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Showing posts with label vultures. Show all posts
Showing posts with label vultures. Show all posts

Friday, November 01, 2024

A PROSE-BENT ODE: THE HEAVY VULTURES DO APPEAR, NOW

by L. Lois


The sky is empty, no hint of cloud, the heavy, dark arc of vultures sweeping low over a world of forgetting. They move in silence, gliding like quick lies from innumerable podcast hosts, words slipping through open doors, hands out for cash, voices telling us there’s nothing left but acquiescence. A slumber here, a kind of wasting, my monsters creep like political dinosaurs too ancient to roar, just the hum of their presence, the crazy crawl of flies, the air filled with echoes of something about to be erased. 
I thought once of building something here— 
an arts sanctuary or maybe a place for fragile things, the way my
 mother cupped her hands
 around a broken bird, holding it in her palms.
 Softest down cradled,
 a thing that didn’t know it could die.
 Like a passkey made of wax,
 the promise of security so thin I felt it would slip away
 under the heat of my fingers.
 But we kept pressing forward— 
as if to stave off the tragedies of suffering, 
telling ourselves that calm and order were always enough. 
This is where reason goes to sleep, 
but we forget, in the moments between dusk and dawn. 
We, too, nod along. We’re calling out, offering our liquor to the night, keeping our doors open and lax, hoping something real will slip through and fill the vacuum hissing threats. But, still, here they come— the vultures. Vile promises sweeping low over places we thought too tender and narrow for their wings. In the last pale light, I see my monsters—they may hide, too, as I fall asleep against our best interests. The faintest memory of feathers, floating where they tromped. No noise at all, except the whimper.


L. Lois lives in an urban hermitage where trauma-informed themes flow during walks by the ocean. Her poems have appeared in Alchemy Magazine, Progenitor Journal, Poetry Breakfast, 300 Days of Sun, Twisted Vine, and other literary publications.

Saturday, October 14, 2023

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2023

by Katherine West




Even in October 
butterflies crowd 
the butterfly bush
are lifted by the cold 
wind then released 
to drift back to their magenta 
breakfast
in a flurry of giant 
orange flakes 
of Halloween snow 
or fire 

The high rise looks like 
a grey ice cream cake 
left out in the summer 
sun so that slabs 
of cement melt and slide 
down its sides to the street where 
grey children lie 
with their eyes shut 
the party over 
time to go home 

The prairie dog sits up
on its hind legs 
still and alert 
waiting for danger—
shadows of crows 
pass over him and away 
like the low-flying planes 
in black and white newsreels 
of World War Two 

Pale blue flowers 
still cling to the tips 
of the rosemary bush 
but the lavender 
and thyme are dried out 
helpless when the wind 
drives down the mountain 
strips them bare 

In this house the cabinets 
are full of supplies—
ten of everything, power 
to run fountains 
in the desert 
thick walls to keep the heat out 
to keep the heat in--
a fat door like that 
of a castle

Vultures come in a black 
rush sometimes--
the body bags are white 
as lumps of sugar 
with the corners 
licked off


Katherine West lives in Southwest New Mexico, near Silver City.  She has written three collections of poetry: The Bone Train, Scimitar Dreams, and  Riddle, as well as one novel, Lion Tamer. Her poetry has appeared in journals such as Writing in a Woman's Voice, Lalitamba, Bombay Gin, The New Verse News, Tanka Journal, Splash!, Eucalypt, Writers Resist, Feminine Collective, Southwest Word Fiesta, and The Silver City Anthology. The New Verse News nominated her poem “And Then the Sky” for a Pushcart Prize in 2019. In addition she has had poetry appear as part of art exhibitions at the Light Art Space gallery in Silver City, New Mexico, the Windsor Museum in Windsor, Colorado, and the Tombaugh Gallery in Las Cruces, New Mexico. 

Tuesday, July 11, 2017

THE TWO DONS

by David Spicer




Two vultures lurk on top of the tree,
both always wanting more, more,
slaves to their animal-egos’ greed,
each desiring money like a whore.
Don and Don, Jr. scowl, dark knights,
as if they despise the world they ravage,
father and son living to pick fights,
doing their best to act the savage.
Women? Just prized possessions
they might grab, fondle, and keep,
depending on their current obsessions
and whether they pounce after they leap.
Will Daddy devour Jr. under the bus?
More than likely, before he eats us.


David Spicer has had poems in Chiron Review, Alcatraz, Gargoyle, Zombie Logic Review, Poppy Road Review, The Reed Magazine, Ploughshares, The American Poetry Review, and elsewhere. The author of Everybody Has a Story and four chapbooks, he’s the former editor of raccoon, Outlaw, and Ion Books.

Wednesday, February 17, 2016

THE MADELEINE ALBRIGHT VILLANELLE

by Pedro Poitevin

From this week's New Yorker.


There is a special place in hell
(a little sad, a little scary)
where chickenhawks and vultures dwell.

Not far from where good Dante fell
some godforsaken February,
there is a special place in hell.

The geysers and volcanos swell.
The lava tarnishes the prairie.
And chickenhawks and vultures dwell

over a crumbling citadel
devoid of prey or adversary.
There is a special place in hell,

just like she told her clientele
before she hit the cemetery.
There, chickenhawks and vultures dwell,

aligned as in a villanelle.
One greets her: “Madam Secretary—
there is a special place in hell
where chickenhawks and vultures dwell.”


Author's Note: After Madeleine Albright had her "undiplomatic moment," I gave myself permission to have my own. This poem is my attempt at imagining a special place in hell for foreign policy hawks and hedge fund managers.

A mathematician by profession, Pedro Poitevin is a bilingual poet and translator originally from Guatemala. He is a contributor to Letras Libres and Periódico de Poesía, the poetry journal of the National Autonomous University of México (UNAM). Poems in English have appeared or are forthcoming in Rattle, Angle, Mathematical Intelligencer, Everyday Genius, and Nashville Review, among other venues.