Poems from Inheritance by Margaret Kaufman
Photo, Brownie Troop, St. Louis, 1949 (After Larry Levis) I’m going to put Karen Prasse right here in front of you on this page so that you won’t mistake her for something else, an example of precocity, for instance, a girl who knew that the sky (blue crayon) was above the earth (green crayon) and…Read More
Poems from The Stranger Dissolves by Christina Hutchins
The Poet to Her Poem Make of my elbows small pebbles rolling the river bottom, a fierce and pummeling sweep. If you will, build of my limbs and trunk the supple breast and weight of the water. Of my hands, eels, my ears twin leeches sucking sound, already these feet are two swift fish flicking…Read More
Poems from Space/Gap/Interval/Distance by Judy Halebsky
A Breaking Word There’s that part after Basho writes old still pond of pressing a fingerprint into wet clay where the word ya holds a space in the air a cloud changes shape in the sky make it a dash, a murmur a breath on the inhale this old pond so many have tried to…Read More
Poems from All night in the new country by Miriam Bird Greenberg
Elegy Early on in the city on weekends claimed by fog I came back to your farmstead, your emptied creekside shanty-house from my laboratory wage work with pockets full of micropipettes and stolen white gloves as if to outfit a regiment of ghost-butlers in an imagined antebellum manor neither of us, if offered, would…Read More
Poems from Plagios/Plagiarisms (Volume One) by Ulalume González de Leόn
VOCES El viento y las palabras no escarmientan: siempre desenterrando caracoles donde estrenar su viejo asunto. A sí mismos se plagian. VOICES Wind and words don’t learn their lesson: always digging up shells where old affairs make their debut. They plagiarize themselves. PALABRA Pronunciada palabra tán sola tán desnuda: regrésate a vestirte…Read More