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Sharron Singleton
Five Poems
Sarah Giragosian
Five Poems
Jenna Kilic
Five Poems
Kristina McDonald
Five Poems
Toni Hanner
Five Poems
Annie Mascorro
Five Poems
Brittney Corrigan
Three Poems
S. E. Hudgens
Four Poems
Ali Doerscher
Four Poems
David Sloan
Three Poems
Olivia Cole
Five Poems
Lucy M. Logsdon
Four Poems
Marc Pietrzykowski
Four Poems
Donna Levine Gershon
Five Poems
Eva Heisler
The Olden Days
Stephanie Rose Adams
Five Poems
Jill Kelly
Five Encounters
Ben Bever
Five Poems
Michael Hugh Lythgoe
Five Poems
Arlene Zide
Three Poems
Harry Bauld
Five Poems
Lisa Zerkle
Four Poems
Peter Mishler
Five Poems
Tim Hawkins
Five Poems
Marqus Bobesich
Four Poems
Abigail Templeton-Greene
Five Poems
Eric Duenez
Five Poems
Anne Graue
Five Poems
Susan Laughter Meyers
Five Poems
Peter Kahn
Two Poems
D. Ellis Phelps
Five Poems
Linda Sonia Miller
The Kingdom
Nicklaus Wenzel
Skagit River
Holly Cian
Five Poems
Susan Morse
Five Poems
Daniel Lassell
Five Poems
Svetlana Lavochkina
Temperate Zones
Daniel Sinderson
Three Poems
Catherine Garland
Five Poems
Michael Fleming
Five Poems
“Atavism is the rare reappearance, in a modern organism, of a trait from a distant evolutionary ancestor. We describe an apparent case of atavism involving a 59-year-old man with chest pain whose coronary circulation and myocardial architecture resembled those of the reptilian heart.”
—“A Case of Atavism in a Human Being”: Abstract
Before the twinge and pain in his chest,
there were the dreams: scenes of wetlands
flooded with milkweed and cattail,
sulfur rank in the air, and mudflats
where he thrilled in secret at the sight
of a frog, wall-eyed and refulgent
beneath a sheen of bog water.
And he dreamed of his wraparound self,
bound around the bough of a hemlock
before shuddering off a ribbon of skin,
scrapping a thin ghost of himself to be lost
in the rustle of leaves. He drowses
under a copse or tests the wiry
alacrity of his body, fluent as a fist.
Later, with his chest tricked out with electrodes
and jelly-slick with a robin blue luster,
he watches the shivery green pulsation
of his heart on the monitor, while the echo
gives voice to its liquid beating,
and belly-up, he hears with his whole being
the oblique, blubbery throb of god’s ruse.
After the attackers leave, the lioness
finds her cub, splayed and half-gone.
She laps at his face, his breast, his haunches
with the shivery pink tip of her tongue,
mouths the crown in the O of her jaws.
She works her tongue through the lush jungle
of his veins, plucks at the muscle,
thin as violin strings,
swills the blood, grinds the fat,
sucks from the wreck
of his bones until they glint like stars,
until she eases him back into her.
Above, the vultures wait then flag, thwarted.
In the economies of death,
let there be no waste,
and if there is a witness overhead,
let my body’s strange devotions deter him.
I.
At every estuary I ask for you.
We had a laugh wading near the mangroves,
waiting for the sun to come up.
You were a pink lamp in the dawn,
a rococo pink, with a body contoured like a heron
and feathers bunched up
like flounce on a flamenco dress.
In our stretch of swamp, silhouetted tortoises
slid past us, a speck of regret in their eyes,
and you found a little knot of fish
to spoon up with your spatula bill,
trilling a riff of bullfrog-grunts
and surfacing with your mouth
fringed with fronds.
In spring, I will be skimming
across the lower latitudes,
looking out for you. Let’s not worry
about probability or the weather.
If you read this, what is the weather to us?
II.
With the eggshell tiling of your belly draped in mud
and your immaculate scales glinting like ceramic in the sun,
you lolled (strategically?) near me, your tail,
articulate and comely, sweeping half moons
along the swamp bank. You smelled of dropworth
and mouldering larvae, and I blew networks of clinging,
bottle green bubbles across your cheeks.
You showed off your snout and curled your forelimbs
around mine; for a full minute, you and I were entwined.
III.
I saw you blinking your wings
against the marine green finish
of a gas pressure lantern.
Pheromones and kerosene spiked
the air, and I flitted above your thorax,
stuttering against your sparked
fury (you had browned your wings
from the light, usually a yucca white).
We found dusty moth wings
pressed like flower petals
along the lantern rim, and we bolted,
returning to the moon as our frame of reference,
and beating wings as thin as confetti
against the night. Although for you,
I would balance astride the flame’s eye
and meet a night swelling with lanterns.
Tonight I wake as an anglerfish,
ringing my world with light,
prowling the window sill, gutted of flies,
the bedroom’s shadowed amalgams and rifts,
its submarine and faceless blooms of mouths
and stomachs, waving tentacles and threads
that go trawling above the lure-light
that sprouts from my head,
the fatal charm that obscures me.
In a room of nose-diving lamps,
little twitching schools of fish, and you,
my broadside eyes obvert and roll inwards,
indrawn to a sleeping language,
while a squid uses its vast arms
to rope and cloak its face.
It sways, encrypted and plain
before the masked diver.
From a body, I turn to a nocturnal verb
brushing up between you and me
in a love letter written in the space between,
finally legible in our dreaming.
We came upon the colloquy of seals,
effusive in their idiom of barks and coughs.
Some speak with an inquisitive inflection
as if to ask, How does this relate
to what we were talking about?
And how do we respond in turn
to these creatures draped and lolling
along the razor-edged rocks,
their skin lustrous in the damp air,
while others stipple the distance
with their bobbing heads?
They shimmy off the ledges
when they see us or are phlegmatic
and sloe-eyed, like a Degas nude
in her chaise lounge. One bull heaves
a belly as big as a kettle drum
up onto a slab, his neck receding
into the wrinkles of his scarved fat
as he bellows to us, probing our reasoning:
How could these marvels be refuted?
Sarah Giragosian is a PhD student in 20th-century North American Poetry and Poetics at SUNY-Albany. Her work has been published in such journals as Crazyhorse, Copper Nickel, Able Muse, and Measure, among others. She is also a co-editor of the online literary journal Barzakh.