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Showing posts with label Pentagon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pentagon. Show all posts

Friday, May 28, 2021

IN UFO NEWS, A VILLANELLE

by Jeannie E. Roberts



 
A spherical shape was noted in flight. 
The object was dark; it moved back and forth. 
Scanned above water, it dropped out of sight.

The strange craft was tracked with IR* at night. 
The vehicle plunged, then altered its course. 
A spherical shape was noted in flight.

The video’s rendered in raw black and white. 
It splashed. It splashed, the audio reports. 
Scanned above water, it dropped out of sight.

Mark bearing and range, strategic advice. 
The U.S. Defense confirmed the clip’s source. 
A spherical shape was noted in flight.
 
Insight has teamed to discern greater heights. 
The Pentagon’s deemed it a special task force. 
Scanned above water, it dropped out of sight.

Intrigue orbits the phenomena of life. 
An archive exists, the “UAP* Drawer.” 
A spherical shape was noted in flight. 
Scanned above water, it dropped out of sight.
  

*Author's Notes: IR: Infrared; UAP: Unidentified Aerial Phenomena.


Jeannie E. Roberts has authored seven books, including her newest chapbook As If Labyrinth—Pandemic Inspired Poems (Kelsay Books, 2021). She's listed in the Poets & Writers Directory and is a poetry editor of the online literary magazine Halfway Down the Stairs. When she’s not reading, writing, or editing, you can find her drawing and painting, or outdoors photographing her natural surroundings. Roberts is an animal lover, a nature enthusiast, an equal rights advocate, and an ally of marginalized people.

Wednesday, September 11, 2019

PENTAGON MEMORIAL

by Jacqueline Jules


Photo of the National 9/11 Pentagon Memorial by Mike Myers


Across the river in D.C., tourists
come from all over the country
to touch walls honoring
soldiers who died
in Vietnam, Korea,
Europe, and other places
far from American soil.

But here in this sacred place
built beside a structure
still standing in spite of attack,
I read the name of a three-year-old
seated on a plane with her parents
and older sister.

Here, water flows in shallow pools
as I walk with silent steps
between 184 benches
made of stainless steel and granite,
each one positioned to preserve
the last moments of someone
who died in a ball of fire
on a clear September morning.

Here, I stand beside
young trees planted in the hope
visitors will value their shade
as they come from all over
to remember the lives lost here,
not somewhere else, far away.
                                           

Jacqueline Jules is the author of the poetry chapbooks Field Trip to the Museum, Stronger Than Cleopatra, and Itzhak Perlman’s Broken String, winner of the 2016 Helen Kay Chapbook Prize from Evening Street Press. Her work has appeared in over 100 publications including TheNewVerse.News, The Rising Phoenix Review, What Rough Beast, Public Pool, Rise Up Review and Gargoyle.  She lives in Arlington, Virginia.