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Winning Poems for August 2007
Judge Deborah Bogen



After Howl III -- Rockin' the Ages
by Gary Blankenship Wild Poetry Forum who loned it through the streets of Idaho seeking visionary indian angels who were visionary indian angels --Allen Ginsberg, Howl east of boise they find a cultist who prepared kool-aid for a jim jones when sister Sylvia saw the Virgin Mary in the pond behind the hen house no one paid any attention to her south of soshone they locate a survivalist who sells cranberries in a fruit stand on highway 93 when mama saw Mother Mary in grandpa's fried egg, they turned the kitchen into a shrine ketchum is all weed dealers who tithe to a clapboard church in mountain home Uncle John is still in the attic they leave orofino where every man woman child stray goat is his her its own prophet Christ walked across Lake Coeur d'Alene the day of the parade in honor of President Reagan and no one noticed in the lewiston they come across the holy slots sacred decks hallowed bones mammon's offering to the state the picture of the Garden behind Grandma's bed only cost her $125 in 1973 in soda springs they hit upon a two dollar gal who nightly prays to baby jesus at least twice an hour in an alley behind the suds and pack when the tent revival came to town everyone was there, two members of the cheer squad were visiting relatives the next fall the idaho falls temple is being repainted in a new shade of temple white I dream my guardian angel is on strike the buddhist gate is locked on cable Italian suits beg moloch sings when the roll is called up yonder I See God Standing in Stout Grove by Larina Warnock poets.org Here, Heaven appears in bursts of broken sunlight between treetops swaying with the weight of words; supplication spirals up from bodies unbent, unkneeling. Here, faces appear carved in soft red bark, and limbs stretch earthward as invitations for embrace; gnarled branches curl like arthritic hands without pain. Here, seedlings appear along the frames of the fallen; new trunks rise beside fern and moss over logs lying prone; roots curl over ancient stumps and both survive. Here, redwoods appear in clusters; gods grow upon gods, between gods, within gods--relics of old religions twisting together in perpetual union, continuous creation. Beneath these branches, I know why ancients worshipped trees, why they sought solace in these groves and found them filled with spirit-tinged whispers. I remember you from my youth, Lord. I remember you from a childlike dream. fulton street hustlers by Allen Itz Blueline it's eleven in the morning and you can tell the drinkers, the down- but-not- outers, squinting in the mid- day sun as they cross fulton street, leaving their $40-a-week motel room, heading for breakfast at one of the dozen taco shops in the neigh borhood, chorizo and eggs with a side of re-fried beans, two flour tortillas black sludge coffee and six aspirin for the head that won't stop aching until they get their first beer, their scrambled eggs chaser that officially starts the day mostly men, careful with appearances, fresh shined boots, sharp creased jeans and starched long-sleeve cowboy shirts with fake pearl snaps, pool shooters, dart throwers, penny tossers, pinball wizards, and hustlers of most every kind, living on the edge always, on the edge of losing usually, they live on alcohol and beer nuts, cheap meals at flytrap eateries and dark places where the truth is only what you can see in a smoked bar mirror, where pre- tending is easier than not immeasurable by Dale McLain Wild Poetry Forum In the year that caught me in its rusty snare, cornered me, rolled me like a bum, I grew an inch. Impossible, you might say. Middle-aged ladies do not grow taller, only wider, sadder, greyer. But it's the truth. I felt every millimeter in my bones. The October sky was closer than it had ever been. From my new perspective I could see things that I'd forgotten. A footstep was a mile. Each heartbeat claimed an hour. So odd, that I was tighter bound than a spool of coarse thread, but felt as if my arms were feathered things unfurled against a coastal wind. In the year when I was laid open by a silvery blade, cut from scalp to toe, I was contained within folded petals a blossom, cotton white and ready for spring's kiss. I bled with joy, a narrow river that went before me as a thin rouged trail I knew was mine. I learned to live unforgiven, came to own a sorrow as deep as a December night and a gladness that danced like stars upon the sea. Things begin so slyly, steal upon us like a summer twilight. I stand altered, a tower dedicated to the next breath drawn. Nothing fits me anymore. Super Nova by Brenda Nixon Cook Pen Shells Axl Rose screams, I'm Going To Make You Bleed. Speakers forward, audio gain and bass on eleven. The car shakes. Her energy seeps violet from every pore. She knows there is no containment possible. Maximum overdrive. She longs for everything to stop. For the question that tumbles around in her noisy mind to take a needed rest. She longs for the benefit of sex, hot and hard or a good cry. Her soul wants to crawl from her body and leave. Bags bagged, a one way ticket to somewhere quiet. There are days the question that flies around her brain reminds her of a photograph of a tree in Greece . A tuning fork near the sea, two limbs barren from ocean spray. Growing vines cling to its split trunk, act as foliage and form the question that haunts her. That simple answer is but another question to tumble into nothingness. She hums along Welcome To the Jungle. BARREN by Mitchell Geller About Poetry Forum I built my own constricting carapace from chemicals ingested lavishly, and wished, with fervor, merely to be numb. Insensible, I watched myself become a grim, distorted pasquinade of me, devoid of kindness, sympathy and grace. Insomnia, anxiety and grief have made me recreant, bitter with fear. I know, my love, that you'd be horrified at my behavior since the day you died -- not, as you chaffed, in love within the year, but still marooned on this spiritless reef. Forgive, my love, the arid waste you've seen -- a year from now my garden will be green. Fall Day in the Park by Esther Greenleaf Murer poets.org In the lapidary light of the sea, I am a flatfish prostrate on the floor of a cathedral, the eyes on my back attuned to the coruscation of corals, polyps, bryozoa swaying in the current's sunlit blue. Now on dancing eddies I levitate in celebration, vault and sweep and skew, pitch and bank and camber a hymn to overarching glory. Then I sink again, canting like a falling leaf, and rest in the mud, where one day soon my center eye will contemplate the bare ruined reef while the other, the wandering one, keeps watch for green ghosts hovering amid the welter of weeds.

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