
Category Archives: CHAOS
Poetry from Darren C. Demaree
Emily as the Predictable Question
Yes, she drew me in
as simply as a breath
& when she breathed
me out I was part
of the derivation
of Emily, the world
that exists for everyone
else. I miss the before,
when her lungs
were making this me,
but it’s good to be
with you all.
How else could I mourn?
How else could I fight
my way back to her?
Emily as Well-Made Cake
I don’t need to be so modern
as to use plates or utensils or occasion,
I just need her in my mouth.
Emily as Obvious Beauty
Being simple,
seeing good as a gift,
that re-made me.
Emily as Fifty-Seven Years Later
The frailties will be funny, too.
Death will be hysterical. Jokes we
barely remember, that’s oxygen.
All All #52
Now, now, now is when we sit on top
of America’s chest to see what
good breath is left. No songs. No strutting
across the mythology of fields
with actual gods we blanketed
to smother. Just the weight of people
& a promise to bring back honey,
to bring back the drowning in honey
to the bee killers. Now. Now. Now. Now.
Poetry from Paul Bavister
A Short Break
A short break, a space to think,
to work things out: his need
for order, her love of silence.
Outside, though the sun was bright,
the wind never stopped. Sand
hissed beneath the cabin door,
gulls skimmed the waves,
small birds flickered into bushes
after night flights over the ocean.
People drifted into the hard light.
Inside, he over-read each word,
he weighed every sentence.
They had never felt so far apart.
Each hesitation filled
with the hiss of the spring wind.
They ate at the kitchen table
while sand sifted over
the wooden floor.
The argument, when it came,
drove them back towards each other –
as if stopping
would be the end of them.
Metal Cabin
The cabin shook with a polar storm.
My son appeared on the laptop
and told me he was lonely
in his new job in the city.
Snow powder hissed
over the metal roof.
I turned up the volume.
He said he went to bars
almost every night
but always sat on his own.
I told him I was scared
of the guys in the control room.
He said he spent too long
in chat rooms
but there was nowhere else
to meet people.
Snow drifts pushed
against the windows.
I said I was always there for him
and when he nodded
I believed he was there for me too.
Technician
It was the first retirement party
I’d ever been to, and even though
they sang his praises, he was
always rude to me. Maybe
he used to be helpful and kind
but to me he was a bully,
resistant, angry. He was mean
about people who’d done nothing
wrong, yet on his last day
everyone had tears in their eyes
and said they would miss him.
Maybe he’d changed. Maybe
work had ground him down.
It’s 45 years later, and my turn
to accept a leaving gift.
My colleagues turn to the buffet
and fill their plates. I’m not sure
if I’ve upset them. I can’t tell
if I’ve changed or stayed the same.
Paul Bavister has published three collections of poetry with Two Rivers Press. His work has appeared in Confluence, Dream Catcher and Smoke. Starlings came highly commended in the Rialto poetry competition.
Poetry from Paul Tristram
A Living Canvas
It just occurred to me,
Life is a living canvas.
Paint your colourful emotions
Brilliantly!
Hermits And Answers
I quit taking the Medication
because it was stifling
the fantastic explosions
inside my head.
There are now rumbling
bass strings playing
when I leopard-stalk
down the street.
Manic gives the colours
deeper understanding,
and patterns run the surface
of almost everything.
Top hats were constructed
for moods not occasion.
Audio hallucinations
soundtrack abstract days…
and the shadows
have minds of their own.
I stopped talking
to that woman
for no good reason,
it troubles her enough to frown…
she just reminds me
of how I used to be,
and I’m far too much
the fractured gentleman
to explain.
I’m really not trying
to annoy you,
merely get around you,
but your questions
are blocking the way.
I’m not allowed
to say that anymore…
there is nothing more offensive
than the truth,
except maybe lies
told with obvious insincerity.
Hermits have all the answers,
but are coded
to keep them to themselves…
some call that selfishness,
whilst I see only wisdom there.
Pastel Pockets Of Warmth
Deep inside her pastel pockets of warmth
I relax into foetal position,
rocking to and fro
contentedly,
rainbow coloured
and teardrop-shaped.
Nerve ends a-tingling and a-buzzing
a soft, humming symphony
of delicate hibernation.
Safe from the purple and black fray,
invasive thoughts and memories
kept in check
by her careful heartstring pulling.
Soul thumb sucking sighs,
regressing back to neutral,
a stripping away and cleansing
of the day-to-day unnecessaries.
Life’s batteries on full charge,
mind and action of limb on subtle standby.
I win another soft victory
with each precious moment not tampered with.
My water levels rise again
as to the universal buoyancy I reconnect
to suckle slowly at the nipples core
of an energy which lies
under the curtain hem of understanding.
A Rusty Butterfly
I saw this little butterfly the other day,
it was so beautiful
that I just had to stop and watch it
until it flittered out of view.
It was a kind of powdery white,
only not a thin, fragile sort,
but a thick, healthy kind,
and it had rust coloured wings.
I’m serious,
I’ve never seen anything quite like it,
it was perfectly white (almost too perfect)
until halfway along the wings
(that’s right, about there, yeah)
and then it was a lovely orange,
rusty colour…
it was indeed magnificent.
I never thought rust was beautiful before,
but the next time I see some
I’m going to stop and venture a look,
and damn it,
I might well discover something special.
And all because of that little butterfly
which danced along the grassy verge
of a busy city street,
while everyone else refused,
or was too busy,
to acknowledge its existence, except me.
That Then Led To This Now
A thousand feather-tips
tickling my Soul’s edges, silly.
Contentedness
almost like drunkenness,
in from the cold
and stamping my feet
enthusiastically
upon the welcome
doormat of home.
An appetite fit for a King
and a Head and Heart
filled with a love
almost to the point of bursting.
Taxidermy Bride
In the cobwebbed shadows
of his long hallway
he sat nervously waiting
upon the partially broken
bottom 3rd stair step.
A whistling excitement
stirred up the dusty leaves
of his delicate, ornate mind.
As he peered downwards
at the Taxidermist’s card
beheld betwixt
his porcelain slender fingers.
And read quietly to himself
‘Your parcel will be
delivered both promptly
and exactly at one and a half
minutes after 6 o’clock
of the evening’.
He gulped down wonder
and smiled deeply
with his eyes only.
As the grandfather clock
not quite 4ft away
struck the 6th hour
and he heard the grind
and clatter of his garden gate
yawning open in the distance.
He rose shakily,
and walked towards
the front door,
each footfall a step further
away from Bachelor.
Rise!
When the self-proclaimed opposition idiot-grin
blindly in falsely supposed victories.
Nothing has your ‘Back’
except either the ‘Rock’ or ‘Hard Place’.
The cowardly gossips cluck
together with whip-cracking tongues.
And the morning’s become
a solitary obstacle course
of both ‘Mountains’ and ‘Molehills’
to traverse and overcome.
Find Strength in your own Tenacity,
focus ‘Long View/Big Picture’
at the treacherous path ahead.
To Earn and Learn from those Battle Scars
you’ve got to bleed some.
There’s no permanent ruin
in ‘Mistakes Made’, ‘Temporary Failures’
and ‘Wrong Decisions Taken’.
They are merely a Platform
to receive ‘Lessons Learnt’
and Shine your way through ‘Thick and Thin’.
It’s your Soul’s Determination, Fight
and Uniqueness that those herds of sheep
are upset and intimidated by…
Ignore their petty, mocking bleats of envy,
Spring your Confident Step and Walk to Win.
Paul Tristram is a widely published Welsh writer. He yearns to tattoo porcelain bridesmaids instead of digging empty graves for innocence at midnight; this too may pass, yet.
His novel “Crazy Like Emotion” is published by Close To The Bone. Short story collection “Kicking Back Drunk ‘Round The Candletree Graves”, and full-length poetry collections “It Is Big And It Is Clever”, “South Wales Outlaw”, “The Gutter Symposium”, “The Dark Side Of British Poetry” and “Uncivil Disobedience Is My Forte” are all published by Hunsbury Press.
Poetry from Patrick Sweeney
when called on to read,
I was in the same metabolic state
as Ham on take-off
*
sparrows always at the fragile conjunction
of staying
or going
*
he never knew the square footage
or the date of anyone’s birthday
*
dandelion puff ball
going somewhere
without a wish
*
I rode in the little yellow bus
with Der Witwer
*
the nervous son of a nervous father,
taking the heat, the white stones refused
*
who I think I am
in the teeming rain
*
he was the genius
of nothing worth knowing
*
mistrusting the rungs
of the ‘borrowed ladder’
*
for my benefit,
Wednesdays and broken lifelines
*
listening to Teen Angel
over and over again
*
stopping him before he could say:
‘Sorry for your loss’
*
she’s overprotective of caterpillars
and runny noses
*
saying the distance between stars
as if I understand it
*
the ones who laughed
behind my back
Bio: Patrick Sweeney is a short-form poet and devotee of the public library.
Poetry from Brent Yergensen
Assurance Came Nigh
I laid in bed, pondering the day,
like a phantom unexpected, sleep took its way.
It was one of those dreams, vivid but just a moment—
imagery rising, leaving my mind in atonement.
I saw a man, burdened with life,
he was drowning in pain, so full his strife.
I saw him walking a field in the forest, shrubbery round him high.
He stopped and pled to God, and assurance came nigh.He emerged assured, leaving the wooded setting with speed,
his confidence high, God answered his need.
And I awoke seconds later, wondering why the short dream—
perhaps a vision, I woke with prayer in mind.
Poetry from Elaine Murray
Blood In The Sand
Blood writing on the wall from the dead.
From the graves words come forth.
Blood of victims spread from one dead to another.
Is my grave my or just a memory of my life.
Blood from heroes of the dead is stories tell how
they die.
Off to battle on, history will tell how battles of heroes’ blood
flows through their veins
Glory goes to dust as soldiers bled.
Blood gives us soldiers with victims of this battle.
While blood goes into a sea of death.
Rich men sit in comfort while blood is spilled.
Blood is the rich man’s dream to conquer to stamp out noblemen
from cultures that go unheard off .
Hope! It is an offer to please mankind .
The blood that’s being spilled is just a memory.
Elaine Murray
July 29, 2004