John LeMasney

April 30, 2008 at 1:56 pm (Uncategorized) ()

Shorehouse Skylight

In a house in the woods
we’ve had 50 years in our family,
a soft edged
rectangle of light
moves a few feet per hour.
Across the rug
across the tile
towards the wall
sometimes brighter,
sometimes flickering,
other times darker.

The room has
a breeze from the fans,
which rock and knock the pull chains
into the glass globe bulb cover
over and over and over,
but besides that, it’s silent and still.

But when your arm or leg passes
through the shaft of light,
you can remember
the hot, bright sun,
the burning sand on your feet,
the salt in your nose,
the roar and squeak in your ears
of crashing waves and scavenging birds,
just a few miles from the house.

Lights in the Snow

Snow brings a hush
that quiets the horn,
yet windows nearby
start to light.
A car lay on the roadside,
a two ton turtle
on its shell.

Sirens sound miles away while
open jowls gather.
Flashlights shine on
the snowy tracks that go
onto the curb and into the lightpole.

A little girl watches
the white turn transparent,
when the flakes, with a hiss,
lick the muffler.

He hangs in his seatbelt,
his hands sweep the roof,
while the people
stand and stare.

Lazarus

His eyebrows moved like seesaws
over wet and bloody bulbous eyes.
When he spoke,
the lips would stretch wide,
so you saw the
back of his tongue.
His darkness
made his teeth
seem to float.

He worked the middle
of the sidewalk,
always walking.
Moving, not stopping.
He’d shift his weight
bringing his body
into the path of each walker,
his face closely tilted into other faces.
His long arms,
well defined, slim,
stretched above his head,
moved in independent funnels,
then returned to his side,
swaying back and forth.
I’m just like Lazarus,
just like him.
Back from the dead,
that’s me!
Nickel or a dime,
what you can spare
you can spare!
I’ll pray for you, mister,
I’ll pray, cause hey, man,
I’m like Lazarus!

I saw one man
almost knock another over
just to go around.
I stopped,
put a hand in my pocket.

You’ll be saved, Mister!
Saved!
Because Jesus watches,
Jesus knows!
He can see you
inside!

I brought out three coins,
all that I had just then,
a dime, a nickel, a penny.

As he walked to my right,
he cupped my hand
from underneath,
and threw it in the air.

Behind me, the coins fell.
He began to shout again.

I’m just like Lazarus,
back from the dead.
Bread on my table,
joy on your soul,
I only ask for your love
and a little change.

John LeMasney is an artist, designer, husband, father, technologist, consultant, writer, poet and open source evangelist living and working in New Jersey. John believes in the openness of thought, the transparency of ideas, and the sharing of everything. John feels personally that the best poetry is that which can be tasted, smelled, seen, touched, and heard. Great poetic work captures the beauty of the magic of everyday life without coercing you to believe in its magic.

Permalink 5 Comments

Terry Blackhawk

April 29, 2008 at 1:31 pm (Uncategorized) ()

Recalling Peter Pan On Derby Day
(for Judy Michaels)

The Fairy & Human Relations Congress will hold its annual meeting…the first weekend in May.
Wireless Flash (Weird News)

Do you believe in fairies,
smudged sparrow—will you hang on to toeholds
of light, those pinpoints darting
through the darkened hall?

These days you run through the green
mornings, each footfall a rebuttal
of cloud spots, liver spots, lung spots.

We missed War Emblem’s victory today.
Next year, we’ll get swept by the pound and gleam,
photo finishes and all the controversial dust.

We’re planning to wear gaudy hats
and let horses make divinest sense.

Last Derby Day, just before they were Off!
we explained the race to our Bengali waiter
as we watched it from the counter in that Manhattan bar.

You bet your peanuts on Keats, who faded early.
I put mine on the colt whose trainer saved his life
with a mixture of milk, turpentine and faith.

I don’t recall if he won or lost, but I’m shopping
for a comical hat, something bursting with spring
and belief, like the wires and pulleys I couldn’t see

when I was five—supports that kept the actors
flying out over the stage.

A Puzzle
—after Rene Magritte’s “The Therapeutist”

Maybe he lost his body
and they healed him
with a cage.
Maybe his questions dissolved
his brain.

Why is he called a survivor?

There is a brass drape
over the headless shoulder
and a bird who considers
entering its cage.

How peacefully the air
must flow through him.

He has opened the cage
and that fuzzy bird, his heart,
sits on the ledge looking in.

The head has sunk below
his shoulders, while on the far wall
a weapon oozes blood.

He has left a space
for the answers to our questions.

He has left a space
for the whispers of children,
for belief in humanity,
for our chance to take a stand.

The hand rests calmly
on its walking stick.
The children still have questions.

Where do their gazes go?
Why doesn’t he have a body?
How can he smell the air?

The Eggplant

Today, in my sweeping, my Swiffer pulled out,
From behind the kitchen cabinet, a desiccated
Eggplant, shrunken and flattened down.
With the sunken stem curled in its center,
It suggested a plum on a Japanese scroll,
But I knew it was an eggplant
And I gave praise to the eggplant for keeping
Its form, even as it shriveled to this light
Porous thing—a dried vegetal discus
That I could flick across the floor.

Obeying laws of collapse there in the dark,
It had released no swarm of fruit flies,
No scent of rot or mold, into my unwitting air.
Secret nightshade, sucking in its cheeks,
Drawing the luscious skin down, emptying
Cells in slow abandon—it had kept itself
For me to discover, to pick up and test
The exquisite husk. It had transformed
Silently, and without obvious flourish,
Until I poked around and found the beauty of it.

Terry Blackhawk is author of two chapbooks and 3 full-length poetry collections — Body & Field (MSU Press), Escape Artist (BkMk Press), selected by Molly Peacock for the John Ciardi Prize, and The Dropped Hand from Marick Press. Her poems have appeared in journals such as Marlboro Review, Michigan Quarterly Review, Florida Review and Nimrod, with reviews of her books in Calyx, Poet Lore, ForeWord and elsewhere. She received the Foley Poetry Prize, four Pushcart Prize nominations and was a finalist for two Marlboro Prizes, the Paumanok Award and the Glasgow Prize, among others. She has received a 3-year artist-in-residence grant from Michigan Council for the Arts and Cultural Affairs and a Teacher-Scholar Sabbatical Award from the National Endowment for the Humanities. A former teacher with Detroit Public Schools and a proud alumna of Antioch College, Terry is the founding director of InsideOut Literary Arts Project , Detroit’s writers-in-schools program with service to over 3,000 students annually. She lives and writes not far from the river in Detroit, Michigan. Please visit here and here for interviews with Terry.

Permalink 1 Comment

Wendy Ekua Quansah

April 28, 2008 at 12:59 pm (Uncategorized) ()

I am 99.9% Positive

T-cell was a warrior
He fought off germs and diseases,
That infected the smallest components,
Immersed within the most minuscule vein
That once pumped stamina to his immaculate heart.
But his persistence was raped by the finest, sexually passionate
Needle of a parasite,
Who sucked life from an unknowledgeable spirit,
When he popped the rotten cherry with naked lips, that now
Craves admittance for weight loss, fevers and tiredness.
T-cell once flawless of deceitful falsification of intimacy,
Walks in man made puddles of fear, anger and depression.
His body, the temple of God, has now been scarred with the realization,
That he is now another number affixed to the germinate epidemic,
That can be prevented by abstaining from unwarranted exercise, of
Our inner thighs and our fruitless mouths, because there is no vaccine to
Rehabilitate the inevitable cause of death due to HIV.
60 seconds retains your future.
Open the door and secure your future,
With one shot that holds knowledge.
People ask me if I am sure.

I am 99.9% positive.

New Seed

The rusted bars he has befriended.
The rock floor he lays his head.
Death wakes him up and puts him to bed.
The streets he’s known all his life.
Gun shots, stab wounds with a razor blade knife.
Rape, theft, burglary.
Money, cash, hoes,
All his eyes can see.
Next step, six feet underground.
Eyes closed, motionless – Shhh! Not a sound.
Second chance at correction,
I put a book in his hand here is your first lesson.
His mind convulsed.
Life flashes before his eyes.
No heart beat.
No pulse.
Incredulously, he opens the book and reads,
“Don’t take life and what it offers for granted.”
Water drips from his face,
A new seed been planted.

Praise Him(inspired by Mr. Laud Anderson)

They praise him as if he fed five thousand with
five loaves of bread and two fish.
They priase him as though he healed the boy with the demon, and
praise him as if he predicted the death of a man, then later
revealed that on the third day, that that same man will be raised to life.

They praise him as if he touched two blind men
and revived their sight.
They praise him as if he predicted Peter’s denial and
praise him as if he healed a man with leprosy.

Yes, his smile brings warmth to my body,
diminishing goose bumps that I acquire when he
winks at me.
And yes, I purposely walk the long way to class, just so I can obtain a
meager waft of his Armani cologne.
And yes, I droll a bit sitting behind him in math class, because the back of his
head is just as sexy as the front.

So yes its feasible the praise him because the terminology his name possesses
mandates praise and glory.
but, although he envisions life as a child of God
he does and will not retain the
entitlement only one identity subsumes.

But until the day he has the capability
to be killed and ressurrected from the dead,
I will solely laud God.

Poet’s Statement:

My name is Wendy Ekua Quansah. I once used to hide feelings under the palm of my hand, when I finally realized I could express occurences and my apprehensions of life through poetry. My poems are written to express, inspire and most importantly educate. All my poems are inspired by true life stories, occurences or individuals.Through my poetry you can better understand who I am as a person. Please visit my newest project located at YuShape.com. Thank you.

Permalink 4 Comments

John Anagbo

April 27, 2008 at 3:43 pm (Uncategorized) ()

OKLAHOMA CITY, 1995

Memories fade
Pandemonium echoes through the heartland
We ponder the senselessness of the perpetrators
And the helplessness of the victims
Hate, the pseudonym for terror strikes
Division replaces cohesion
Anger and hate fills us all.

MANDELA! I HEAR THE FOOTSTEPS OF FREEDOM

What is the color of my eyes?
What is the color of my shirt…your dress…his uniform?
What is the color of my soul?

Why do you concentrate on only one color
On the one aspect of my being
That I can do nothing about?
Colored bathrooms, colored bus
Colored restaurants, colored this, colored that…

Tomorrow, I shall lend you my shoes
Promise that you will walk with me,
Eat with me, dance with me, sing with me,
And sleep in my shack

Promise that you will make me coffee
And hot chocolate
That you will wake my children up
And take them to the bus stop
Then ride a bus reserved for you
When you hear the sirens, do not run
Face the music and the anguish of the voiceless

When I hear your cry
I will open the door
I will do it because I harbor no evil
I have two cheeks
And I bear no grudge
I will certainly remember my painful past
But I have the courage to look into the future

What is the price of ignorance?
Pain, anger, hatred and prejudice
What is the cost of tolerance?
NOTHING

Have you walked far enough?
How do you like my shoes?
There are no people of color
We are all colored


John Anagbo is a Supervisor/Teacher of English at Montgomery High School
in Skillman, NJ. He also works as a Content Instruction Specialist in
English for the Program in Teacher Preparation at Princeton University.

Permalink 3 Comments

Wendy Wood Kwitny

April 27, 2008 at 3:42 pm (Uncategorized) ()

Fallen Angels

In 1965, in his studio in Warsaw, Roman Opalka, a French born painter of Polish origin, began painting a process of counting – from one to infinity. All details have the same title, 1965/1-00; the idea does not date although the artist has pledged his life to its execution: ‘All my work is a single thing, the description from number one to infinity. A single thing, a single life.’

So many little things,
said one of the angels who pulled herself up
in the middle of a very large city
as a moon rolled down the street
chased by a tiny dog, barking loudly of course,
causing the birds to fly away, one group after another.

All that remains of a beautiful star:
a small girl with yellow hair.
She belonged to a constellation no one has ever seen.
She lives in a house that is too small
for her mother and too large for her father.
One of them will leave soon
and make her immensely sad.

Bent over an immaculate piece of machinery,
the semi-conductor physicist with golden hair
is viewing the smallest particles in the world.
Outside the clean room, the dust of ancient worlds
and enormous cities and small towns collect,
and beyond that, the smallest dreams and questions,

those too weak yet to take a plane
from Slovakia to the center of the world;
in spite, the little angel stands on tip-toes,
a bit of broken star, a bit of broken heart,
who by degrees, with the help of birds
and swollen moons, will one day exclaim,

the children think everything is too big,
that is why they are in such a hurry.
So many little things, she said, as she slipped
the head of a pin
into her electron microscope.

Poem For My Children
What does this brick want to be? It wants to be something greater than it is. – Louis Kahn
We’ve built the little walls and roof And made a lovely door, So tell us mother Wendy, What are you wanting more? – J.M. Barrie

I asked this paper what it wished to be.
It replied, A poem for your children, mother Wendy.

Darling boys I was lost
in a black and white movie,
a gray girl, the sky a paler version of my hair,
then out of the blue,
you gave me yellow,
my shoes blushing red,
the city up ahead
verdant green,
rumored to have a wizard,
but instead,
two little boys sit at a breakfast table,
slipping the wedges of an orange
into their mouths to bare like teeth

My life was as quiet as a man reading a newspaper
until the moment I heard you cry–
it wasn’t my name you called,
but the most genuine word I had ever heard,
your cries for a mother filled the rooms
like the music of the great composers,
flowers from Holland made a garden of the house
(your tulips the most dear to me)
an itinerant ocean unfolded in the backyard,
as a wild horse galloped its grassy beach
to the astonishment of a local squirrel
and always me,
the girl who wanted to be ballerina,
now leaps.

Darling boys,
my life that was once a brick,
is now a basilica;
to watch you jump in the driveway,
is to feel like Michelangelo, mug of coffee in hand,
stepping from the bright winter light into the sanctuary
to look up at his ceiling.

Wendy Wood Kwitny’s book, House of Affection, was published by The Sheep Meadow Press in 2004.

Permalink 2 Comments

Sophia Latorre-Zengierski

April 26, 2008 at 12:02 pm (Uncategorized) ()

Generation Gaps

I.
He did not understand dreams.
He liked numbers, logic, money.
He had made a life for himself
And wanted me to do the same.
Go to work in the company, make money,
Invest it well, make more, he said.
Be respectful on the surface,
Make connections, minimize bad press,
Push and pull, swindle if you need to.
Don’t ruin your name, our family name.

II.
He doesn’t talk to me any more – about dreams or anything.
I did not understand numbers, logic or the rage for riches.
I had put myself in exile
And I didn’t want my son to do the same.
Go out in the world, experience things,
Take some risks, experience more, I said.
Look deeper than the surface,
Make friends, accept your faults,
Laugh and cry, listen to your heart – you need to.
Don’t worry about your name; you’ll make your own.

III.
He is still figuring out his dreams
Between numbers, logic and the prospect of wealth.
He was still in school
And we’d told him different things:
Go work in the company, make money,
Take some risks, experience more,.
Be respectful on the surface,
Make friends, minimize bad press,
Push and pull, listen to your heart – you need to.
Then choose your name.

La Niña

“La niña pobrecita,”
I hear,
“Mi niña,”
She calls,
But her voice;
It is straining.
Farther and
Father away.
Madame,
Mademoiselle
Cannot call
Me that.
I can never be
“Frau” or
“Fräulein.”
My Spanish,
A hairlength
Better than
My German.
To Madame,
I am
“Ma petite.”
To Mademoiselle,
I am
“Ma cherie.”
But who,
Who will
Call me
“La niña”
Anymore?

AP French Composition

Its five o’clock in the morning
and my blood pressure must be soaring.
To a girl of seventeen
how could Madame be so mean?
A composition due tomorrow
and all I have is sorrow.
The page, now, is bare
for I have not a care.
This prompt confounds me:
a letter to one vieux ami.
The length of the page
puts me in a daze.
Prepositions, idioms, irregular verbs,
I do hope there’s a five point curve.
Oh, the woes of AP French
On such a gentle wench.

Sophia is thrilled to once again be apart of PPL’s poetry podcast! Her poetry has been included in Villa Victoria Academy’s Inscape, Creative Communications’ A Celebration of Young Poets, West-Windsor Plainsboro High School South’s Echoes and The Arts Council of Princeton’s UNDERage. She is a member of the Burlington County Poets and has written articles for harrypotterfanzone.com. Last spring, she participated in the library’s Voices and the Princeton Shakespeare Festival, and self-published a short story, Lilac and Gold, in conjunction with a charity, A Leg To Stand On. A member of National Honors Society, she is Assistant Arts Editor of her school paper, head of stage crew for this year’s school productions and a French teaching assistant. She will be graduating from West Windsor-Plainsboro High School this June and currently resides in Princeton.

Permalink 5 Comments

Elizabeth Anne Socolow

April 25, 2008 at 2:16 pm (Uncategorized) ()

POTTING

A piece of the world is in a clay pot,
earth for which I will be the rain.
And the pot itself came from the earth, clay
a different density from the airy dark soil
that welcomes roots. Whenever I see cooks
mash potatoes now, or roll a crust to hold
the sliced honeyed apples, I see the tree,
I see the fruit, I see the earth that held the spuds,
I see the clay that made the pot that holds
my ferns, and the potter who kneaded clay
like dough, who rolled it, and molded it,
I see the earth itself a kiln
glazing balls of clay,
taking sand, melting it to glass.

WHAT I TAUGHT HER

My student refuses to argue about anything.
Her brother died young,
a terrible death she nursed him through,
of A.I.D.S.. Her husband’s brother
likewise died young
of A.I.D.S. I do not like
to correct my students’ grammar
or their spelling.
Everything is luck and choice,
and we can’t blame the past
for what a person chooses
to do with their lives,
she wrote.
We all have many lives, I wrote,
as cats do, but a person, I wrote,
still chooses ‘his or her lives’ or life.
Please make an argument.
Choose to.
Do not assume everything
is without causality.
I did not write:
as your mother has taught you.
She wrote: Some nights
my husband and I
lie in bed wondering out loud
about our brothers,
and our son
who almost died in his first year
of lung trouble, which he survived.

Fight with words, I tell her,
as you fought for your son’s life.
She does. She learns to argue.
It is less important than how
she and her husband
found each other,
about which I know nothing,
or about what it means
to lose a sibling young
to sexual love
with such a kicker,
and if it matters
at all
how a child dies young.

DOG OUTRUNNING PEOPLE

I saw today a woman who has a kind of chariot, now,
in lieu of legs that work on their own power,
she stands as she can, tall,
perched high on the platform of her rolling machine,
and her white dog races with her, she racing him
on her powerful motor, both running past Hilly’s Brook,
her second husband with her, then letting her go,
letting the dog exercise faster, on his lead, than anyone
our age could run for long on two legs.

She was laughing as she passed me,
stopped at Hilly’s Brook where the arched branch
completes a circle with its reflection.
The dog was panting, as dogs do,
instead of perspiring at the exertion,
as her writings have told for years
the effort of holding together
children, routine, school, space,
memory, her will to love,
start again unflagged and undeterred,
while everything broke
and she kept everything running.

Her face is hers, and beautiful,
her hands strong on the handlebar.
Her pleasure is too strong for her smile to hold it.
She is laughing as she passes and the white dog
looks back. She adjusts the controls and catches up.

Evenly they move away from me, still stopped,
to look at the slow flowing water, the tree,
the circle the branch makes with its reflection,
and I nod to her husband watching her far up ahead.
He is walking with delight, alone.

Liz Socolow won the Barnard Poetry Prize for her book length collection
Laughing at Gravity: Conversations with Isaac Newton, and the single poetry
prize for 2006 from Isotope Magazine, and in 2005 from CV2, Canada’s
premier poetry journal. She spent her work life in classrooms
teaching poetry and literature to students of all ages and is now doing that
work with the Evergreen forum at the Suzanne Patterson Center for Senior
Citizens in Princeton. She lives in Lawrenceville with hundreds
of plants and is the mother of two grown sons, and the grandmother of three
grandchildren.

Permalink Leave a Comment

Emily Nguyen

April 24, 2008 at 1:16 pm (Uncategorized) ()

Poems Written in the Style of the Kokinshu

In each of the days’ rewritings
the night grows colder,
more alone.

Day walks down the pebbled walkway of the night
where you toss like a flower,
still held to the stem of dawn.

You climb out of a long silent past.
You dissolve like steam
into the shirt of me.

I was an empty lotus shell
tied to the stem of longing.

I am an asterisk
stolen from the night.

Like the wandering
dreams of fire,
a strong desire to know you
wanders in, and eats up
all that I know of you.

October

Spring and Summer fall
all over themselves
to reach you, frail October.
In the light of your leaves,
the sun retreats,
and the moon takes on
too many shapes,
more than its thin crescent
can hold
without waxing bold all over.

In the ink winding through the inner chapters
there’s an occasional flamboyant spill—

I remember when you walked into me.
I stare at my umbrella
as if your sense were rain
actually touching the body
of where I am.

Close the Curtain quickly

Close the curtain quickly
while the day is still drawing
with its soft grey patches

–quickly, before the colors splay

or the patterned cloth
of our lives
will be unpinned.

We have come through
the open scissors of the day.


Emily Nguyen was born in Madison Wisconsin She has an MA in Comparative Literature and in Japanese Language and Literature and has been a member of US1 Poets since 1991. Her poem “The Hamlet Ophelia Letters” will come out in an upcoming issue of ARS-Interpres.

Permalink Leave a Comment

Lois Marie Harrod

April 23, 2008 at 2:52 pm (Uncategorized) ()

Windows

To be a window is easier than to be a door. You do
not have to suffer daily fists and the brass conk
of canes, you do not have to ease open
to every opportunity with its get-rich dreams.

No mail man forces a dog to snarl at your knob,
no mother keeps yelling that you should be open
or shut depending on the whims of the weather,
and the cat sits on your sill without begging out or in.

If she twitches at the squirrel, no matter. On All Hallow’s
you do not grow weary on your hinges,
and in summer you’re screened. No one scolds

you for letting in the flies. You are merely there,
that paradoxical clarity that delineates worlds, blameless
and irresponsible until the boy with his stone.

The Chair and the Bed

The chair was straight-backed and righteous, a ladder
to heaven running up his spine, he knew where he was
going even though a telephone book was sometimes placed
on his painted seat and a child lifted onto him for a holiday
meal, but that didn’t last longer than a heel mark on his rung,
the child was gone before the gravy, and the chair was back
to where he had been in the bedroom, white and empty.

The bed was another matter, rumpled
but righteous in her own way, whispering to her sheets
that the chair worried too much about saliva and salvation,
all that grumbling because the wife had missed a banana smear
on his leg, hey, life was messy, didn’t she know every night
the old roll and flop, slaver and snore? Why even when
the man and the wife were sleeping, the bed could taste
the phlegm and stain and then there was that schnauzer
who took a corner of the spread and pulled it onto the floor
to stink it up. What was the big deal?

Of course, the chair knew too.
Every night he sat and watched, holding himself as rigid as he could.

The Cuff and the Sleeve

They learned to live with each other
as couples do, ironing out differences, but
the cuff was often angry with the sleeve,
especially when it was hot and the sleeve
rolled the cuff into himself. I wish you
wouldn’t do that, she kept saying to him,
when you hold me this tight I can hardly
breathe–and your sweat, it’s toxic.
The sleeve chided her, Darling, why do I
have I to take the heat? Can’t you give
a little. Stop thinking of yourself.
The cuff tried, but she couldn’t help hoping
for cooler days when the sleeve was less
amorous and was willing to let
the smoothest bit of her show.

Lois Marie Harrod’s chapbook Furniture is forthcoming from Grayson Press. Her Firmament was published by Finishing Line Press in 2007 and her Put Your Sorry Side Out, by Concrete Wolf in 2005. She won a 2003 poetry fellowship, her third, from the New Jersey Council on the Arts. Her sixth book of poetry Spelling the World Backward (2000) was published by Palanquin Press, University of South Carolina Aiken, which also published her chapbook This Is a Story You Already Know (l999) and her book Part of the Deeper Sea (l997). Over 300 of her poems have appeared in journals including American Poetry Review, Blueline, The MacGuffin, Salt, The Literary Review, Zone3. Her earlier publications include the books Every Twinge a Verdict (Belle Mead Press, l987), Crazy Alice (Belle Mead Press, l991) and a chapbook Green Snake Riding (New Spirit Press, l994).

Permalink Leave a Comment

postmidnight

April 22, 2008 at 1:34 pm (Uncategorized) ()

Iago’s Lament

To you, I am villain,
With the most treacherous of plans
I’ll wear my heart on my sleeve
For I am not what I am
As I stand here before you bleeding
When all else around me have died
I’ll answer the question awaiting escape
From your lips –
Plainly,
Simply,
Why?
What could have driven anyone
To this point of insanity
Rage filled fit towards the carnage
Surrounding we –
I too, am broken hearted
Recounting the now dearly departed
Emilia, Desdemona, Rodrigo &
Oh dear, dear Othello
My brother who made me capable
Of hastening his end as Cain did Abel, yet
For if my brother is my keeper,
Am I my brother’s pet?
Disenchanted mongrel –
Rabid and foaming
As my love for Othello
Became loathing –
Now, I am let go
Perhaps we should start
With introductions –
My name is Iago
With much of this tale already known
Our journey begins with the seeds
Of a reaping being sewn
“we met as soulmates on Venetian islands
we left as inmates from an asylum”
a moor in service of the duke
most found his presence to be a rebuke
truth be told,
but I looked into his eyes,
sensing something more bold –
a spirit and a soul much like mine
the world would be ours in a time
for siding with Othello,
I became a pariah,
But color didn’t matter,
Only ambition and desire
As the other recruits scoffed and laughed
I nurtured Othello into a man who surpassed beast
Together we would never know defeat
Warriors unparalleled
To our enemies, demons born of the pits of hell
Well enough, on the battlefield
We were the duke’s favorite weapons to wield
Two sides of the same blade
Our bloodletting prowess constantly displayed
Earning an awesome reputation
As the laughter faded away
Into my look of dismay
On the fateful day when the duke
Chose as his general the man that I made
Who I risked everything for
No longer my equal,
He was my master, the moor
I was sure I, at least,
Would be his second in command,
Instead he cut me off
To make Cassio his right hand
In this darkness no flower can grow,
So what of your Venetian rose Iago?
Cast back into Othello’s ebon shadow
Deserving to bloom,
Refusing to wilt
Reclaiming my light is survival
I feel no guilt –
Be it reason, madness,
Or steely path to my sword’s hilt
Make no mistake,
These are the tombs Othello built
Had he heeded me, no blood
Would have spilt
Like Roderigo, foolishly enamored
With fair Desdemona
He would have given anything to own her
I, just wanted her away
Her presence encouraging Othello
To play the hero when he
Was no more heroic than i
But once you tell enough tales,
You are forced to live the lie,
Try to fill some grand position
When reputation is an idle
& most false imposition
gotten without merit
I merely wish to ferret out The Truth
That this “noble moor” was most uncouth
False friend & betrayer in parts
His cunning shone through in Cypress,
Mine in his heart,
And yes – I wished to take his life
After too many whisperings
Of Othello’s trysts with Emilia, my wife
My beloved & he,
Violating a divine decree
Filches from me my good name
Robs me of that which
No enriches him
& makes me poor indeed
Othello deserved to bleed
for theft of all that makes a man,
so in bloom, your rose Iago
hatched a simple plan
to make things right
to become karma made flesh
o’er the course of a fortnight
I convinced Othello of Desdemona’s
Wandering heart,
Maneuvered Cassio & Roderigo
To play their parts,
Emila’s end was the price of infidelity
As death often holds hands with jealousy
This body count of Emila, Roderigo,
Desdemona & Othello
Seems too much to manage,
But this is a war with
Collateral damage
My future now, only the fates & Cassio can tell
As I swear, my sole crime was loving not wisely,
But too well
This is the truth, all that you’ve heard
Demand me nothing – what you know, you know
From this time forth
I never will speak word

Universal Donor

I pour plasma onto pages
Of ranting rages
Transcribing wisdom of the ages
Channeling sinners, saints, sages
& gurus
conjuring mojo & juju
in practicing verbal voodoo
bringing the dead back to life
resurrecting trees with every line
I write
My poems are my zombies
I release into the night
Hungry & insane
Between each line you can
Hear the call for brains
Expeditiously surreptitious
The flow is viscous
Aortically overactive & anime vicious
This world has a sickness
Probably an STD
From messing with the wrong people
Consistently
Insistent we ignore history
To accept as is as what should be
Complacency & conformity
Promoting until we behave uniformly
When we should be rude & uncouth
Students of bill hicks
Disciples of raoul duke,
Cursed to follow Douglas adams &
Lenny Bruce
Swearing to tell the truth,
The whole truth, & nothing but so well
Personal credo an evolved
“what the hell?”
called “what the hell are you doing?
are you becoming the change you
claim to be pursuing?”
strange things afoot
trouble brewing,
rumbles stewing,
plotting to undo our imminent undoing
why me?
Can’t deny destiny
Coursing through my arteries
Attempting immortality via
These words I live
Flow positive
So positive
Red cross approved
O positive
Linguistic hemophiliac
Hemorraging verses like a maniac
Klepto stalking stolen curiosity
To steal it back
Robin hoodlum in the
Age of bedlam
Chanting redrum in asylums
The phylums are false
As your assumptions
As manipulated soundbites
For mass consumption
Mentally lazy
More concerned about
Anna Nicole’s O.D.
Or the father of her baby
Than the activities of the
Presidency
Devoting more time to
Paris’ month in jail
Than to the years people
In Darfur have ailed
We’ve bailed on the
Humanist aesthetic
More engaged in apathetic rhetoric
Than actually doing something about it
When Trent Lott
Can compare immigrants to livestock
No one calls out bull – no shock
This planet needs fixin
As truth gradually becomes fiction
We can’t see how the system got broken
No clearer
Low visibility with too much
Smoke & mirrors
Genesis of our situation
Born of political prestidigitation
Cloaked in false corollaries to
Form international sleight of vocabulary
Until our language is worth
Less than mud
I can’t give my word anymore
I just give blood.

postmidnight is one of the hottest young poets on the spoken word scene. He’s slammed & performed across the country, read his work on several radio stations, & done work with various non-profit organizations ranging from schools to soup kitchens. He’s the author of 2 screenplays, a stage play, & 6 chapbooks. Attempting to legitimize the vocation of “rock star poet,” he is currently recording with his band, Inside Job. Click here for further biographical information.

Princeton Rep Shakespeare Festival/Shakespeare in the Square Shakespear-e-thon 2008
This year, Princeton Rep is pleased to present its annual Shakespear-e-thon as part of Princeton’s Communiversity Street Festival on Saturday, April 26th on the Palmer Square Green from 2:30 to 4:30 p.m.

Permalink 1 Comment

Next page »