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Poetry Winter 2023    fiction    all issues

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Cover
Susan Wilkinson

Selena Spier
Red From The West
& other poems

Pamela Wax
Talk Therapy
& other poems

Ana Reisens
Honey Water
& other poems

Mark Yakich
Necessary Hope
& other poems

Bridget Kriner
A Few Lies & a Truth
& other poems

Keegan Shepherd
Silver Queen
& other poems

Alaina Goodrich
Sacred Conflagration
& other poems

George Longenecker
Those Who Hunger
& other poems

Hailey Young
Ball Room
& other poems

Sébastien Luc Butler
Aubade
& other poems

Savannah Grant
Ever Since (v.2)
& other poems

grace (logan)
Dynamic
& other poems

Samantha Imperi
A Poem for the Ghosted
& other poems

Corinne Walsh
Limerence
& other poems

Kayla Heinze
Stop checking the score
& other poems

Richard Baldo
Chasing Through to Dawn
& other poems

Alex Eve
A moment
& other poems

Robert Michael Oliver
Prison Hounds
& other poems


Writer's Site

Sébastien Luc Butler

Aubade

smell of almost rain                       dust

green wood                    lightning bug


pining above      flotsam pollen

spooling             in the river


sphinx moth      nuzzles                 foxglove’s

speckled interior           i didn’t know


i was real           before you touched me

the storm comes            rain


a path of memory          so deep

it hardly resembles       memory


the veins in your eyes   when you looked at me

the first time     before


words                 to witness

before one          knows how



Aubade

i am a poor witness        out walking at night

when streets dream                    only


of themselves   broadside           of a farmhouse

white paint       scuffed               as the bar of soap


i sometimes get to wash you with            your valleys

hard      then soft           more often


it’s my own hand            running across

my skin             trying


to figure yours                the night is cold

enough for snow             but


there is no snow              the wet tips

of my hair         harden              crinkle


like the dead grass          dawn   is impossibly

far         & its song          of you


proper stage for my lament        since when

did i assume      it worked that way


 during              is so short

& ever



Aubade

Mornings I balk

awake into aubade. Default


mode: entropy in green

& blue. My blues, my love,


without you, filling out

an ocean. What’s new?


An ocean in your touch.

Your skin’s salt-lick, briny


caper of days you come

to visit. Diver’s bends


in the blood, I wave-

break against your back’s


mussel-pink muscles, your

spine’s rosemary rosary,


the rosary your name

makes my throat, tide-pool


of wet flame. Outside,


sap suckers pepper

cedar’s bearded bark


for each nectar-sleeve, crepe

myrtle shatters itself


over red earth. Months I forget


to be with you, long

longing of watching pasta water


wait to boil while cooking

for one yet again,


thinking how

after slow dancing


we picked bits of thyme

from between our teeth.



Aubade

crows gather       vortex   in hundreds

the leafless tops of trees              scavenging


wind                    how i wish i could say

it’s nothing like hitchcock made them


that would be a lie         i don’t know

what they bring             other than


another winter               without you

a selfishness        i have no defense for


it’s said crow memory    is so strong

it could count in a defense trial


they remember               all who were cruel

who showed grace          some claim


they can even learn to speak       i turn

to say                  as if you’d be there


winter without you        i know that song

play it again        if you remember how



Aubade

i’ve been reading too much          charles wright

i take a walk                   expect a poem


just as somehow             i expect you

as if       i were owed you              owed


the starlings      again their ring

around the rosey            their dusk


coronation         sweet    murmuration

no poem             just a line—


once in a stark turn       sun splashed

their understory            alark


into a thousand eyelashes

who would believe me    if i said


i’d seen your eyes           just so   in bed

a private history            we’re consigned to


precious falsehoods       we bought

will never return            just like a poem


i feel you            above my left eyebrow

invisible shard               in which there’s light

Sébastien Luc Butler holds an MFA from the University of Virginia. His poems have appeared or are forthcoming from Narrative Magazine, Pleiades, Black Warrior Review, Southeast Review, the minnesota review, Four Way Review, and elsewhere. The recipient of the 2021 Hopwood Award, and a finalist for the 2023 Black Warrior Review Poetry Contest, his writing can be found at Fifty Grande, Foreword Reviews, and West Trade Review. Hailing from Michigan, he resides in Brooklyn.

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