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Showing posts with label delta. Show all posts
Showing posts with label delta. Show all posts

Sunday, September 25, 2022

NOT OVER

by Dion Farquhar 





I’m Omicron, son of Delta

I skipped generations

from four to fifteen

letters of the Greek alphabet


I’ve outrun Delta

gone after 200,000 more

surpassed a million  

despite decrees, desires


for the old normal

—that hell

for everyone (but the dead)

to get back to work


forget your boosters

travel bans and masks

after all this time 

you still don’t get what global means


you may be faster

smarter now

but after two and a half years

so am I


your rich country as backward

as the ones you’ve impoverished                                                                           

but you win again, America

tally the most dead


so dream on about “herd immunity” 

your unvaxed forty percent

still my gateway

and I’m here to stay



Dion Farquhar has recent poems in Non-Binary Review, Superpresent, Blind Field, Poesis, Cape Rock: Poetry, Poydras Review, Mortar, Local Nomad, Columbia Poetry Review, moria, Shifter,BlazeVOX, etc. Her third poetry book Don’t Bother is in press at Finishing Line Press, and she has three chapbooks. She works as an exploited adjunct at two universities, but still loves the classroom, and she is active in the University of California Santa Cruz adjunct union, the UC-AFT. 

Sunday, August 01, 2021

D IS FOR DELTA

by Mary K O'Melveny




In math, Delta means change.
An isosceles triangle points the way
to changes in quantity:

  more sick
  more hospital beds
  more ventilators
  more dead
  more masks
  more six foot limits:
    apart from each other
    down in the ground.
 
Changes as in differences in.
  As in:
    yesterday there was reason to hope
    last week we went to a concert
    the airport was full of tourists
  As in:
    the rate of change is significant:
    red lines rise on graphs
    there are no lines of people seeking vaccines
    there are now some lines but not enough.

Changes as in variables.
  As in:
    yesterday I met you at a party
    today I am at the doctor’s office
    tomorrow my family will hold a zoom remembrance.
In science, Delta means a sometimes triangular mass of sediment.     
  As in:
     silt and sand lodged in a river’s mouth
     spit into the sea  or a lake  or a plain
        as in Mississippi    or Okavango   or Kalahari
     tides and waves create sandbars and dendritic silt
        as in the Nile   or the Ganges
     estuaries of brackish water form at the confluence of sea and river
        as in China’s Yellow River.
   Some Deltas become abandoned  
the rivers leave   discard their channels   dry up
   that too denotes movement   change. 
  That change is called avulsion:
    As in:
      the sudden separation of mass from one place to another
      the sudden separation of reason from the brain
      the sudden movement from reality to fantasy.
 
Delta can be a girl’s name:
   books of baby names call it appealing   chic  unique
       fit for a child of grace and distinction.
 This too will change. 


Mary K O'Melveny is a recently retired labor rights attorney who lives in Washington DC and Woodstock NY.  Her work has appeared in various print and on-line journals. Her first poetry chapbook A Woman of a Certain Age is available from Finishing Line Press. Mary’s poetry collection Merging Star Hypotheses was published by Finishing Line Press in January, 2020.

Tuesday, February 18, 2020

SPILLED WATERCOLORS

by Diane Elayne Dees



Tweeted by NASA astronaut Jessica Meir from the International Space Station.


From space, the aqua, cream, azure, and cerulean
appear as if blended by a master painter
with an eye for serenity and expansion. I imagine
a second painting, this one bright, yet soft,
with puffs of spoonbill pink and splashes
of sea turtle green streaked across a peaceful
background of bunting indigo. From space,
the Louisiana delta is an impressionist’s dream
of water and feathers and the reflections
of a stippled sky. Up close, the picture tears
at the edges as the coastline rapidly recedes.
The Rusty Blackbird, black bear and Great Blue
fade behind a foreground of erosion and loss.
From space, the watercolors spill a dream-like
beauty onto a canvas teeming with life,
while the landscape shifts precariously,
altering the perspective forever.


Diane Elayne Dees has two chapbooks forthcoming. Her microchap Beach Days is available for download and folding from Origami Poems Project. Diane also publishes Women Who Serve, a blog that delivers news and commentary on women’s professional tennis throughout the world.

Friday, July 17, 2015

LOW BEAMS IN THE MISSISSIPPI DELTA

by James Croteau


Along the Mississippi Delta. Image source: My American Odyssey


Only low beams lit the road
as my parents drove Highway 61
from Memphis through Clarksdale
to Cleveland with civil rights marches
all around us. I never knew
it's not a delta at all, no mouth
until further south. It's all alluvial

plain, this place of my birth. Grandpa
disembarked in Baltimore's harbor
in 1921, moved south when
cotton was still king but
he never planted. Instead he owned
a five and dime on Main Street
in Cleveland. I was proud
to help clerk. Sometimes he'd aim
squinted eyes my way, talk the Italian
he taught me “follow that N-word."

"It's the longest stretch of straight road
east of the Great River," my dad
always said as he drove, low beams
to avoid blinding the oncoming
drivers like us. We got used to not seeing
anything beyond the white

cotton by the side of the road.
Living legacies are often at the periphery
of the privileged. Even amid
outcries at the murders in the streets
and the churches, we whites miss
the lay of the land by
low beaming our questions--
Was the officer following policy?
Was the shooter mentally ill?
Isn't the KKK really to blame?

But I've been lucky, my eyes
have been pried apart by
a few good people. I see some
beyond the well-meant
intentions in front of my face.

The fertile flatness was freely
brought by the floods of the Yazoo
and Mississippi, then it was stolen
and exploited--Indian removal, slavery,
sharecropping, Jim Crow de jure

and de facto, this history's alive and
denied. If I high beam my heart
I can see that I could have been
Darren Wilson, even Dylann Roof.
I learn how the land of my birth
really lies, only when I can feel
the white of my finger placed
everyday on the trigger of the gun

I was given on the day I was born.


James M. Croteau lives in Kalamazoo, Michigan with his partner of 28 years, Darryl, and their two Labrador retrievers. Jim grew up gay and Catholic in the southern United States and loved his mother very much. He has had poems published in Hoot: a Postcard review of {mini} poetry and proseThe New Verse News, and Right Hand Pointing. He has a series of poems upcoming in April 2014 in Assaracus: A Journal of Gay Poetry.

Tuesday, February 12, 2013

SHELL OIL IN NIGERIA

by B.Z. Niditch

Mixed Decision for Shell in Nigeria Oil Spill Suits --NY Times, January 30, 2013;
Image source: Aljazeera January 31, 2013


In gutted morning
of the Ogoni villagers
the poor wake up
as we earth friends
of the Niger delta
hold faithful pencils
and write
of your struggle,
knowing each bruise
on the assembled
gathering to hear
the radio
with battered lilies
from years of pollution
in the injustice
of acid rain
dulled by hunger
without fishing grounds
under the rope
of tar skies
oil once filled
the delta
as Aaron's beard,
in the name and life
of Ken Saro-Wiwa
you are not abandoned
to the huge profits
of yet another
international corporation.


B.Z. Niditch is a poet, playwright, fiction writer and teacher. His work is widely published in journals and magazines throughout the world, including: Columbia: A Magazine of Poetry and Art; The Literary Review; Denver Quarterly; Hawaii Review; Le Guepard (France); Kadmos (France); Prism International; Jejune (Czech Republic); Leopold Bloom (Budapest);  Antioch Review; and Prairie Schooner, among others.  He lives in Brookline, Massachusetts.