile.org. Please include:
• your name and contact information (email and home address for
sending contributor’s copies),
• a paragraph about yourself (background, achievements, etc.),
• a statement of your aesthetic intent in the work,
• a photo headshot of yourself.
We respond within 2 weeks. If you do not hear from us, reconnect to
make sure we received your submission. Note that we do not accept
unsolicited essays, reviews, video / motion based art, or Q&A’s.
TALK ABOUT POETRY PODCASTS AND BLOG
At our Talk About Poetry podcast, working poets discuss poems that
interest, annoy, excite, and engage them. The Talk About Poetry blog
provides more opportunities for feedback. The addresses are:
-Soundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/bobherz;
-iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/talk-about-poetry/
id972411979?mt=2;
-Talk About Poetry blog: https://talkaboutpoetry.wordpress.com.
Page vi6 - Nine Mile Magazine
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׉	 7cassandra://8gNSV1jHS-WIQHQ3ADBdB8bPrxeqbBWJEvMzS560w2Us`̫ ^_;S,׉E
3NINE MILE BOOKS
Nine Mile Books are available at our website, ninemile.org, or online at
Amazon.com and iTunes. Recent books are:
• More Than Watchmen At Daybreak, Cyrus Cassells (2020), $16, or $9.99 at
Kindle. “These twelve poems log time Cassells spent in silence in a
hermitage with the Benedictine Brothers at the Christ in the Desert
monastery... Cassells waited for these poems, listening patiently for their
deep harmonies, probing their quiet revelations... Throughout there is a
clear strain of praise and belief, unabashed and unapologetic. The last
poem ends with a ‘burgeoning dawn’ a promise ofmore after this geyser
of sound. What distilled magical mysterious poems!”—Spencer Reece,
author of The Clerk´s Tale andThe Road to Emmaus
• Metamortuary, Dylan Krieger (2020), $16, or $9.99 at Kindle and iBooks.
Brilliant variations on Ovid’s Metamorphoses with dazzling excursions
through life, poetry, and death. “Each of the book’s four sections,
Dangerous Meat / Raw War / Quiet Catastrophes / Eternal End-Times,
is a detached possession belonging to the same church of an absent and
holy endeavor where Krieger stages population myths for an imagined
audience of resuscitated reanimations with a language so alive and so
secretly killed that it renders irrelevant the spelling that revelation too
often uses to sound out the shape of its more basic priests.”—Barton
Smock, isacoustic
• The You That AllAlong Has HousedYou: A Sequence, Leslie Ullman (2019),
$16, or $9.99 at Kindle and iBooks. “Leslie Ullman has the ability to spin
illuminating spells through and around the matter of earth and life. Her
vision penetrates with an attention as careful and as transforming as day
through clear water, as moonlight on stone. She is an artisan with words,
and the results are poems embodying the intricacy and beauty of the
subjects they honor.” —Pattiann Rogers
• A Little GutMagic, Matthew Lippman (2018), $16, or $9.99 at Kindle.
“Reading Matthew Lippman’s poems feels like having a conversation
with a hilarious, brutally honest, and brilliant friend.”—Jessica Bacal,
author ofMistakes IMade atWork: 25 InfluentialWomen Reflect on What They
Got Out ofGetting ItWrong
• The GolemVerses, Diane R. Wiener (2018), $16, or $9.99 at Kindle and
iBooks. “…Diane Wiener unlocks the door to a room of confidences,
secrets, passions, and fears. These poems present an interior dialogue in
which the Golem is more than symbol or legend but trusted companion
and guiding, grounding force. This room is furnished with intellect,
Volume 8 No 1 - Page 7
Page vii
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chair and bear witness to this lyric journey.”—Georgia Popoff, author of
Psychometry.
• Perfect Crime, David Weiss (2017), $16. Of this book the poet says, “The
whole of it thinks about the idea of perfect crime metaphysically, in the
sense that time, for example, is, itself, a perfect crime. Perfect meaning:
effect without cause. A crime or situation or condition that can’t be
solved.”
• Where I Come From (2016), Jackie Warren-Moore, $12. Poet, playwright,
theatrical director, teacher, and freelance writer, Ms. Warren-Moore’s
work has been published nationally and internationally. She is a Survivor
of racism, sexism, sexual abuse, and physical abuse who regards her
poetic voice as the roadmap of her survival, a way of healing herself and
of speaking to the souls of others.
• SelectedLate Poems ofGeorg Trakl (2016), translations by Bob Herz, $7.50, or
$7.49 at Kindle and iBooks. This book includes all the poems Trakl
wrote in the last two years of his life, from Sebastian in Dream and the
poems that appeared in Der Brenner, plus poems from other periods
showing the development of the poet's art.
• Letter to Kerouac in Heaven (2016), Jack Micheline, $10. One of the original
Beats, Micheline's career took him from Greenwich Village to San
Francisco, with friends that included almost everyone, from Mailer to
Ginsberg to Corso and others. He was a street poet whose first book
included an introduction by Jack Kerouac and was reviewed in Esquire by
Dorothy Parker. This is a replica publication of one of his street books.
• BadAngels, Sam Pereira (2015), $20, or at Kindle and iBooks, $9.99. Of
this poet Peter Everwine wrote, “He’s an original.” Pereira’s work has
been praised by Norman Dubie, David St. John, and Peter Campion.
• Some Time in the Winter, Michael Burkard (2014), $16. A reprint of the
famed original 1978 chapbook with an extended essay by Mr. Burkard on
the origins of the poem.
• Poems forLorca, Walt Shepperd (2012), $9.95. The poems continue Mr.
Shepperd’s lifelong effort to truly see and record the life around him.
Lorca is his daughter, and the poems constitute an invaluable generational
gift from father to daughter, and from friend, colleague, and community
member to all of us.
Page vii8 - Nine Mile Magazine
P
׉	 7cassandra://ob_uA_mT5Wbz0K8hgYz5BcuemQsOvFboP5LWD5arwfs`̫ ^_;S,׉E ENine Mile
Magazine
Vol. 8, No. 1
Spring, 2020
Volume 8 No 1 - Page 9
׉	 7cassandra://b4MKZH_-n97eUzaQ1UF1SUE_bq9QF-1p8JuqYGS7atM`̫ ^_;S,^_;S,8בCט   8u׉׉	 7cassandra://yGe0xw8n7HYPEOr0u1ZM6-zilimcaxY1WiGvdUm-vAk v` I׉	 7cassandra://b4PI3HXiNN5sVd9U7CZF-5xWsvGj0FJXgTLKR6-LKusi-`@׉	 7cassandra://rK8po7FSg4b8kiqy1xRVFEtwflsw7ea1UBEu320jkWM`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://0bvT53DnE20G3lnY250pbXRKAWc8_aB5wlI3SeAH3Aw}͠^c;S,Kט  8u׉׉	 7cassandra://1lZ-LCefzu6_x4WSZ9x-W1pP68Wduqs4SNEESn5Iuno ` I׉	 7cassandra://8aWQq_YjN1KNGhmGYn2RCIov0FyN2yw28dTxjAwY3Kkid`@׉	 7cassandra://fjbB7YRxbILei9RTuKkt-uyW8c7VWVdp-ZLegVgUchE`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://FeczqDMuFmEOTnVWh4r-41LAdUSnv4DYa1GhA5AwJiw|7͠^c;S,Lט   8u׉׉	 7cassandra://yGe0xw8n7HYPEOr0u1ZM6-zilimcaxY1WiGvdUm-vAk v` I׉	 7cassandra://b4PI3HXiNN5sVd9U7CZF-5xWsvGj0FJXgTLKR6-LKusi-`@׉	 7cassandra://rK8po7FSg4b8kiqy1xRVFEtwflsw7ea1UBEu320jkWM`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://0bvT53DnE20G3lnY250pbXRKAWc8_aB5wlI3SeAH3Aw}͠^c;S,Kט  8u׉׉	 7cassandra://1lZ-LCefzu6_x4WSZ9x-W1pP68Wduqs4SNEESn5Iuno ` I׉	 7cassandra://8aWQq_YjN1KNGhmGYn2RCIov0FyN2yw28dTxjAwY3Kkid`@׉	 7cassandra://fjbB7YRxbILei9RTuKkt-uyW8c7VWVdp-ZLegVgUchE`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://FeczqDMuFmEOTnVWh4r-41LAdUSnv4DYa1GhA5AwJiw|7͠^c;S,Lט   8u׉׉	 7cassandra://yGe0xw8n7HYPEOr0u1ZM6-zilimcaxY1WiGvdUm-vAk v` I׉	 7cassandra://b4PI3HXiNN5sVd9U7CZF-5xWsvGj0FJXgTLKR6-LKusi-`@׉	 7cassandra://rK8po7FSg4b8kiqy1xRVFEtwflsw7ea1UBEu320jkWM`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://0bvT53DnE20G3lnY250pbXRKAWc8_aB5wlI3SeAH3Aw}͠^c;S,Kט  8u׉׉	 7cassandra://1lZ-LCefzu6_x4WSZ9x-W1pP68Wduqs4SNEESn5Iuno ` I׉	 7cassandra://8aWQq_YjN1KNGhmGYn2RCIov0FyN2yw28dTxjAwY3Kkid`@׉	 7cassandra://fjbB7YRxbILei9RTuKkt-uyW8c7VWVdp-ZLegVgUchE`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://FeczqDMuFmEOTnVWh4r-41LAdUSnv4DYa1GhA5AwJiw|7͠^c;S,L׉E
Appreciations & Asides
Random notes and quotes on art, literature, and life, unedited and as we
found them, from artists and critics whom we love:
I don’t try to be prophetic, as I don’t sit down to write literature. It is
simply this: a writer has to take all the risks of putting down what he sees.
No one can tell him about that. No one can control that reality. It reminds
me of something Pablo Picasso was supposed to have said to Gertrude
Stein while he was painting her portrait. Gertrude said, “I don’t look like
that.” And Picasso replied, “You will.” And he was right.
—James Baldwin, “The Art of Fiction No. 78,” The Paris Review 1984.
Remember the players have often mentioned it as an honor to
Shakespeare, that in his writing, whatsoever he penned, he never blotted
out a line. My answer hath been, “Would he had blotted a thousand,” which
they thought a malevolent speech. I had not told posterity this but for their
ignorance, who chose that circumstance to commend their friend by
wherein he most faulted; and to justify mine own candor, for I loved the
man, and do honor his memory on this side idolatry as much as any. He
was, indeed, honest, and of an open and free nature; had an excellent fancy,
brave notions, and gentle expressions, wherein be flowed with that facility
that sometime it was necessary he should be stopped. “Sufflaminandus
erat,” [He should have been clogged] as Augustus said ofHaterius. His wit was in
his own power; would the rule of it had been so too. Many times he fell
into those things, could not escape laughter, as when he said in the person
of Caesar, one speaking to him: “Caesar, thou dost me wrong.” He replied:
“Caesar did never wrong but with just cause;” and such like, which were
ridiculous. But he redeemed his vices with his virtues. There was ever more
in him to be praised than to be pardoned.
—Ben Johnson, adapted from The HarvardClassics (1910), Vol. 27.
Eliot tells us that the mystery ofHamlet is clarified if, instead of
considering the entire action of the drama as being due to Shakespeare’s
design, we see the tragedy as a sort of poorly made patchwork of previous
tragic material…There are traces of a work by Thomas Kyd, which we
know indirectly from other sources, in which the motive was only that of
revenge; and the delay in taking revenge was caused only by the problem of
assassinating a monarch surrounded by guards; moreover, Hamlet’s
“madness” is feigned, the aim being to avert suspicion. In Shakespeare’s
Page 10 - Nine Mile Magazine
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Tdefinitive drama the delayed vengeance is not explained—with the
exception ofHamlet’s continuous doubts, and the effect of his “madness”
is not to lull but to arouse the king’s suspicions. Shakespeare’s Hamlet also
deals with the effect of a mother’s guilt on the son, but Shakespeare was
unable to impose this motif upon the material of the old drama—and the
modification is not sufficiently complete to be convincing. In several ways
the play is puzzling, disquieting as none of the others is. Shakespeare left in
unnecessary and incongruent scenes that ought to have been spotted on
even the hastiest revision. Then there are unexplained scenes that would
seem to derive from a reworking ofKyd’s original play perhaps by
Chapman. In conclusion, Hamlet is a stratification ofmotifs that have not
merged, and represents the efforts of different authors, where each one put
his hand to the work of his predecessors. So, far from being Shakespeare’s
masterpiece, the play is an artistic failure. “Both workmanship and thought
are in an unstable condition …And probably more people have thought
Hamlet a work of art because they found it interesting, than have found it
interesting because it is a work of art. It is the Mona Lisa of literature.”
—Umberto Eco, On The Shoulders OfGiants (Harvard University Press,
2019). [NOTE: Quote is from Elliot’s essay “Hamlet and His Problems.”]
I have always known that there were spellbinding evil parts for women.
For one thing, I was taken at an early age to see Snow White and the Seven
Dwarfs. Never mind the Protestant work ethic of the dwarfs. Never mind
the tedious housework-is-virtuous motif. Never mind the fact that Snow
White is a vampire—anyone who lies in a glass coffin without decaying and
then comes to life again must be. The truth is that I was paralysed by the
scene in which the evil queen drinks the magic potion and changes her
shape. What power, what untold possibilities!
—Margaret Atwood, “Spotty-Handed Villainesses: Problems Of Female
Bad Behaviour In The Creation Of Literature,” from a speech given “in
various versions, here and there, in 1994.”
When one goes at ideas directly, with hammer and tongs as it were, ideas
tend to elude one in a poem. I think they only come back in when one
pretends not to be paying any attention to them, like a cat that will rub
against your leg.
—John Ashbery, Interview with Daniel Kane, English 88 Reading List.
When I write, I never re-write a sentence because for me my thought and
my writing are one thing. It’s like breathing, I don’t re-breathe a breath...
Volume 8 No 1 - Page 11
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Everything I have—my intellect, my experience, my feelings have been
used. If someone doesn’t like it, it is like saying they don’t like my gall
bladder. I can’t do anything about it.
—Arundhati Roy, interview in India 50, 1998.
Which is more musical: a truck passing by a factory or a truck passing by
a music school?
—John Cage, Silence: Lectures andWritings (Wesleyan University Press,
Anniversary edition, 2013)
Many people will agree that a man may be a great artist, and yet have a
bad influence. There is more ofMilton's influence in the badness of the bad
verse of the eighteenth century than of anybody's else: he certainly did more
harm than Dryden and Pope, and perhaps a good deal of the obloquy
which has fallen on these two poets, especially the latter, because of their
influence, ought to be transferred to Milton. But to put the matter simply in
terms of “bad influence” is not necessarily to bring a serious charge:
because a good deal of the responsibility, when we state the problem in
these terms, may devolve on the eighteenth-century poets themselves for
being such bad poets that they were incapable of being influenced except
for ill.
—T. S. Eliot, “The Poetry of John Milton,” 1936.
I repeat that the remoteness ofMilton’s verse from ordinary speech, his
invention of his own poetic language, seems to me one of the marks of his
greatness. Other marks are his sense of structure, both in the general design
of Paradise Lost and Samson, and in his syntax; and finally, and not least,
his inerrancy, conscious or unconscious, in writing so as to make the best
display of his talents, and the best concealment of his weaknesses.
—T. S. Eliot, “The Poetry of John Milton,” 1960.
Born and raised in what they used to call “The Radical Movement,” I
always look back with amused pride on those old-timers who didn’t smoke
or drink and lived long and troubled lives absolutely devoted to one
unmarried spouse—to keep themselves fit and ready for the barricades. The
World, The Flesh, and The Devil are far subtler personages than those
innocent Jewish mechanics and Italian peasants thought, but they still go
about in the night as a roaring lion seeking whom they may devour. It
behooves the artist to recognize and avoid them, especially when they wave
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׉	 7cassandra://QqmvfdQaNtGSHccdIecSR6TiCkL_JGUeRMJzpNtsLv4~`̫ ^_;S,	׉E	red, or black, flags, as well as roar. Because art is a weapon. After millions
of well-aimed blows, someday perhaps it will break the stone heart of the
mindless cacodemon called Things As They Are. Everything else has failed.
—Kenneth Rexroth, Introduction to Rexroth’s first collection of essays,
Bird in the Bush (New Directions, 1959).
Well, being a poet is a funny kind of jazz. It doesn’t get you anything. It
doesn’t get you any money, or not much, and it doesn’t get you any
prestige, or not much. It’s just something you do.
—John Berryman, from “An Interview with John Berryman” conducted
by John Plotz of the HarvardAdvocate on Oct. 27, 1968. In Berryman’s
Understanding: Reflections on the Poetry ofJohn Berryman. Ed. Harry Thomas.
Boston: Northeastern UP, 1988. Copyright © HarvardAdvocate
In recent years I’ve been lucky enough to travel to Britain a number of
times for literary events. My conversations with poets and readers there
have led me to think more about what it means to be an American writer—
something that we don’t consider so carefully, I suppose, until we’re
confronted with difference. In conversations in pubs after readings, or in
the café at the Poetry Society in London, it struck me that our colleagues in
the United Kingdom have a very different sense of the poet’s right to speak
about his or her own life—of the centrality of the self, in other words, in
the poems we write.
The clearest example of this came one evening when we were talking
about American poets, and the conversation turned to the poems of James
Wright. I quoted three lines ofWright’s I’ve always loved:
Suddenly I realize
That ifI stepped out ofmy body I would break
Into blossom.
I was shocked to discover that this passage had been enormously
controversial in the U.K.; for my British friends, it represented the height of
a brash, American sense of self. How dare Wright make such a claim for his
own feelings? How could he have the nerve to be so self-aggrandizing, to
assume that he felt some special, important emotion that could be
announced in this way, without irony, without apology?
Perhaps the signal characteristic of American poetry is our desire to put
the self at the center—whether it be Whitman’s expansive, inclusive “I” or
Dickinson’s micro-cosmic, endlessly doubting examination. Our way of
knowing the world is through the study of our own feelings and
perceptions. And if this gets in our way, some of the time, and offers too
Volume 8 No 1 - Page 13
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Through its bold curiosity about the self, its willingness to investigate
perception, thought and feeling with a relentless intensity, American poetry
in our century has evolved into a vibrant and diverse endeavor that’s among
this last century’s brighter achievement.
—Mark Doty, citied online at Modern American Poetry (http://mapslegacy.org/poets/a_f/doty/american.htm)
It
has become increasingly plain to me that the very excellent
organisation of a long book or the finest perceptions and judgment in time
of revision do not go well with liquor. A short story can be written on the
bottle, but for a novel you need the mental speed that enables you to keep
the whole pattern inside your head and ruthlessly sacrifice the sideshows …
I would give anything if I hadn’t written Part III of Tender Is the Night
entirely on stimulant.
—F. Scott Fitzgerald, letter to Max Perkins, March 11, 1935, in F. Scott
Fitzgerald, A Life in Letters, ed. Matthew Bruccoli (Simon & Schuster, 1994)
Memory, I think, is a substitute for the tail that we lost for good in the
happy process of evolution. It directs our movements, including migration.
Apart from that there is clearly something atavistic in the very process of
recollection, if only because such a process is never linear.
—Joseph Brodsky, “Less Than One,” in Less Than One SelectedEssays
(Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1986)
Someone said to Donne, the English satirist, “Thunder against the sins
but spare the sinners.” “What,” he said. “damn the cards and pardon the
card sharps?”
—Chamfort, Products ofthe PerfectedCivilization, translated by W.S. Merwin,
(North Point Press, 1984)
Great writers are either husbands or lovers. Some writers supply the
solid virtues of the husband: reliability, intelligibility, generosity, decency.
There are other writers in whom one prizes the gifts of a lover, gifts of
temperament rather than moral goodness. Notoriously, women tolerate
qualities in a lover—moodiness, selfishness, unreliability, brutality—that
they would never countenance in a husband, in return for excitement, an
infusion of intense feeling. In the same way, readers put up with
unintelligibility, obsessiveness, painful, truths, lies, bad grammar—if, in
compensation, the writers allows them to savor rare emotions and
Page 14 - Nine Mile Magazine
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0dangerous sensations. And, as in life, so in art both are necessary, husbands
and lovers. It’s a pity when one is forced to choose between them.
—Susan Sontag, “Camus’ Notebooks,” in Against Interpretation (Dell
Publishing, 1969)
In a political culture ofmanaged spectacles and passive spectators,
poetry appears as a rift, a peculiar lapse, in the prevailing mode. The reading
of a poem, a poetry reading, is not a spectacle, nor can it be passively
received. It’s an exchange of electrical currents through language—that
daily, mundane, abused, and ill-prized medium, that instrument of
deception and revelation, that material thing, that knife, rag, boat, spoon/
reed become pipe/tree trunk become drum/mud become clay flute/conch
shell become summons to freedom/old trousers and petticoats become
iconography in appliqué/rubber bands stretched around a box become lyre.
—Adrienne Rich, “Someone Is Writing a Poem” fromWhat Is FoundThere:
Notebooks on Poetry andPolitics. (W. W. Norton & Company, Inc., 1993)
…we heard that [Hemingway] was back in Paris and telling a number of
people how much he wanted to see her. Don’t you come home with
Hemingway on your arm, I used to say to her when she went out for a walk.
Sure enough one day she came back bringing him with her…. They sat and
talked a long time. Finally I heard her say, Hemingway, after all you are
ninety percent Rotarian. Can’t you, he said, make it eighty percent. No, she
said regretfully, I can’t.
—Gertrude Stein, The Autobiography ofAlice B. Toklas, SelectedWritings of
Gertrude Stein (Random House, 1946)
Why go grubbing in muck heaps? The world is fair, and the proportion
of healthy-minded men and honest women, to those who are foul, fallen or
unnatural is great. Mr Oscar Wilde has again been writing stuff that were
better unwritten; and while The Picture ofDorian Gray, which he
contributes to Lippincott’s, is ingenious, interesting, full of cleverness, and
plainly the work of a man of letters, it is false art—for its interest is medicolegal;
it is false to human nature—for its hero is a devil, it is false to
morality—for it is not made sufficiently clear that the writer does not prefer
a course of unnatural iniquity to a life of cleanliness, health and sanity. The
story—which deals with matters only fit for the Criminal Investigation
Department or a hearing in camera—is discreditable alike to author and
editor…Mr. Wilde has brains, and art, and style; but if he can write for
none but outlawed noblemen and perverted telegraph-boys, the sooner he
Volume 8 No 1 - Page 15
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reputation and the public morals.
—The Scots Observer, July 5th, 1890
It is rumoured that The Waste Land was written as a hoax. Several of its
supporters explain that this is immaterial, literature being concerned not
with intentions but results.
—J. F., “Shantih, Shantih, Shantih: Has the Reader Any Rights Before the
Bar of Literature?,” Time (March 1923)
We hate poetry that has a palpable design upon us—and if we do not
agree, seems to put its hand in its breeches pocket. Poetry should be great
& unobtrusive, a thing which enters into one’s soul, and does not startle it
or amaze it with itself but with its subject.—How beautiful are the retired
flowers! how would they lose their beauty were they to throng into the
highway crying out, “admire me I am a violet! dote upon me I am a
primrose!” Modern poets differ from the Elizabethans in this. Each of the
moderns like an Elector ofHanover governs his petty state, & knows how
many straws are swept daily from the Causeways in all his dominions & has
a continual itching that all the Housewives should have their coppers well
scoured: the antients were Emperors of vast Provinces, they had only heard
of the remote ones and scarcely cared to visit them.—I will cut all this—I
will have no more ofWordsworth or Hunt in particular—Why should we
be of the tribe ofManasseh when we can wander with Esau? why should
we kick against the Pricks, when we can walk on Roses? Why should we be
owls, when we can be Eagles?
—John Keats, Letter to J. H. Reynolds (February 3, 1818) Hampstead
Page 16 - Nine Mile Magazine
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Edgar Is Disgruntled
his gutters need repair and outside, as all too often happens, there are
flags, high-pitched hollers, grill-smoke, heavy-on-the-mustard deviled eggs,
sausage sputter, great shimmering haunches of Jello, cakes like pillows, and
an ominous gluten-free table tucked up against Albert’s hedge. Edgar loves
his food, but what’s not to loathe navigating the wheeling kids, the pale
midriffs of girls age 8-58, heartiness and piles of flimsy paper plates, those
wide grins beneath eyes which roam away when Edgar starts to speak.
With his hand on the doorknob and his dog occupied with a large
chew, Edgar realizes that to step out the door is to step down into a war
zone. He hesitates. It’s well known that a neighborhood barbecue can get
you killed.
Volume 8 No 1 - Page 17
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It’s the dried up child that’s the problem; it’s not as though her mother
has to worry about fitting a wizened being in a booster seat, or that
shopping for an outfit that might make the first day of school feel ok is a
hassle – it’s the not knowing, day to day. Her daughter tells her nothing. It’s
the not knowing, when the mother taps open the bedroom door to wake
her child, whether the world will be upright, or on its side.
The Grandmother worries she’s hasn’t enough money to send
even the smallest check.
The girl herself’s ok. She makes sure she’s ok. Classes are ok. Food’s
ok; her shoes fit and at school the kids are either solicitous or evil and
therefore a known quantity. The girl knows a lot about the state of the
world; she reads way more books than her classmates and could pry their
heads open.
She wishes her always-worried mother would give her a break and just
shut up.
The grandmother waits for her social security deposit and wonders
whether to spring for new wrapping paper this Christmas or just smooth
out what she neatly folded up last year.
The dried up child is on a field trip to an historic village with lots of
sheep.
The mother steps out into the cold, closing the door behind her.
Page 18 - Nine Mile Magazine
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was not home when neighbor Todd came to the door. At first the dogs
barked. Each year he knocks, stands back politely and asks permission to
hunt deer on those forest ledges sloping down towards the Deerfield River.
In his hand, a gift of 3 beautiful wooden spoons he’d carved during solitary
evenings.
Todd works at the hospital. He cleans things up. He is a calm man with
a slow, affectionate smile but he notices everything. Each day this man on
the sidelines, doing his job, sees what falls off the edges of life itself, of
hope, or even credibility.
That is why, each year, when Todd arrives at the several doorways here
in the hill towns, family dogs only bark once or twice.
Volume 8 No 1 - Page 19
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~`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://RHT06W2lgkIYUVZOi6fkMcyC__oJWkCWS6lT9Z-QDvQ2͠^h;S,_ט   8u׉׉	 7cassandra://kt_xSghrbs1VPleUsHT2bJE9rLl3gGYKQWAYzCGoXjs +` I׉	 7cassandra://NJgZ-IJQn0aLXhdCuuA2-rlS7gGGl3AXUNWrj9cMMTo>t`@׉	 7cassandra://laITPI5nAQtWrd7V3natoZ1eaQDfFWYZu7jmIQGj_Ag`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://1oVs208aGHo_qsBkthYh8-EkLJv6_ebf6moxUNKvP2w@͠^h;S,^ט  8u׉׉	 7cassandra://ciI1HOX2NZIFGxw2wPuatS3nSQDjSADFWO35NhEpZPE ~` I׉	 7cassandra://XdxKMBhg4BUATQQZ4h9RjzYHe3YcBlekw0o90SWQ2Xg$6`@׉	 7cassandra://3h0WkyqJZcclz3PWW6PNpknAL-DumNK1vd1YjosJgUA
~`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://RHT06W2lgkIYUVZOi6fkMcyC__oJWkCWS6lT9Z-QDvQ2͠^h;S,_׉EThis Year, Todd’s Spoons
are slender as women conjured by Modigliani: Clarice has been to the
beach. She shakes out her shoes, removes thick woolen socks and pins
them on the clothesline to drain out their sand. Alda has been brushing the
ghosts of Edward Gorey’s cats, a demanding chore she busies herself with
four times a week. On Fridays she sets out black bowls of raw cream.
Skinny Mickey has spent all afternoon drifting back and forth thinking she
might dust the front room windowsills. She loves vernal pools and frog
songs, but the season is long past and the music she thought stored tightly
in her mind is fading. That distresses her; she’s the saddest of the three
Spoon sisters but she never speaks of it.
We’re lost, she thinks, why dust at all. Why sweep up the sand sliding
from my sister’s skirts; why wash and dry the ghost bowls, or tidy the
invisible litter boxes. Justice is a feather caught in the tide, affection a plastic
Christmas tree torn up at the curb; singing starts with pride and a wide
heart but daily sours in the mouth....
Still, it matters to make the evening soup, buy bread, chocolate, paper
and pens. Clarice, Alda, and Skinny Mickey gather for their meal: curtains
drawn, joy and discouragement are both set aside in a velvet-lined drawer.
The sisters rest like any family at their small kitchen table with its yellow oilcloth.
Just a few cobwebs in the corner above the closed and bolted cellar
door.
Page 20 - Nine Mile Magazine
׉	 7cassandra://laITPI5nAQtWrd7V3natoZ1eaQDfFWYZu7jmIQGj_Ag`̫ ^_;S,׉EAll Saints
It’s just after dawn and she’s taken the mare out, riding through mist,
slow-stepping over slippery leaves, then up the slope to that spot on the
ridge which signifies clarity. These are the terrible weeks before
Thanksgiving with its whirl of details and recipes, those shopping lists, the
spot cleaning and airing of best linens.
The morning is damp-cold, pinching her cheeks red, bruising her lips
with something she’s not ready for: all that food, buttery oranges and
greens parceled out on gold-rimmed white china.
How she thinks of what she won’t eat at the table, how she’ll urge the
family and guests towards seconds and thirds, how she’ll hoard – for later –
some of everything in that dark corner of her pantry.
Volume 8 No 1 - Page 21
׉	 7cassandra://3h0WkyqJZcclz3PWW6PNpknAL-DumNK1vd1YjosJgUA
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Pamela Stewart (known as Jody) is a true “boomer,” New England
born and bred. She began writing in grade school because she couldn’t
draw. She’s taught creative writing at ASU,
University of Arizona, UC Irvine, and
University ofHouston. In 1982 she received
a Guggenheim and traveled to Cornwall, UK
where she then lived for 7 years. Jody
returned to western Massachusetts and in
1994 she, and her family moved to a farm to
raise fiber animals. Over the years she’s
published in a number ofmagazines, received 3 Pushcart publications, and
has written 6 full-length books including The RedWindow (Univ. ofGeorgia
Press, 1997), and Ghost Farm (Pleasure Boat Studio, 2010.) A chapbook, Just
Visiting, was published by Grey Suit Editions, London, 2014. She still lives
on the farm with 3 dogs, some elderly sheep, a rescued horse, his donkey,
several goats and old pigs.
ABOUT THE POEMS
How I met my first Prose-ette was by accident. Over the years I started
countless bits of prose which never came to life. They drabbed right off the
edge of the page, but about 6 years ago I asked myself to write at least one
sentence while drinking my first cup of coffee in the dark of the morning. It
wouldn’t matter what I wrote because all that really mattered was that hot
black coffee.
Sometimes another sentence emerged, then another and maybe a few
more. My first prose-ette entity was that of elusive Edgar regarding his
Phoenix apartment and its shortcomings. These little paragraphs were
spontaneous and always surprised me! To write was just plain fun and the
joy of it was that I was never “working on a poem.”
Page 22 - Nine Mile Magazine
׉	 7cassandra://Wb-4voOPv3hxoU_DryOrjQfS3HoBcowMIX4UYp1Du0w`̫ ^_;S,׉ECyrus Cassells
The Bamboo Labyrinth
Legions of rice stalks and midsummer reeds
Swayed in accelerating wind. In love,
I followed you all the way to Sado Island.
Fleeing a farrago of Taiko drums,
In favor of the earliest assembling stars,
We laughed and ambled in the twilit
Silver and jade-green field,
With our flimsy muslin shirts
Unbuttoned to reveal,
As if to Lothario Jupiter,
The Big Dipper, and the pockmarked moon,
Those old-time eavesdroppers
And unregenerate voyeurs,
The truant glory of our saké-splashed
Collarbones and throats—
A beguiling garland of lights shimmered,
Festooning the flowing Sea of Japan—a little broadcast
Brilliance from Korea (or Manchuria?)—
And almost straightaway, baleful clouds
Came along to block the ebullient stars.
With a shower in locomotion our way,
We hurried to a standstill battalion
Of hallowing trees;
So help me, I’d never encountered
Living bamboo, and by chance,
There was a whole god-sent grove
To revel in—
When the flat-footed, rummaging storm,
The Kabuki-wild rain reached us,
We weren’t abject or enraged,
Like bull-headed Lear roughly booted outdoors
By his repudiating daughters;
We were antic, July-giddy—
Volume 8 No 1 - Page 23
׉	 7cassandra://tvNhqw7NAwoo4TJfUiBDrlq_MRFUZ4dgCATrpwunqK8I`̫ ^_;S,^_;S,8בCט   8u׉׉	 7cassandra://NCUDTyuCHX4muqCcfcClNwQBaA_JIcfDQPnWVSPCsbo ` I׉	 7cassandra://XHMVf31NIMYm1nCxlzOHPNYycOY6ySlcKnE9FHcz_dU9`@׉	 7cassandra://vTozHDxmh4BCxT3bK7stsHyHpAsANMvLJXO6AndWhmY`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://w2dbuKwnMwmmqTdTqpfUCvXom7fpIPNTiPmxCQn_en8JQ͠^i;S,eט  8u׉׉	 7cassandra://8NpezHqOxWMau88R88KMSgY0vA614Zo_rhJkQdJ4KdYC` I׉	 7cassandra://IqjwVbiE1MpPI8vn3FB-H5EcrvA05QcD-Ev0MeMZX-M`@׉	 7cassandra://40wdfFWt0qGD67NEYCFPPz2mQi7DEplQO2YIoPkIc4M]`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://etSEvoEyWd7jxAudV2Bb9UuU2lWw5oM_7zKTCTo4Z8Y3͠^i;S,fט   8u׉׉	 7cassandra://NCUDTyuCHX4muqCcfcClNwQBaA_JIcfDQPnWVSPCsbo ` I׉	 7cassandra://XHMVf31NIMYm1nCxlzOHPNYycOY6ySlcKnE9FHcz_dU9`@׉	 7cassandra://vTozHDxmh4BCxT3bK7stsHyHpAsANMvLJXO6AndWhmY`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://w2dbuKwnMwmmqTdTqpfUCvXom7fpIPNTiPmxCQn_en8JQ͠^i;S,eט  8u׉׉	 7cassandra://8NpezHqOxWMau88R88KMSgY0vA614Zo_rhJkQdJ4KdYC` I׉	 7cassandra://IqjwVbiE1MpPI8vn3FB-H5EcrvA05QcD-Ev0MeMZX-M`@׉	 7cassandra://40wdfFWt0qGD67NEYCFPPz2mQi7DEplQO2YIoPkIc4M]`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://etSEvoEyWd7jxAudV2Bb9UuU2lWw5oM_7zKTCTo4Z8Y3͠^i;S,fט   8u׉׉	 7cassandra://NCUDTyuCHX4muqCcfcClNwQBaA_JIcfDQPnWVSPCsbo ` I׉	 7cassandra://XHMVf31NIMYm1nCxlzOHPNYycOY6ySlcKnE9FHcz_dU9`@׉	 7cassandra://vTozHDxmh4BCxT3bK7stsHyHpAsANMvLJXO6AndWhmY`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://w2dbuKwnMwmmqTdTqpfUCvXom7fpIPNTiPmxCQn_en8JQ͠^i;S,eט  8u׉׉	 7cassandra://8NpezHqOxWMau88R88KMSgY0vA614Zo_rhJkQdJ4KdYC` I׉	 7cassandra://IqjwVbiE1MpPI8vn3FB-H5EcrvA05QcD-Ev0MeMZX-M`@׉	 7cassandra://40wdfFWt0qGD67NEYCFPPz2mQi7DEplQO2YIoPkIc4M]`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://etSEvoEyWd7jxAudV2Bb9UuU2lWw5oM_7zKTCTo4Z8Y3͠^i;S,f׉E6Lighting flashes. The swoosh of wind
Rattling the gallant trees, the green and ocher
Auspices of the grove,
Ambushing the soldier-tall spears
Encircling us.
Your pretext was to hold and protect me
From the spieling tempest,
Then you pressed your storm-moist palm
To my novice’s chest,
My unshielded heart—
In the tensile year leading up
To that crazy, whistling bamboo maze,
I’d labored carefully to conceal
The sparks I felt so often in your presence;
Like dispensing with an intricate mask
At uproarious Venetian Carnival,
All at once, our mutual longing
Was completely pond-clear, ineluctable:
Truthfully, no ardent valentine had ever dared
To bless me with a French kiss
Or to probe my wet but febrile nipples
With a purposeful tongue,
And well, that was an epiphany!
Yes, I admit: I’d never known
The rain-slicked moustache
And black tussock of thick hair,
The telling heat and reassuring heft
Of a man’s sinews firsthand—
The wide-awake pilgrim, the not shipwrecked
Philosopher manqué in me insists:
We outwitting survivors
Return from oblivion or tempest,
Out of the ruckus and voltage, alive,
Only to find unmistakable signs,
Indelible memories branding us
Like Lichtenberg figures:
The fabled marks, the improbable flowers
Pitiless lighting leaves
On startled, inconsolable flesh—
Page 24 - Nine Mile Magazine
׉	 7cassandra://vTozHDxmh4BCxT3bK7stsHyHpAsANMvLJXO6AndWhmY`̫ ^_;S,׉E|Tell me, you, who never attained
Christ’s age—my sweet summer despoiler,
Did an errant thunderbolt claim me?
Did I die there in that rain-washed grove?—
All I know is,
My irreplaceable first man,
My amorous prize in the storm,
I can’t relinquish our windblown
Bamboo labyrinth,
I can’t rest without reclaiming
That bonanza of rain on my flesh—
Volume 8 No 1 - Page 25
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As in a tensile joust,
In which stouthearted knights,
Beribboned favorites of the king,
Both dauntless competitors,
Never dare to reveal
The turret-tall stakes,
Time and again, in the eventful years
Following college, I shook
Your firm, almost hallowing hand,
Tallying in my head
Your dynamic triumphs, with the requisite
Courteous detachment
(Yes, indifference was the hunter’s snare,
The focused angler’s reel
Of our later encounters,
Mock indifference and its cousin, nonchalance)
So as to outfox, longstanding crush
And university rival,
You, with your lightly disguised,
Yet thoroughly transparent
Fix on me
(All of your ingenious bids
To secure my applause—detectable
Emblems of an undeclared desire),
Taking note of the inimitable plays,
The sovereign films,
The gold and silver accolades,
All you had so diligently attained,
Sometimes with cast-ashore envy,
Sometimes with welling joy—
I see now: under my feigned politesse,
My false reticence,
Beneath almost negligible white lies, denials,
I bore the crest and chilly armor
That hid irrefutable loss,
The fear, in this bustling life, first of squiring
Then losing you—
Page 26 - Nine Mile Magazine
׉	 7cassandra://GMLID-ThXEP0FlGtzKoswQWVukaV7hdA7lUGGnIzn5g^`̫ ^_;S,׉EEverything in my brisk, meticulous
Waking world arranged
(The humdrum opposite
Ofmy unhampered dreams,
The valiant world under my lids,
In which we pledged gallants
And staunch companions strode,
Inseparable as Damon and Pythias)
Permitting me to venture forth,
Sanguine, princely,
A full-blown leader in my field,
But with my secretly allied,
Irrationally loyal heart insolvent—
When I heard the riveting news
Of your cliff-side crash,
Poleaxed as a bested crusader
Or a suddenly gasping chatelaine,
I actually collapsed
In the fabled medieval quarter of Rhodes—
As if someone had savaged the revealing
Strings of an alluring harp—deposed
On the blank, cool cobblestones
Near the inimitable moat
Of Saint John’s Gate, toppled
By the sound of your questing voice
In sophomore astronomy class:
What is this colossal force,
This mighty God-spark
That binds the stars?—
So help me, my inmost hero
(Soul-close as a hungry milk brother),
My terrific, quite humbling swoon
Was equal to the noon-struck moment
In a long-ago copse,
When a veering Roosevelt elk
Leapt before me,
As if the astonishing beast could toss,
With its imposing antlers,
Volume 8 No 1 - Page 27
׉	 7cassandra://4M3zzP2YpLc3dmKKKFAQpHEge2ot5Q-LKkFjeLQlQGc2`̫ ^_;S,^_;S,8בCט   8u׉׉	 7cassandra://ekgDjzMEtjZboCrFeofxFT7T43cy5jSJzPBUM6hzXIYfJ` I׉	 7cassandra://i8dHP-w1HDZdn1I-NxYWubRQ4_gQE3YhUTBAMVC_U_I` @׉	 7cassandra://Jzo8ygabc-MwHd7mntEHXPfbE7tCmQOg5FURzLdooaUN`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://40fZRSaFGz1ExxbEMfTqQGUyT5AQo4Gvknsa1aKnEs40K͠^j;S,kט  8u׉׉	 7cassandra://hCkAa9IYJ2MhF1fogDCoYfJUhuVbwLfvNoAAZ4t_Sd0 O` I׉	 7cassandra://gwSQ7wkNwII7iheqQJa_OsldeP7QXqExKJK1emtucNQ7`@׉	 7cassandra://9MwSEQPZeQOrnkkMVKDeXKeainMutklahAfUff2JqHkF`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://K60Ia0hsq8E7uMwEoR672YtW6TNonzd7S7QJ5Y3ASf0̈́͠^j;S,lט   8u׉׉	 7cassandra://ekgDjzMEtjZboCrFeofxFT7T43cy5jSJzPBUM6hzXIYfJ` I׉	 7cassandra://i8dHP-w1HDZdn1I-NxYWubRQ4_gQE3YhUTBAMVC_U_I` @׉	 7cassandra://Jzo8ygabc-MwHd7mntEHXPfbE7tCmQOg5FURzLdooaUN`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://40fZRSaFGz1ExxbEMfTqQGUyT5AQo4Gvknsa1aKnEs40K͠^j;S,kט  8u׉׉	 7cassandra://hCkAa9IYJ2MhF1fogDCoYfJUhuVbwLfvNoAAZ4t_Sd0 O` I׉	 7cassandra://gwSQ7wkNwII7iheqQJa_OsldeP7QXqExKJK1emtucNQ7`@׉	 7cassandra://9MwSEQPZeQOrnkkMVKDeXKeainMutklahAfUff2JqHkF`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://K60Ia0hsq8E7uMwEoR672YtW6TNonzd7S7QJ5Y3ASf0̈́͠^j;S,lט   8u׉׉	 7cassandra://ekgDjzMEtjZboCrFeofxFT7T43cy5jSJzPBUM6hzXIYfJ` I׉	 7cassandra://i8dHP-w1HDZdn1I-NxYWubRQ4_gQE3YhUTBAMVC_U_I` @׉	 7cassandra://Jzo8ygabc-MwHd7mntEHXPfbE7tCmQOg5FURzLdooaUN`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://40fZRSaFGz1ExxbEMfTqQGUyT5AQo4Gvknsa1aKnEs40K͠^j;S,kט  8u׉׉	 7cassandra://hCkAa9IYJ2MhF1fogDCoYfJUhuVbwLfvNoAAZ4t_Sd0 O` I׉	 7cassandra://gwSQ7wkNwII7iheqQJa_OsldeP7QXqExKJK1emtucNQ7`@׉	 7cassandra://9MwSEQPZeQOrnkkMVKDeXKeainMutklahAfUff2JqHkF`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://K60Ia0hsq8E7uMwEoR672YtW6TNonzd7S7QJ5Y3ASf0̈́͠^j;S,l׉E The gold chrysanthemum sun,
And I staggered back, dear genius,
I staggered back—
in memory ofD., 1949-2017
Page 28 - Nine Mile Magazine
׉	 7cassandra://Jzo8ygabc-MwHd7mntEHXPfbE7tCmQOg5FURzLdooaUN`̫ ^_;S,׉EVerse In Which The Poet’s New Lover
Carves Him Into a Sicilian Puppet
I. Verse in Which the Poet’s New LoverCarves Him Into a Sicilian Puppet
In Sicily, you paint my Moor’s armor
The illustrious gold of a royal gingko
In garish fall, my foraging, wide-awake eyes
The white of glittering feldspar,
Or far-off Andromeda,
My just-fashioned irises the entreating green
Of Van Gogh’s “The Poet’s Garden.”
But my eyes are brown as pennies, I protest
To my newly acquired lover, Marco Angelo,
Ace woodcarver and able puppeteer
Who looks impressively tan and fit
(It’s sweltering mid-July)
In his Starsky and Hutch t-shirt,
While he graces my evolving lookalike
With the bull’s-eye gaze belonging
To a go-for-glory trapeze artist
Or a galloping circus showman:
Caro poeta, I’m sure pea-green works better
For a daring Moor
Or a defiant Saracen.
But I thought you were transforming me,
Like a modern day Geppetto,
Into a hero, a truth-loving, crusading knight,
Your very own high yellow Orlando!
Well, amico, as you can tell,
From the latest phase ofthe pupo,
I have changedmy mind.
By the way, teasing Marco whispers,
Gently tapping my island-brown forehead:
Are those brows really yours
Or just a Japanese painter’s brushstrokes?
Volume 8 No 1 - Page 29
׉	 7cassandra://9MwSEQPZeQOrnkkMVKDeXKeainMutklahAfUff2JqHkF`̫ ^_;S,^_;S,8בCט   8u׉׉	 7cassandra://dOjxsAQtMPklJ1je30DvTXOp4fc3Yk3To9GRXp7QYv8 ` I׉	 7cassandra://4b5K6X5SqiijM1BS2Qv5FMol-0sPS9uOBDgDFUQSPtw6`@׉	 7cassandra://6hSkpwqNYHCRC2W6Uig-0P15miQjb-ByR-rxQqOuSx8}`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://6tOCayCZiQbOlfqK7Wzsvo_RD9Qe-Lpz-7tlT1XlZwAn͠^k;S,nט  8u׉׉	 7cassandra://7eABv5byU8feXWf229xVvT_TJ7XQM0ls8h8GQN_Ils0 ` I׉	 7cassandra://J_ZHSpy2vZOPFxWAPfRQKiRTFCK9Xluxk3mafwWduak%H`@׉	 7cassandra://c-aLJVITPB88tBgbpEjkQRJdf939R_ormOuwyJ2CHJI`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://dAGw0SLrawX4IgaXLxsp2iwu4pyj9hFU-9XBvitOIz4@ ͠^k;S,oט   8u׉׉	 7cassandra://dOjxsAQtMPklJ1je30DvTXOp4fc3Yk3To9GRXp7QYv8 ` I׉	 7cassandra://4b5K6X5SqiijM1BS2Qv5FMol-0sPS9uOBDgDFUQSPtw6`@׉	 7cassandra://6hSkpwqNYHCRC2W6Uig-0P15miQjb-ByR-rxQqOuSx8}`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://6tOCayCZiQbOlfqK7Wzsvo_RD9Qe-Lpz-7tlT1XlZwAn͠^k;S,nט  8u׉׉	 7cassandra://7eABv5byU8feXWf229xVvT_TJ7XQM0ls8h8GQN_Ils0 ` I׉	 7cassandra://J_ZHSpy2vZOPFxWAPfRQKiRTFCK9Xluxk3mafwWduak%H`@׉	 7cassandra://c-aLJVITPB88tBgbpEjkQRJdf939R_ormOuwyJ2CHJI`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://dAGw0SLrawX4IgaXLxsp2iwu4pyj9hFU-9XBvitOIz4@ ͠^k;S,oט   8u׉׉	 7cassandra://dOjxsAQtMPklJ1je30DvTXOp4fc3Yk3To9GRXp7QYv8 ` I׉	 7cassandra://4b5K6X5SqiijM1BS2Qv5FMol-0sPS9uOBDgDFUQSPtw6`@׉	 7cassandra://6hSkpwqNYHCRC2W6Uig-0P15miQjb-ByR-rxQqOuSx8}`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://6tOCayCZiQbOlfqK7Wzsvo_RD9Qe-Lpz-7tlT1XlZwAn͠^k;S,nט  8u׉׉	 7cassandra://7eABv5byU8feXWf229xVvT_TJ7XQM0ls8h8GQN_Ils0 ` I׉	 7cassandra://J_ZHSpy2vZOPFxWAPfRQKiRTFCK9Xluxk3mafwWduak%H`@׉	 7cassandra://c-aLJVITPB88tBgbpEjkQRJdf939R_ormOuwyJ2CHJI`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://dAGw0SLrawX4IgaXLxsp2iwu4pyj9hFU-9XBvitOIz4@ ͠^k;S,o׉EII. Marco Angelo’s PuppetMuseum Tour (Come Upstairs)
The flame-like moment our eyes locked,
Marco Angelo was lifting his Naples yellow
And peony-pink awning,
And after a lush, prolonged stare, Don Intensity,
With his prophet-long hair, deliberately
Lowered the awning again,
So I was impelled to amble past
His suddenly reopened store
And inviting woodcarver’s workshop
Once, twice, before summoning
My All-American stars-and-stripes resolve
To venture inside, where,
As a dumbshow tourist in Ortigia,
The bewitching island offshoot of Syracuse,
I pretended to browse,
Musing just how long I could sustain
My finicky shopper’s ruse,
My mostly lust-fueled performance,
Before fleeing, in a clumsy flash,
With a heartfelt buona sera—
Finally, in an affable, committed voice,
Marco Angelo proclaimed:
My two brothers and I, we have
A whole collection ofrare
And even precious puppets,
Little stages, woodcarving tools, and old posters,
Yes, a museum—
Please follow me upstairs;
Let me show you—
In a cat-quiet corner
Of the remarkable puppet collection, I confess,
I came for the first time
From the pressure of his formidable,
Sinewy arms, from the shock
Of his trimmed, cologne-scented beard
And care-taking tongue:
Page 30 - Nine Mile Magazine
׉	 7cassandra://6hSkpwqNYHCRC2W6Uig-0P15miQjb-ByR-rxQqOuSx8}`̫ ^_;S,׉E&At one crest in our lovemaking,
Before the countless widened eyes
Of ready-to-be-seen-and-see antique puppets,
He laughed and wrapped
His waterfall of waist-length hair
Like a dark flag around my throat—
*
It became a summer ritual: I’d arrive,
Just as Marco Angelo was closing:
In our daft, eleventh hour re-enactment
Of his salacious museum tour,
Like an appraising collector,
I’d run my assessing hands
Over a few glittering Sicilian knights
And fearsome, “swart-skinned” Saracens—
Once my avid puppeteer
Literally hauled me upstairs, let me
Unbutton his linen shirt and unbraid
His gleaming black hair,
Then nimbly blindfolded me—with a blue,
Hand-sewn scarf from Cefalù—
To let me savor more fully
Our unleashed bodies’ veneer
Of sweat and midsummer musk—
Volume 8 No 1 - Page 31
׉	 7cassandra://c-aLJVITPB88tBgbpEjkQRJdf939R_ormOuwyJ2CHJI`̫ ^_;S,^_;S,8בCט   8u׉׉	 7cassandra://mZIjH3Aas1viguiCGajqS2XW4MzD2hYE1KKG8-v084I {` I׉	 7cassandra://JmknUr3Ya9_mnV88203xXEznuoFuvIEqNRNuprtA1EY5!`@׉	 7cassandra://gDVlWiq2oXRNxK5TsbtLjURa0z5ZEsLBjc-68bir9dk`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://NlfFzmIHChv3Dfd91iRS2DIihfg9zKMyEGeBn5PUxI8qp͠^l;S,qט  8u׉׉	 7cassandra://XsJzhMO5d7OIjWqXG2AIrjWKuMdbzrwgn-jlsIytpjg ` I׉	 7cassandra://jLfH-f4hn6ixUPNfiB8v7_KfXCU0bN3euAT8sHLvU9Y;`@׉	 7cassandra://cBMaixb3MV5-usNHOccrFCRJ5yS-NEQCk56RUyH-z00x`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://9fy-QS37Z0Qu2WJMRnwbn_XdQJS6AVx7b_XhhxbWw4Y\͠^l;S,rט   8u׉׉	 7cassandra://mZIjH3Aas1viguiCGajqS2XW4MzD2hYE1KKG8-v084I {` I׉	 7cassandra://JmknUr3Ya9_mnV88203xXEznuoFuvIEqNRNuprtA1EY5!`@׉	 7cassandra://gDVlWiq2oXRNxK5TsbtLjURa0z5ZEsLBjc-68bir9dk`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://NlfFzmIHChv3Dfd91iRS2DIihfg9zKMyEGeBn5PUxI8qp͠^l;S,qט  8u׉׉	 7cassandra://XsJzhMO5d7OIjWqXG2AIrjWKuMdbzrwgn-jlsIytpjg ` I׉	 7cassandra://jLfH-f4hn6ixUPNfiB8v7_KfXCU0bN3euAT8sHLvU9Y;`@׉	 7cassandra://cBMaixb3MV5-usNHOccrFCRJ5yS-NEQCk56RUyH-z00x`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://9fy-QS37Z0Qu2WJMRnwbn_XdQJS6AVx7b_XhhxbWw4Y\͠^l;S,rט   8u׉׉	 7cassandra://mZIjH3Aas1viguiCGajqS2XW4MzD2hYE1KKG8-v084I {` I׉	 7cassandra://JmknUr3Ya9_mnV88203xXEznuoFuvIEqNRNuprtA1EY5!`@׉	 7cassandra://gDVlWiq2oXRNxK5TsbtLjURa0z5ZEsLBjc-68bir9dk`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://NlfFzmIHChv3Dfd91iRS2DIihfg9zKMyEGeBn5PUxI8qp͠^l;S,qט  8u׉׉	 7cassandra://XsJzhMO5d7OIjWqXG2AIrjWKuMdbzrwgn-jlsIytpjg ` I׉	 7cassandra://jLfH-f4hn6ixUPNfiB8v7_KfXCU0bN3euAT8sHLvU9Y;`@׉	 7cassandra://cBMaixb3MV5-usNHOccrFCRJ5yS-NEQCk56RUyH-z00x`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://9fy-QS37Z0Qu2WJMRnwbn_XdQJS6AVx7b_XhhxbWw4Y\͠^l;S,r׉E'III. My Lookalike Saracen Under the Stars
After a steady month ofmeticulous carving, assembling,
Sewing on a black and gold-trimmed velvet cape,
And crowning my hard-knock lookalike
With a shiny, sickle-moon helmet,
Marco declares my bearded twin warrior
Is prime to hit the illustrious puppet stage,
Magically erected in a lovely
But mostly roofless building:
In your honor, we’ll let you be
The parlatore—the voice
Ofthe wily Saracen
Just for a few performances.
It’s good you’re an actor as well,
Because, amore, you better soundmean!
So into the chivalrous world of Charlemagne,
I plunge—the bustling planet of the Sicilian pupi,
Brimming with 9
th
century Parisians,
Invading Tartars, and Saracens,
With beloved stock characters:
The staunch, always do-right paladin Orlando,
The dazzling, clash-inducing beauty Angelica,
The ever-scheming witch, Morgana . . .
.
Look!Here I am relentless, dastardly,
Never giving in to the Christians;
Here I am dramatic, wheedling,
A horse’s ass . . .
As I sally into battle under the dog day stars,
I laugh and say, Marco,
When things get seriously mean:
Just remember, puppet master, deep down,
Like any steadfast poet worth his salt,
I’m a troubadour, yes indeed,
A verse-spouting lover, head to toe,
Never a harsh foe or a fighter!
Page 32 - Nine Mile Magazine
׉	 7cassandra://gDVlWiq2oXRNxK5TsbtLjURa0z5ZEsLBjc-68bir9dk`̫ ^_;S,׉E.The Wrestlers (Caramelo And Guapo Gringo)
Though I was rash, run-of-the-mill—
A tagalong athlete at best,
How is it, after all these years,
We’re still punning and wrestling?
We never banter about this,
The bald-as-a-sumo fact you insisted I drop
“Fancy-pants” French and straightaway “enlist”—
That’s exactly the verb you used!—
In “handier” First-Year Spanish,
And then recruited me
For the mostly belittled wrestling team;
I suppose, for your part, even then,
Mat-work was akin
To outright philosophy, a pulsing physical form
Of fathomless meditation—
I confess it tickles me you’ve settled
In “Guadalajara, Guadalajara,”
The vaunted birthplace of our tiny,
At times fortissimo Spanish teacher,
The far-sighted woman who instilled in us
An endless love for totemic García Lorca,
The magus García Marquez,
And blind, encyclopedic Borges—
On Señora Leticia’s engaging
High school senior Spanish Club trek
To gargantuan Mexico City,
I fell in love with Montezuma’s
Godzilla-and-Mothara-sized metropolis,
But lamented my gadabout paseos,
Without fail, blackened my saved-for deck shoes—
In “onerous” high school,
As we once derided it,
As disapproving sophomores,
You felt demi-cursed by your German
And Scandinavian good looks,
And instead of duly squiring
Volume 8 No 1 - Page 33
׉	 7cassandra://cBMaixb3MV5-usNHOccrFCRJ5yS-NEQCk56RUyH-z00x`̫ ^_;S,^_;S,8בCט   8u׉׉	 7cassandra://oZrFsQNxanEFESGGqefIH_3eQ-rJMMCTrWkzfmPcd5A ` I׉	 7cassandra://nokszy7OGYMRTdVQ2yhiGKzy1KUukvNUklDEjgStotc7`@׉	 7cassandra://_-oNvC1TU0QjTjjyMh5SlibESTl0Vk56wOxl4v9NnEc`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://oDO1ywY8vdliTv_F71eyJAX4DnziSCBop8UP6Nkgr6In͠^m;S,tט  8u׉׉	 7cassandra://Sm8RrsORJP0qvfM-WDbO3JZtImAy-t-AqhOCxMIcpCs j` I׉	 7cassandra://iIw5tqsdScC9hSZdkwlSz5gqfO3-B7UItMnf2Dm-n9M5'`@׉	 7cassandra://iPiZTMp3eIyDLSYRvUR_d8q5e9ARlju4bmcQYCXTvKA`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://Tbr2zE3C7G2SPd4mO-35JKjCVgvSRtQ1d05jlGNFtno^͠^m;S,uט   8u׉׉	 7cassandra://oZrFsQNxanEFESGGqefIH_3eQ-rJMMCTrWkzfmPcd5A ` I׉	 7cassandra://nokszy7OGYMRTdVQ2yhiGKzy1KUukvNUklDEjgStotc7`@׉	 7cassandra://_-oNvC1TU0QjTjjyMh5SlibESTl0Vk56wOxl4v9NnEc`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://oDO1ywY8vdliTv_F71eyJAX4DnziSCBop8UP6Nkgr6In͠^m;S,tט  8u׉׉	 7cassandra://Sm8RrsORJP0qvfM-WDbO3JZtImAy-t-AqhOCxMIcpCs j` I׉	 7cassandra://iIw5tqsdScC9hSZdkwlSz5gqfO3-B7UItMnf2Dm-n9M5'`@׉	 7cassandra://iPiZTMp3eIyDLSYRvUR_d8q5e9ARlju4bmcQYCXTvKA`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://Tbr2zE3C7G2SPd4mO-35JKjCVgvSRtQ1d05jlGNFtno^͠^m;S,uט   8u׉׉	 7cassandra://oZrFsQNxanEFESGGqefIH_3eQ-rJMMCTrWkzfmPcd5A ` I׉	 7cassandra://nokszy7OGYMRTdVQ2yhiGKzy1KUukvNUklDEjgStotc7`@׉	 7cassandra://_-oNvC1TU0QjTjjyMh5SlibESTl0Vk56wOxl4v9NnEc`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://oDO1ywY8vdliTv_F71eyJAX4DnziSCBop8UP6Nkgr6In͠^m;S,tט  8u׉׉	 7cassandra://Sm8RrsORJP0qvfM-WDbO3JZtImAy-t-AqhOCxMIcpCs j` I׉	 7cassandra://iIw5tqsdScC9hSZdkwlSz5gqfO3-B7UItMnf2Dm-n9M5'`@׉	 7cassandra://iPiZTMp3eIyDLSYRvUR_d8q5e9ARlju4bmcQYCXTvKA`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://Tbr2zE3C7G2SPd4mO-35JKjCVgvSRtQ1d05jlGNFtno^͠^m;S,u׉EThe fig-ripe Valkyries,
The cookie-cutter sweethearts
Your Cologne-born mother
Had carefully, almost gingerly
Allotted for you,
In wayward fashion,
You praised our high desert town’s
Wary, wiseacre Latina girls,
With lush rose-trellis names:
Keris, Jacinta, Maria Isabel, Socorro …
I replay those early years
Of sheer horseplay and camaraderie,
As we trek to irresistible Tulum,
And later, climb to the panoramic top
Of the rugged pyramid in Cobá
(Yes, with its buffeted cloud flotillas,
Its fabled blue-and-white canopy,
Mexico has my favorite sky),
Stopping for a journeyman bullfight
In a humble jungle village,
Where your flagpole height,
Wheat-colored ponytail,
And tallow-pale forearms
Make you a lightning-fast Nordic celeb,
A Mayan curiosity—
Back in college, we used to exclaim:
I see a hammock with my name on it!
Nowadays, in spiffed-up Playa del Carmen,
There’s little sleeping outdoors:
After a flirty, agile jack-of-all-trades
Valiantly fixes your truck’s flat tire,
Marcelino gleefully coaxes, and yes, slyly ushers
“Caramelo and Guapo Gringo”
(As if we’d been hailed
As first-class Lucha Libre wrestlers!)
To a newly inaugurated, no-frills hotel,
Where an impervious tarantula blooms,
Above the lintel of our shore-blessed room,
Page 34 - Nine Mile Magazine
׉	 7cassandra://_-oNvC1TU0QjTjjyMh5SlibESTl0Vk56wOxl4v9NnEc`̫ ^_;S,׉ELike a blossoming black star
In some abysmal Hammer Horror—
In this bright, empty-bellied hotel,
I recall, before our lively tenure
As on-fire teen wrestlers,
The summer-to-summer stretch
That we incorrigible thespians
(Acned, raring to go, and graced
With ever-ready erections)
Started impersonating blood-sampling
“Champs and Vampires” —
Count Dracula versus Barnabas Collins!—
And our delightful horror show duel
Suddenly veered (as if some leering demigod
Or lust-inducing satyr
Had waved a magic wand)
Into our first heedless kisses,
Our first blissed-out thrusts
And quick-as-a-hare climaxes—
As you recall, your tree house
Was aptly christened “Collinwood West,”
(You were obsessed, naturally,
With that creaky-as-a-crypt-lid soap,
Dark Shadows)
And my own cobbled-together perch
Was dubbed Lord Dracula’s Castle—
Today we’re the untried inn’s
Absolute first and only welcome guests,
So nobody but nobody can detect
Or fault my sudden gasps
As our at-ease siesta,
Started in separate beds, becomes
More than your average August siesta—
In our marvelous, semi-nervous,
Yet still vigorous faux-wrestling,
Followed by our surprise,
Volume 8 No 1 - Page 35
׉	 7cassandra://iPiZTMp3eIyDLSYRvUR_d8q5e9ARlju4bmcQYCXTvKA`̫ ^_;S, ^_;S,8בCט   8u׉׉	 7cassandra://a-Cli6mi4GTJRulamvnNAgtt6SxK8XmDdUSPm4UxakwY` I׉	 7cassandra://KOgZrU5TUs3GMLcG5tlpLm8DvT0QpJffKDxSC-tJsvAN`@׉	 7cassandra://lyogyfWyhduY3IlQOsC6QHAO9N-MmS9lCE1YnfUk0eY`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://TQjIyvGgdYyoVV7HfUrrtAeli3mN5x_kFvHkSQPD6iMNQ͠^m;S,wט  8u׉׉	 7cassandra://bwhhNeh8aMDX9QGk7P6HPh4k43VAMeGO_6dh8bHXW3w ` I׉	 7cassandra://DqQsr_Cx3dhu9YsXN3aJVndpRBi0qkH_D_YeRFaMbeEB`@׉	 7cassandra://lnDGdN3w-9gGj8P5qZ35njuOir_v89PZTngMNiy1678`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://6WXJZyFHB9aff0kjFtuK8uUcblXXhEoKL5nEyi9Lemo͞͠^m;S,xט   8u׉׉	 7cassandra://a-Cli6mi4GTJRulamvnNAgtt6SxK8XmDdUSPm4UxakwY` I׉	 7cassandra://KOgZrU5TUs3GMLcG5tlpLm8DvT0QpJffKDxSC-tJsvAN`@׉	 7cassandra://lyogyfWyhduY3IlQOsC6QHAO9N-MmS9lCE1YnfUk0eY`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://TQjIyvGgdYyoVV7HfUrrtAeli3mN5x_kFvHkSQPD6iMNQ͠^m;S,wט  8u׉׉	 7cassandra://bwhhNeh8aMDX9QGk7P6HPh4k43VAMeGO_6dh8bHXW3w ` I׉	 7cassandra://DqQsr_Cx3dhu9YsXN3aJVndpRBi0qkH_D_YeRFaMbeEB`@׉	 7cassandra://lnDGdN3w-9gGj8P5qZ35njuOir_v89PZTngMNiy1678`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://6WXJZyFHB9aff0kjFtuK8uUcblXXhEoKL5nEyi9Lemo͞͠^m;S,xט   8u׉׉	 7cassandra://a-Cli6mi4GTJRulamvnNAgtt6SxK8XmDdUSPm4UxakwY` I׉	 7cassandra://KOgZrU5TUs3GMLcG5tlpLm8DvT0QpJffKDxSC-tJsvAN`@׉	 7cassandra://lyogyfWyhduY3IlQOsC6QHAO9N-MmS9lCE1YnfUk0eY`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://TQjIyvGgdYyoVV7HfUrrtAeli3mN5x_kFvHkSQPD6iMNQ͠^m;S,wט  8u׉׉	 7cassandra://bwhhNeh8aMDX9QGk7P6HPh4k43VAMeGO_6dh8bHXW3w ` I׉	 7cassandra://DqQsr_Cx3dhu9YsXN3aJVndpRBi0qkH_D_YeRFaMbeEB`@׉	 7cassandra://lnDGdN3w-9gGj8P5qZ35njuOir_v89PZTngMNiy1678`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://6WXJZyFHB9aff0kjFtuK8uUcblXXhEoKL5nEyi9Lemo͞͠^m;S,x׉E^Hello-again coupling,
It’s clear as a cornet’s register:
You’re a man now,
Possessing a roustabout’s chest
And impressive shoulders,
And lo, your strong, insurgent kisses
Are much surer than at fumbling fourteen:
Look, how did you get inside me,
Barnabas Collins? Does this mean
We’re Champs andVampires again?
Page 36 - Nine Mile Magazine
׉	 7cassandra://lyogyfWyhduY3IlQOsC6QHAO9N-MmS9lCE1YnfUk0eY`̫ ^_;S,!׉EABOUT CYRUS CASSELLS
Cyrus Cassells’ six books are The MudActor, SoulMake a Path through
Shouting, Beautiful Signor, More Than Peace andCypresses, The Crossed-Out
Swastika, and The GospelAccording To Wild Indigo.
His book of Catalan translations, StillLife with
Children: SelectedPoems ofFrancesc Parcerisas, is due
from Stephen F. Austin State University Press in
April 2019. He’s a recipient of a Lannan Literary
Award, a William Carlos Williams Award, and a
Lambda Literary Award.
ABOUT THE POEMS
My six published books of poetry,
multicultural and international in spirit, have
been concerned with issues of justice, war, conscience, the healing of
trauma, as well as the restorative power of romantic and erotic love. In
addition to my study of French, Italian, Japanese, and Spanish, I have also
been drawn, out of a sense of justice, to endangered languages and dialects,
including Gullah, Hawaiian, and Catalan (callously banned from public use
by Franco at the close of the Spanish Civil War). I strive hard to make my
poetic language precise, musical, and memorable. As poet Ellen Hinsey
once asserted, “poetry is an independent ambassador for conscience: it
answers to no one, it crosses borders without a passport, and it speaks the
truth.” With my poetry, I like to think ofmyself as an intrepid AfricanAmerican
ambassador working freely and fearlessly in the world.
Volume 8 No 1 - Page 37
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Henry, Praying: Sutter Psych Hospital
Keeping this chair beside him—
three times our day.
And at midnight,
when the Cosmos
reduces us to snacks,
still he prays.
Mercy on tiptoes
trips into his ruthless world.
He’s formal, a stately murmurer,
with the longest band of gratitudes
even though he must be starved. And even
though he’s starving, he
manages a stony
ascending trail of thank-goodness-for-this, thank-heaven-for-that.
Esses whisper where teeth used to be.
No piped-in music, palliative or reverent,
mistimes Henry’s peace
before our viands, a hospital class act,
roast au jus, not as tough to a springy knife
as guys he knows from the street. Vegetables bright verde,
blues swirled into yellows,
squash in its home of amber rind, pallid glory
of a baked underground staple.
Eyelids down, ropy strands of gray-brown-gray hair,
Face washed with grace,
Henry begins to eat
only after he’s spared nothing.
Page 38 - Nine Mile Magazine
׉	 7cassandra://XUFu0fjaVdkHBWH8jvy6pmydHWSiggb49T8PusRzpvc`̫ ^_;S,#׉E I am full; I pray Henry wants my roll and milk and butter.
That prayer is answered.
I remain there,
with Henry’s prayer in the air:
something fair’s been given him.
(You, God, don’t you dare
walk out on Henry’s prayer.)
Volume 8 No 1 - Page 39
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New jar of honey
Cat’s territory
Fish guts under a pier
Clove — the jacks of spice
Salt air over the dunes — it can reach much further in
New leather shoes
French fries at the boardwalk
Hills ofmanure and barn of hay
Sourdough baking —
but not for ourselves alone
The shoulders of a friend with no
top lying in the sun
Wet wool wet paint
Pizza Vanilla
Good skunky pot
Wicked coffee
In the outside world Dorothy walks by
wearing Estée Lauder
Soap on someone
in the snow Daphne odora
Silver sperm like pitch
around its tree
What a cat knows
about catnip
See Valéry
And missing them, not
knowing what he missed,
made him go
Page 40 - Nine Mile Magazine
׉	 7cassandra://gLBr1Vjub6PiOgxMXIAAYuwlyDY-dlVNTY7iCMyBuLk4`̫ ^_;S,%׉EOmad
Orange tree in bloom
Cedar, lumber
Winter woodsmoke
Match-head between
thumb and index
If you could smell
these things you’d know
who you are
(I want to tell him)
Since — stripped — you can’t
you’ve learned
the nature ofGod
a god who turns up his nose
Note: the condition is called “anosmia.”
Volume 8 No 1 - Page 41
׉	 7cassandra://iXvBWLIw7fRo2JgZR_EwAEKTNLwmlYTUmV8B4xEZqQk`̫ ^_;S,&^_;S,%8בCט   8u׉׉	 7cassandra://IJWfwtbeamEF3BrEM7Z6yG5AF7EHlCrNUn9XV-XvBas -` I׉	 7cassandra://s9Sg_EBf0P3uP0Kx38CaIY7lvDp0_4wbw84jdOyAO_E.`@׉	 7cassandra://6AsZbJf0QnDQ1v2K7YL-Msk5pQO0YGieZ6YYtFBKDak`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://JC7lcYmJmHpcvhQZk-VbIKKXFiWYhaFS4DpqYGkfwnQX͠^o;S,ט  8u׉׉	 7cassandra://qrhrC5grjSoym3opVcoAd4af5hK0YZXkEqGZU4tvd_Y ` I׉	 7cassandra://E0s_D4ahaNuWxMHWLLtKcSFDy0RqCPiwoMIClFk-PPU-%`@׉	 7cassandra://iPk12YmmiG2YbABRINv9U-eksujvilmZ1GyghHZ28A0-`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://1W8J5D_6-8zqzeprh_srXPRY7H99KWlz4y0-VBi5yW4Y͠^p;S,ט   8u׉׉	 7cassandra://IJWfwtbeamEF3BrEM7Z6yG5AF7EHlCrNUn9XV-XvBas -` I׉	 7cassandra://s9Sg_EBf0P3uP0Kx38CaIY7lvDp0_4wbw84jdOyAO_E.`@׉	 7cassandra://6AsZbJf0QnDQ1v2K7YL-Msk5pQO0YGieZ6YYtFBKDak`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://JC7lcYmJmHpcvhQZk-VbIKKXFiWYhaFS4DpqYGkfwnQX͠^o;S,ט  8u׉׉	 7cassandra://qrhrC5grjSoym3opVcoAd4af5hK0YZXkEqGZU4tvd_Y ` I׉	 7cassandra://E0s_D4ahaNuWxMHWLLtKcSFDy0RqCPiwoMIClFk-PPU-%`@׉	 7cassandra://iPk12YmmiG2YbABRINv9U-eksujvilmZ1GyghHZ28A0-`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://1W8J5D_6-8zqzeprh_srXPRY7H99KWlz4y0-VBi5yW4Y͠^p;S,ט   8u׉׉	 7cassandra://IJWfwtbeamEF3BrEM7Z6yG5AF7EHlCrNUn9XV-XvBas -` I׉	 7cassandra://s9Sg_EBf0P3uP0Kx38CaIY7lvDp0_4wbw84jdOyAO_E.`@׉	 7cassandra://6AsZbJf0QnDQ1v2K7YL-Msk5pQO0YGieZ6YYtFBKDak`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://JC7lcYmJmHpcvhQZk-VbIKKXFiWYhaFS4DpqYGkfwnQX͠^o;S,ט  8u׉׉	 7cassandra://qrhrC5grjSoym3opVcoAd4af5hK0YZXkEqGZU4tvd_Y ` I׉	 7cassandra://E0s_D4ahaNuWxMHWLLtKcSFDy0RqCPiwoMIClFk-PPU-%`@׉	 7cassandra://iPk12YmmiG2YbABRINv9U-eksujvilmZ1GyghHZ28A0-`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://1W8J5D_6-8zqzeprh_srXPRY7H99KWlz4y0-VBi5yW4Y͠^p;S,׉EExistentialist, Swimming
forLinda Allen
Water’s an -ism.
Pr.
Linda’s bi-weekly at the pool.
Driver’s dependable Abdul.
Tiptoes choose:
Not to slip on the rim.
Then surface smooth,
Tense, or in facets —
Linda’s in it.
She’d taught her class Camus —
Not strange to adolescents —
Each swore, “That’s what I am too!”
I know swimming but hardly philosophy:
“Philosophy is underneath how you live and act,”
A medium as full as it can muster about you.
Philosophy swims funny. At least to me.
Does it slosh around, flounder? Is it abstract without geology?
What stroke needs to follow another?
As a girl she was already free. In inlets, bays.
But she could tie its name
To what she swam, existential swan-foot.
In Marin she designed her own, stone
On its floor, river-rock instead of diving board.
“You need to be aware that you’re an Existentialist to be one,”
Linda makes gin-clear.
For me, philosophy adds water-wings. But swimming lifts our weight:
Page 42 - Nine Mile Magazine
׉	 7cassandra://6AsZbJf0QnDQ1v2K7YL-Msk5pQO0YGieZ6YYtFBKDak`̫ ^_;S,'׉EI carried my whole Dad across the Eel.
Everyone in her Cal Extension Existentialism class
Had brushes with death.
Sixteen, driving outside Vincennes, her car hit rock, rolled,
Spilled her into a flood, where she tried (which side
Was closer?) swimming to safety.
Her existentialism saved her.
Linda’s blue eyes are the closest cloud to land.
She’s ready to float on floes, in snow.
You need a beach towel for real meaning.
So, go get.
Linda never looks back, even at the end of the year.
In life’s floating world,
Over the tide of time,
Her purpose doesn’t change.
We know
We exist because we catch a stranger looking us over
In our swimsuit.
Sidestroke always feels
You can talk to someone alongside,
Even across the whole fetch.
If to exist is to swim, is to swim to exist?
But of course. Long lanes stretch our explanation.
Literary agent — yes, for a poet
That is absurd, my friend.
Part of the meaning of Linda
Is what Linda means to me.
Volume 8 No 1 - Page 43
׉	 7cassandra://iPk12YmmiG2YbABRINv9U-eksujvilmZ1GyghHZ28A0-`̫ ^_;S,(^_;S,'8בCט   8u׉׉	 7cassandra://idzxxCKjN72dmZw8uYLpH8q4f5KWB0w6aCsIPXDpKqg J` I׉	 7cassandra://63AbnqYgoEZVR9Nl8e3YFerTK4_rAAEuxjb5PmSXwgE2`@׉	 7cassandra://ZXqeoPs5KCydQqrc-wM6r0ZmOlRfW_9aiWs-dx-NEsI"`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://JyqzlurtOs5V7EB8rWo8IcuMMpGtGikPv59o87tXCcIR͠^p;S,ט  8u׉׉	 7cassandra://DNTK-gskosIBCd51T2a_qtF6_dst2OuyWADvyL8TYT4` I׉	 7cassandra://XQidHKcWICrOn-3WxoQ38VtKd8QAQBK5FoPj4Iohoms^`@׉	 7cassandra://9v8iKFagG22O3DU7ExZvABgCb78KwmZ0bqTZ00DmmOY`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://pJnfsK_hCazCxJks7KFvbpxPUnZBCMcrcswOQX0O6j0=͠^p;S,ט   8u׉׉	 7cassandra://idzxxCKjN72dmZw8uYLpH8q4f5KWB0w6aCsIPXDpKqg J` I׉	 7cassandra://63AbnqYgoEZVR9Nl8e3YFerTK4_rAAEuxjb5PmSXwgE2`@׉	 7cassandra://ZXqeoPs5KCydQqrc-wM6r0ZmOlRfW_9aiWs-dx-NEsI"`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://JyqzlurtOs5V7EB8rWo8IcuMMpGtGikPv59o87tXCcIR͠^p;S,ט  8u׉׉	 7cassandra://DNTK-gskosIBCd51T2a_qtF6_dst2OuyWADvyL8TYT4` I׉	 7cassandra://XQidHKcWICrOn-3WxoQ38VtKd8QAQBK5FoPj4Iohoms^`@׉	 7cassandra://9v8iKFagG22O3DU7ExZvABgCb78KwmZ0bqTZ00DmmOY`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://pJnfsK_hCazCxJks7KFvbpxPUnZBCMcrcswOQX0O6j0=͠^p;S,ט   8u׉׉	 7cassandra://idzxxCKjN72dmZw8uYLpH8q4f5KWB0w6aCsIPXDpKqg J` I׉	 7cassandra://63AbnqYgoEZVR9Nl8e3YFerTK4_rAAEuxjb5PmSXwgE2`@׉	 7cassandra://ZXqeoPs5KCydQqrc-wM6r0ZmOlRfW_9aiWs-dx-NEsI"`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://JyqzlurtOs5V7EB8rWo8IcuMMpGtGikPv59o87tXCcIR͠^p;S,ט  8u׉׉	 7cassandra://DNTK-gskosIBCd51T2a_qtF6_dst2OuyWADvyL8TYT4` I׉	 7cassandra://XQidHKcWICrOn-3WxoQ38VtKd8QAQBK5FoPj4Iohoms^`@׉	 7cassandra://9v8iKFagG22O3DU7ExZvABgCb78KwmZ0bqTZ00DmmOY`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://pJnfsK_hCazCxJks7KFvbpxPUnZBCMcrcswOQX0O6j0=͠^p;S,׉E=Establishments
The bars in Iowa City,
the taverns in Portland,
AA in California.
AA in San Miguel.
George’s, The Mill, farmers
lugging bagsful ofmorels for patrons.
Mead at eighteen in Solvang.
The liquor store every day but Sunday
in Seattle. Asking Ray
Carver in Evansville where is one?
He honorably did not know.
Singapore sling in Honolulu, a bumble-foot hopping
at sandal-feet. Black Russian
at nineteen in Mazatlán. Gin with Andrea
election night. Election-related injury.
Margaritas with Dr. Malia
after her long day diagnosing children.
Sazerac with Heaney, French Quarter.
Rye with cramps and bickering Harvard grad students in Somerville.
Welch’s treat in D.C.
Vodka for bridge phobia corner ofGolden Gate.
Vodka before crossing the Benicia bridge,
fear of the maw of fog around the Mothball Fleet.
Whatever I wish I hadn’t in Wilkes-Barre.
Napa wineries with Kizer and Woodbridge.
Sonoma bottles at Carolyn’s kitchen island.
“Tying One On in Vienna,” vicariously.
IV in the ER.
Little bottles in luggage.
That thumbnail funnel —
Page 44 - Nine Mile Magazine
׉	 7cassandra://ZXqeoPs5KCydQqrc-wM6r0ZmOlRfW_9aiWs-dx-NEsI"`̫ ^_;S,)׉Ea bird’s eye. Tipsy cedar waxwings,
falling-down-drunk woodchuck,
snails in a saucer of beer.
With birds it was mountain ashberries.
With Ashbery, nothing remembered
after five, any city.
Dallas: everyone charging their bar bill to Stafford’s room.
Larry Queen’s Molotov cocktail
thrown into the Blue Moon
where everyone was still toasting
Roethke. Holy
watering hole, and we come out not quite whole
without him.
Volume 8 No 1 - Page 45
׉	 7cassandra://9v8iKFagG22O3DU7ExZvABgCb78KwmZ0bqTZ00DmmOY`̫ ^_;S,*^_;S,)8בCט   8u׉׉	 7cassandra://7AMMj5Xtn_N4hhyBNHD-hymOKB1dt3SUPpHx-bcaQe4 ` I׉	 7cassandra://hjP_Vhqk4VIje_c7WaOoDUU4BjlNbh4WYhKd4FFPDXI)@`@׉	 7cassandra://evFuPvf0larPSwiGLDp9NGnr2id4RCh0JZtgIqIHsnw`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://ikJZS6deu2_SMMIBJTeGmXpO5YNF2Jf0I8tpl9oiqvwQ͠^p;S,ט  8u׉׉	 7cassandra://a2FsddBRwIegAheS84tD4lBAszhjTXQsbggTcBhuBMM ` I׉	 7cassandra://4dW_ZwKVzazDVAOQP63QQWYLItU-Th-nh9UzU7_BcN8'`@׉	 7cassandra://YfgXwvJvrWEBxYsVjvuf9kl_cgVrZ4ck98qkLDxAzWwf`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://lwRDsnnq0EXABDRFramFFNKpwfwdKZlaB4iYRZECHnI[͠^q;S,ט   8u׉׉	 7cassandra://7AMMj5Xtn_N4hhyBNHD-hymOKB1dt3SUPpHx-bcaQe4 ` I׉	 7cassandra://hjP_Vhqk4VIje_c7WaOoDUU4BjlNbh4WYhKd4FFPDXI)@`@׉	 7cassandra://evFuPvf0larPSwiGLDp9NGnr2id4RCh0JZtgIqIHsnw`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://ikJZS6deu2_SMMIBJTeGmXpO5YNF2Jf0I8tpl9oiqvwQ͠^p;S,ט  8u׉׉	 7cassandra://a2FsddBRwIegAheS84tD4lBAszhjTXQsbggTcBhuBMM ` I׉	 7cassandra://4dW_ZwKVzazDVAOQP63QQWYLItU-Th-nh9UzU7_BcN8'`@׉	 7cassandra://YfgXwvJvrWEBxYsVjvuf9kl_cgVrZ4ck98qkLDxAzWwf`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://lwRDsnnq0EXABDRFramFFNKpwfwdKZlaB4iYRZECHnI[͠^q;S,ט   8u׉׉	 7cassandra://7AMMj5Xtn_N4hhyBNHD-hymOKB1dt3SUPpHx-bcaQe4 ` I׉	 7cassandra://hjP_Vhqk4VIje_c7WaOoDUU4BjlNbh4WYhKd4FFPDXI)@`@׉	 7cassandra://evFuPvf0larPSwiGLDp9NGnr2id4RCh0JZtgIqIHsnw`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://ikJZS6deu2_SMMIBJTeGmXpO5YNF2Jf0I8tpl9oiqvwQ͠^p;S,ט  8u׉׉	 7cassandra://a2FsddBRwIegAheS84tD4lBAszhjTXQsbggTcBhuBMM ` I׉	 7cassandra://4dW_ZwKVzazDVAOQP63QQWYLItU-Th-nh9UzU7_BcN8'`@׉	 7cassandra://YfgXwvJvrWEBxYsVjvuf9kl_cgVrZ4ck98qkLDxAzWwf`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://lwRDsnnq0EXABDRFramFFNKpwfwdKZlaB4iYRZECHnI[͠^q;S,׉E^Names at Land’s End
Tragedy won’t get me
with the smoke of the few
molassesy Filipino cigarettes
I lit in graduate school
and snuffed out with pregnancy.
But tobacco ate
Welch, Orlen, Ray, Hip, Mariana, and Leah.
Franz, Harrison, the sweet Door County haiku-gatherer,
Norbert Blei.
Georgia’s inbreath and cough.
Vern in his bacon air, heavy ham of a chair.
Good Hugh Duffield’s chains of nicotine tainting his paintings.
O’Hara toked all available flavors
but his poetry sounds as if
there’s nothing to worry about,
until the arrow that flieth by day comes out of nowhere.
Huff drops his Camel and the whole basement goes up,
two lovers burn down,
ashes soaked in ashes.
Mick my snow-melter, alone in Montana, stardust gone.
Paper remains — no sweet driftwood fire on a beach:
Berry tills them into his Kentucky field.
Page 46 - Nine Mile Magazine
׉	 7cassandra://evFuPvf0larPSwiGLDp9NGnr2id4RCh0JZtgIqIHsnw`̫ ^_;S,+׉EZFinishing
Bill Matthews said he knew when a poem was finished.
It was like painting a floor, and you painted the floor
until you got to the last corner.
Then you brushed it in.
Henry and I painted a fir floor cobalt blue.
The walls, paper pulled down, scraped, gouges filled,
we swabbed white.
The day we finished,
we closed the door and got in bed.
That was the night our daughter figured
how to turn a doorknob.
Her feet questioned that the floor was complete.
I told the young poet who asked, How do you know
when a poem is done? I told her
these parallels of floors.
Well, she said, did that leave Bill stuck
in a corner? And how did you get to bed
over the wet floor?
I do not know.
I muffed.
You’re right — that wasn’t quite true.
There is always more to solve,
like why a carpet, never?
We loved that her feet were blue.
Volume 8 No 1 - Page 47
׉	 7cassandra://YfgXwvJvrWEBxYsVjvuf9kl_cgVrZ4ck98qkLDxAzWwf`̫ ^_;S,,^_;S,+8בCט   8u׉׉	 7cassandra://pmmkjwLfYKf-kQewrqOfvAkUcemn44HV2U_rgdDVQCU IF`I׉	 7cassandra://3UzjCH6tHGW-OHcmNcvUclsBd9fTr2Q4sl931uCphHk[`@׉	 7cassandra://tuPUOOI7hW2DN4S0RJYAMiLwyMBblAvlT0lSosa3dRo`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://Ns-uFm4KRG23hL7TyHmeUsa1zTO7GQYl1Fpme-jPRpg܁͠^r;S,ט  8u׉׉	 7cassandra://px1BHDUatd-LhpWroLLmsvL56FgzV8M1OFjM50pwGNg ` I׉	 7cassandra://uMVq206MBUqWO2RkA8TAlhxa2aVFwHhMch_wYocFGxk+`@׉	 7cassandra://SUS1GtdISAH8ueCxS6AMPWTxsNQu3YuGujfMY_dZlHkS`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://aUEEGmTlzdus1dFlTkXVgUNr7_4uFwXrUJsO6sp72aQI͠^r;S,ט   8u׉׉	 7cassandra://pmmkjwLfYKf-kQewrqOfvAkUcemn44HV2U_rgdDVQCU IF`I׉	 7cassandra://3UzjCH6tHGW-OHcmNcvUclsBd9fTr2Q4sl931uCphHk[`@׉	 7cassandra://tuPUOOI7hW2DN4S0RJYAMiLwyMBblAvlT0lSosa3dRo`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://Ns-uFm4KRG23hL7TyHmeUsa1zTO7GQYl1Fpme-jPRpg܁͠^r;S,ט  8u׉׉	 7cassandra://px1BHDUatd-LhpWroLLmsvL56FgzV8M1OFjM50pwGNg ` I׉	 7cassandra://uMVq206MBUqWO2RkA8TAlhxa2aVFwHhMch_wYocFGxk+`@׉	 7cassandra://SUS1GtdISAH8ueCxS6AMPWTxsNQu3YuGujfMY_dZlHkS`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://aUEEGmTlzdus1dFlTkXVgUNr7_4uFwXrUJsO6sp72aQI͠^r;S,ט   8u׉׉	 7cassandra://pmmkjwLfYKf-kQewrqOfvAkUcemn44HV2U_rgdDVQCU IF`I׉	 7cassandra://3UzjCH6tHGW-OHcmNcvUclsBd9fTr2Q4sl931uCphHk[`@׉	 7cassandra://tuPUOOI7hW2DN4S0RJYAMiLwyMBblAvlT0lSosa3dRo`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://Ns-uFm4KRG23hL7TyHmeUsa1zTO7GQYl1Fpme-jPRpg܁͠^r;S,ט  8u׉׉	 7cassandra://px1BHDUatd-LhpWroLLmsvL56FgzV8M1OFjM50pwGNg ` I׉	 7cassandra://uMVq206MBUqWO2RkA8TAlhxa2aVFwHhMch_wYocFGxk+`@׉	 7cassandra://SUS1GtdISAH8ueCxS6AMPWTxsNQu3YuGujfMY_dZlHkS`̫ ׉	 7cassandra://aUEEGmTlzdus1dFlTkXVgUNr7_4uFwXrUJsO6sp72aQI͠^r;S,׉EABOUT SANDRA MCPHERSON
Sandra McPherson has twenty collections published, including five with
Ecco, three with Wesleyan, two with Illinois, and two with Ostrakon. Her
new collection, Quicksilver,
Cougars, andQuartz, is
forthcoming from Salmon Poetry
Press (Ireland). Newer work
appears or is forthcoming in
TriQuarterly, Pedestal, Field, Poetry,
The Iowa Review, Yale Review, Agni,
Ploughshares, Kenyon Review, Ecotone,
Cimarron, Crazyhorse, Basalt, Cirque,
Palette Poetry, Plume, Red
Wheelbarrow, Epoch, JuxtaProse,
Vox Populi, and Antioch Review. She taught for 23 years at University of
California at Davis and 4 years at the Iowa Writers’ Workshop. Her
collection of 67 African-American improvisational quilts is housed at
University of California at Davis Design Department. She founded Swan
Scythe Press. She is the great-grand-niece of Abby Morton Diaz,
Plymouth feminist author and abolitionist.
ABOUT THE POEMS
This group felt, to me, as unified as an armload of flowers, old clothes,
cats, a child to calm, lost friends, cherished diversions, and selfishlyclutched
indebtedness to the wisdom of equals also holding themselves
together.
Elements: Bill Matthews’ concept about how a poem ends, that he told
me at the Aspen Writers’ Conference; my daughter on the Spectrum
padded over our newly painted floor in Portland before we knew she could
open a door. Raised on the wisdom of older poets, I’ve come to feel that
our generation too has said things to preserve. They just stay with you,
even if you don’t write them down.
The two Sutter Psych poems are from a whole mental illness
manuscript, The 5150 Poems, I can’t tantalize any press to take, but it’s
valuable to me because it centers on my fellow patients, whom I cared for
and whose coping strategies I tried to learn from. In early 2013 I was
involuntarily hospitalized for a month. The whole cycle is not depressing, I
Page 48 - Nine Mile Magazine
׉	 7cassandra://tuPUOOI7hW2DN4S0RJYAMiLwyMBblAvlT0lSosa3dRo`̫ ^_;S,-׉Efeel, because it cares about others and it studies myself and my dissolution
at the time in order to document a crisis, brain chemistry and emotional
muddle.
My dear Existentialist, Linda Allen, who is now over 90, was a literary
agent, in NYC and SF, for fiction and other prose writers. I wanted to
learn how her swimming and her Existentialism might overlap, so I
interviewed her a few years ago. This piece evolved. I so admire her
strength and balance. We laugh together.
“Establishments” is as clear as can be. I might add that I studied with
Elizabeth Bishop, along with my first husband, who additionally studied
with Theodore Roethke.
The smoking poem is a grievous elegy for so many of our beloveds.
With a dig at the end at a poet-tobacco-grower, I had to name names.
The group coheres because it tears me apart and reassembles me or
whoever is willing to go through that “procedure.”
* photo credit: Malia McCarthy
Volume 8 No 1 - Page 49
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20
th
Century Petroglyph, Marietta, Ohio
They must have used tools to do it, would have
taken hours to cut so deeply through the
rock, the image they created dated
1925, two Klan members side
by side in their hoods, round insignias
still clear, the trim at the edges of their
robes carefully etched. Back then hillsides were
bare, shorn of all trees for the clear cut. To
create their tableau they would have stood in
the sun while they carved the great, flat piece of
exposed sandstone for all the faces to see
from the porches of homes long since collapsed,
foundations become nothing, sites marked by
old fashioned snowdrops, yellow daffodils
in the spring, just one old homestead leaving
behind a chimney constructed from the
type of composite cement that suggests
one hundred and fifty years have passed since
its construction out of bricks from the yard
once found at the bottom of the hollow
where the path now ends, the beehive kilns long
forgotten, pavers smothered by asphalt.
Page 50 - Nine Mile Magazine
׉	 7cassandra://0aB1EsDoJj-J8cEtRCqJBEMpmcNT6erWRhX-U0Lcp0o`̫ ^_;S,/׉EZABOUT SANDRA KOLANKIEWICZ
Sandra Kolankiewicz’s poems have appeared widely, most recently in
One, Otis Nebulae, Trampset, Concho RiverReview, London Magazine, NewWorld
Writing and Appalachian Heritage. Turning Inside Out was
published by Black Lawrence. Finishing Line has
released The Way You WillGo and Lost in Transition.
ABOUT THE POEM
I have a friend with whom I go out hiking in the
old watersheds of our little Ohio town. Many of the
places we go used to have houses a hundred or so
years ago, but because the houses were built on
hillsides, they have all disappeared. Occasionally we will find daffodils
poking up, an old rose bush, or some other remnant of a home, the
foundation stones barefly visible in the moss and leaves. One day,
however, we found this carving. We realized that whoever made it had
taken a lot of time and also because of the date of the carving the hillside
would have been in plain view for all of the houses to see—this would have
been after the clear cutting and before the forests retook the hillsides. A
very sobering find. I very much wanted to do justice to the experience.
Good old Ohio, which had never allowed slavery, outed at the same time
black young men are still being targeted. I am pleased you will publish the
poem and hope it contributes to a conversation about equity, humanity, and
love.
Volume 8 No 1 - Page 51
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Estate Sale —Eagle Pond Farm
catacombs blown
blown
from within not so
cluttered
as
convulsed
ancestors awaken
quilts spill
sheds
whisks
wooden boxes
children’s blocks
dominoes and
peeling wallpaper
those
in a mason jar
and Jane’s
porcelain cats on
the sill
should be
poetry
enough
sunflowers
gifting
Page 52 - Nine Mile Magazine
׉	 7cassandra://uVCSD0YiA3sgCYMAl1bjlo7ykrx9X5aWhIpwbvbRAp4``̫ ^_;S,1׉ECSplinters
I fell in the old henhouse
playing submarine though
in August it was hot and dry
and smelled ofmanure, feathers
and straw.
Hands full of splinters
I climbed the long hill
to the house where my father
waited having heard
my cries.
Taking my hands in his one good
hand he said some of these
we can get with a quick flick
but some are deep under
your skin and will take time.
And though the pain was almost gone
I cried because he was there with me
and I cried for the shame of falling
and I cried for the splinters
that remained deep in my flesh.
Volume 8 No 1 - Page 53
׉	 7cassandra://VL6KIuVlB_Enu1_DEs544Ui3uWRah1JsB3-sZRQRpQ0
$`̫ ^_;S,2^_;S,18,Spring 2020 for site Preview of Spring 2020 issue^\w:a