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Winning Poems for March 2007
Judge Pascale Petit



The Bird Artists
by Laurie Byro About Poetry Forum When my skin no longer fits, I carry a bag of bones to the edge of the ocean. I steal the breath from a gull. On the beach a mother bends to help a young boy bundle up a baby cormorant. I watch as they cradle it, hold a wing into the air and fling it eastward. I thought you could teach me how to fly. I made you out of sand dunes and red clay. My husband sleeps. I conjure up you, Merwin, and you, Merlin. Palm trees and ancient words, a black cauldron of seawater and fire. You spread the fan of the cormorant's wing and arrange your pigments and brushes, stroke each feather with woodland brown or green. I feel my skin begin to loosen. I pick away the lice, curl back the sclerotic welt of paint. Omen by Dave Rowley Inside the Writer's Studio This morning an omen: the blue jay's stiffening legs receive an open sky. Sad, like a blue flame cradling a teaspoon, or the tap-tap-tapping on a tenuous vein in a break-down motel. Even the wallpaper peels away from the cloying stories that stink this room like rats who've crawled between the walls and died. Now it's summer and their ghosts thicken and swell in your throat. The sting of steel is mirror-flashed and plunging, close your eyes to hear its sinuous song. Close your humming eyes and wait, it's close and warm, like morning singing and the walls become blue-feather filled quilts as your legs fall away and up into the sky. Show but Never Tell by Brenda Levy Tate Pen Shells In the Guller house, terrible things were done to all the children. I once lived around the corner, down a mud road where the youngest son sometimes walked. His name was Charlie and I knew something had to be wrong with his brain. Nice ponies, he'd tell me, staring past the edge of his own boyhood. Ay-uh, them's real nice. He'd grin so wide I could count every one of his tumbledown grey teeth. He was eleven then, and growing. In the Guller house, brothers, cousins and uncles didn't wait for the girls to get their periods. None of them stayed virgins much past five or six. Except for the cripple, who had stumps for legs and arms. They used to park her on the step just to get some sun, like a plant kept too long in shadows. Neighbors said she didn't mind, she was a vegetable. I had no opinion on that. In the Guller house, they ate cow-corn stolen from a field across the highway. The farmer hooted and slapped his knee, because they were filching his cattle-food and he figured it was funny. I never saw any garden in their scraped-raw yard. Battered cars buried the lawn, and junk trucks made fences. But the social services and public health station wagons shone in the dust. So did the small daughters. In the Guller house, a nurse hesitated at the threshold with her medicine kit, while Charlie's father was breeding one of his nieces on the kitchen floor. Hold on; I ain't done yet! he grunted, and finished. The nurse told everybody, but this was the 1970s. Incest was just a family affair, except for the babies. Every once in awhile, they got taken away. Charlie became a man--with two kids by his sister-- before a Guller finally screamed, loud enough to disturb the sweet community. She was thirteen. They tried to shut her up. By then I'd moved to another county. In the Guller house, two hundred years lie black as a dirty stove. The rape- room is gone: part of a chicken coop. I suppose the cripple died; Charlie and his kin should still be in prison, although probably they're not. The laughing farmer's dead, too. Lost children drift in the convenient dark, names without faces, because it's easier for the rest of us. Good people still drive past the ruin, shop and work and age. Harsh January air cuts across the South Mountain and sandblasts an empty driveway--the same wind that abrades me now. But I've never been hard-blown open, a broken door, a Guller child. Caisa Thorbjornsdotter by Jana Bouma Wild Poetry Forum I've known the small red farmhouse, the dear blue curtains and the white china, the husband behind the oxen on the rocky hillside, the patch of oats beside the tall pines. I've known the forest alive with skogsra and wight, trolls and huldre-folk, the hymns in the small church. I've known the wash day and the birthing day, the son gone off to the city, the iron crosses, each with its name, beside the small mounds. I've known the long journey, sick with fever, the crowded passage, the strange new city, the setting out by lake and river and wagon, arriving at this place that stretches on forever, a land of nothing, no tomte or myling to murmur in the night, no neighbor, no fencepost. This land did not turn easy to the plow, but I planted myself here among the tall grasses. The grasses' deep roots, they welcomed me. *skogsra, wight, trolls, huldre-folk, tomte, myling: creatures in Scandinavian folklore Thorbjornsdotter: daughter of Thorbjorn Venetian Notes by Adam Elgar Inside the Writer's Studio Cannaregio It's this way in, an umbilicus through a living monument to everything that long ago mislaid its century, and stands now on the sufferance of time, a backdrop to the boat's raucous trance, its grunt and shudder as it strikes the Campo wall, our shock in finding that the tunnelled waterways and pox-peeled facades are not illusions after all. This is the unmoving dance of brick and stone on ether. Santa Croce This is the capital of claustrophobia where liquid alleyways drown light in pungent green, steep furtive passages conspire along their dark cammin, and slip us through the city's corseted heart. One humpy bridge will take us only to the next, our dread and fascination mounting till the pesceria like a sudden tide grants us the gift of openness, the sea in boxes on an ice-slicked floor, fish gilded, rosy, silver, veined with blue, beside a flaunt of sucking discs in stars and jointed creatures trying not to die. Our hearts' tides make no sense of this. Dorsoduro Our eyes stream at the dazzle on the Zattere. Here the world's light tightens to a smack, there's no escape from blue except returning through the narrow calli where the shadows sulk in loyalty to winter. This taut geometry discharges us at last to lunch in kinder light subdued by stone. The weary curve of Campo Santa Margherita drinks, as we do our Friuli, the declining sun. The Box Which is Myth by S. Jason Fraley Inside the Writer's Studio

For each brother, the box contains Agamemnon's skull, a collection of precious stones, and Dad's old Playboys, respectively. All their stories: how each made love for the first time while it was in the room, how it survived as their parent's house burned. The slight indention where a thief's head landed when clubbed with a trophy. Not a mildew stain. No, a glow.

* * *

They arrive at Dad's birthday party. In the corner--the box covered with a decorative table cloth. Someone puts a red plastic cup on it. When the two oldest brothers go outside to bring in extra bags of ice, the youngest takes the box, sneaks into the laundry room. He slices it open with his pocket knife. An explosion of flannel shirts.

* * *

The box is meticulously taped. The lead detective stretches latex gloves over his hands, drops the knife into a plastic bag. Fingerprint dust floats. Handcuffed to chairs, the brothers share stories. One insists he stole the box from behind the museum when a Greek exhibit traveled through town. The other says that when it is time to retire, he will live as he has always dreamed.

Takes your breath
by Kathleen Vibbert
Pen Shells

We settle in close like apples in a round bowl,
while the moon brushes off bits of light as awkward;
you remove the white shirt with button down collar.

And in between split spheres,
the hairs on your neck become soft-wheat.
You find your way through my breasts.
Hands separate dusks from the corners
of our mouths-
some colors enter and never leave - -
the world knows how to cool and warm,
which scars never sleep and which voices say yes.

The world knows when and how to dress a peach--
and how the thistle slowly takes away your breath.


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