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Poems by Christine L. Reed "Guernica"
| The Falling Game | Christine L. Reed lives in Tranquility, NJ where she edits and publishes Maelstrom, a hard copy literary magazine while self-employing herself in the home cleaning business. She is also the poetry editor for Moondance a web magazine celebrating the creativity of women. She has had her poetry featured in travelling art exhibits and published internationally in many small magazines, anthologies and web venues. Some recent publications include Conspire, Niederngasse, Zuzu's Petals Quarterly, Recursive Angel, Kimera and a run as poet of the week on Poetry Superhighway. "Guernica" It took her tongue, sharp and quick and landed it on the thigh of the girl in a far corner of the kitchen, two floors down. She had smashed garlic and poured oil, screaming stern mama, scolding with the eyes in the back of her thick black hair at nutmeg niños, tussling in the top of an ordinary afternoon. They began to hear the planes as she drained the heavy pot of red beans, they fell to the floor in time with the rain of bombs, rolling like marbles with the thick sound of drums. One mess she would never have to clean. A young mother nursing and dreaming her tiny joy into a fine strong man, now shrieked and clawed at the clamped mouth on her breast, didn't know both of their legs were gone. The pilots picked up coffee cups, congratulated each other with clean hands, thought of empty buildings crisply destroyed and faceless men, dirty and old....disintegrated without a trace while Picasso began to paint the screams.
The Falling Game Spun dizzy we stained our dungarees. Green-kneed we watched the clouds swirl until there was nothing but sky. The smell of dirt and fresh air soaked into our skins, like the rain in the street when, barefooted, we sloshed and kicked on hot days, too poor for pools. We were the kids who knew what lay under the bridge, what was in the woods and where to find the quarters at the laundromat. Our hands gripped bark faster than lumberjacks, we climbed to escape, breathed with trees, borrowed their freedom, and imagined ourselves into better lives, we never knew there was no such thing. The Kingdom of You "...I lost two cities, lovely ones. And, vaster, some realms I owned, two rivers, a continent. I miss them, but it wasn't a disaster.... " Elizabeth BishopWe carved sand ditches with our toes and laughed about the neighbors who fought about the silly things in life. The ocean belonged to you. You let me visit it, showed me its wonders. Let others trespass in your generosity. We lived on these memories, promised we would return and recapture your claim, tell the crabs we were home again. In your drug smattered dream-wakes I whispered the sea into your ear like a prayer, watched your once sun-burned skin sink deeper. Each night of tubes and sob-wrenched pleas, trying to squeeze my life into your hand, I heard the waves crash in the hiss of the pumps. I told you to go on ahead, to explore the new land, find the jellyfish of it, and when I got there I would bask with you in your kingdom, once more. The Way You Went in your wool coat and drymouth, your boots cracked ice on the snow and my face, you took the path past my window, steamed with coffee and breathing. I wanted to yell, to pull you in, pour hot things inside of you, make you wake up. Instead, I hid behind curtains, pink swirls of chintz, held my breath until you passed. I hoped you didn't slip, break bones, take out innocent bystanders, embarrass me. So I watched you go, a Scotch on the rocks, pretended not to feel you, or the ache of letting you walk by. Copyright © 1999 by Christine L. Reed. All rights reserved. |
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