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28:2
June, 2013

LYNX  
A Journal for Linking Poets  
  
   
     
     

 

SOLO POETRY

 

SYMBIOTIC POETRY

 LAKE POND OVER LAKE POND 3
 Micah Cavalerie

lake pond
over the reflection
lake pond

history of moss is hardly the same as history of social cliques
at different levels cliques rise up into families, coalescing into neighbors and states
moss even over miles of hectares, acres of moss, is the most fragile ground and food for caribou and little field mice.

 

 

PORTRAIT OF A LADY
Steven Carter

Eighty-three years old, she lives alone in a fairy-tale house by the lake. With its unexpected nooks and crannies, a short flight of stairs that leads nowhere, and one of two tiny bedrooms she uses for painting the mountain apple trees of a Hawaiian childhood, the house isn’t so much a reflection of her as it is her—or so a neighbor has observed.
She appreciates the solicitousness of neighbors, though she’d rather be alone, even in winter, when the lake freezes over and she can watch eagles, coyotes, and red foxes make a meal of the dead elk dragged onto the ice by a neighbor astride a small John Deere tractor. In early April when the lake begins to thaw, she stations herself on the tiny rickety deck with a pair of binoculars, waiting for Canada geese migrating north.
Childless, widowed for nearly forty years, she knows she’ll die alone in this house, almost welcoming the thought, though she’s in good health. I know what they’ll find, she thinks with a trace of amusement, a half-finished mountain apple tree on the easel and my head on the pillow. More than twice she’s told neighbors who pretend to admire her
paintings: They tasted like a rose smells. At night she dreams of the lake in summer; Hawaii’s salmon-pink twilights; blank canvases—and the touch of her husband’s hands on her back.

                                     moonset
                                              four a.m. —
                                                            the same raven's cry

 

                                  sun low in the sky
                                           never quite right—
                                                 color of the apples

 

tree

Haiga by Elizabeth McFarland

 

BEFORE A COLD FIREPLACE
Steven Carter

Night thoughts—
To me, what makes contemplating never seeing a beloved person again cruel and unbearable is that eons will pass; stars will blossom, wither, and die; comets will fizzle out and the earth be swallowed by the sun—all Creation fading into a thin, cold haze; and I’ll still be bereft of that person.
When I talk like this to friends, they roll their eyes and accuse me of lack of acceptance.
I accuse them of lack of imagination.
Then—inexplicably—I burst into laughter.

                                  drinking alone
                                             . . . on her ninth life
                                                          Old Calico

HAIBUN
Gerard John Conforti

1.
Tears burn my eyes remembering her passing many, many years ago.
So many flowers blooming in her heart till the autumn withered her away.

daffodils bow near the pond gone

 

2.
Eric, so many days staying in your small room you were planning how to die.
When April came you sped your car into a tree.

so young the rain clouds pass over your grave

 

3.
Night comes with tears from closed eyes rolling down your face:
How a broken heart took you away.

she left never to be seen again only memories

 

4.
He gazes out the dewy window when the rising sun dries the glass.
The following night the dew comes rolling down the window glass again.

alone he talks to himself unknowingly

 

 

 

CLASS REUNION
Alexander Jankiewicz

“She’s here, you know. She’s standing over there at the table.”

“Who?” I feel compelled, for some reason, to act as if I didn’t know.

“You know who… which college did she go to?”

My best friend from high school always had a way of getting right to the point. I see her standing across the room.

“Go over and say hi.” The volume of his voice suddenly becomes irritating.

She’s wearing a yellow dress. I remember how her favorite color was yellow.

“She’s not married. Bill just told me she never married. She lives in Boston now. You should go over and say hi. She asked Bill if you’d be here.”

I remember how when I asked her to marry me, she just smiled and said that we were too young. I’ve known over the years that she was right. I can feel my heartbeat starting to race as I take the first steps back in time. When she sees me, she smiles.

 

the kisses
we once shared
alone
we stand together
years from where we were

 

work

Haiga by Elizabeth McFarland

 

 

HEAVEN
Alexander Jankiewicz

I place my hand on her gravestone. I feel the loneliness of  remembering when there is no one else to share the memories with. I tell her that we will see each other again.

 

one last hope
alone smelling carnations
I whisper her name







THE WORK WEEK
Roger Jones


Traffic makes me grumpy.  Driving up the freeway this afternoon, admiring the usual vista — the flat, treeless farmland; the auction house; the old defunct motel; the ski boat sales place; the concrete plant – I try to get caught up in a reverie about highway-as-pathway,  and the trite old dream — freedom and the open road. Then I look in the mirror:  a monster pickup, with a giant chrome grill, tail-gating me closely.

                          under buttermilk skies
                          a man leading a horse
                          back to the barn

fruit

Haiga by Elizabeth McFarland

 

 

SLEEPING IN
Roger Jones


Tuesday morning. A cold soaking rain outside. Once in awhile, a quiet shudder of thunder. The garbage trucks are cruising around, slamming and beeping. Several men run around throwing barrels and yelling at each other. I stay in bed, nestle further down. Why not? No class to teach today. No pressing work, and the house full of warmth and late fall dark. The cats lie around the house, asleep. The calendar will tend to itself.


November chill
the red oak at last
turning red

 

 

SEQUENCES

 


the way through
Jenny Ward Angyal

in a house
of locked doors
she dips her brush
in green-gold light—
a forest beckons
 
I enter
through brushstrokes
like briars
the deepening canvas
of the heart
 
following
the echo of birdsong
inside us
we make our own way
through a pathless wood

snail
Haiga by Colin Stewart Jones 

 

hide and seek    
Jenny Ward Angyal
 
the words
of a child’s prayer
to Our Father
dead on my lips
I enter a silent grove
 
in this hollow
between hills
like breasts,
my search for bloodroot
still blooming
 
unable
to name what stirs
in dappled light
I cry out only come
come come come
 

 

 

TO THE EDGE OF TWILIGHT
asni amin

birdsong
for a moment
I forget …¦
drifting downstream
songs I'll never sing again

he calls me
by another name …
in the silence
unspoken words
echo

things you said
wish I could string them together
like a string of pearls …
till then dance me
to the edge of twilight

unpacking
traces of dreams
unraveling …
I let them go
to yesterday

 

 

SPRING
Ramesh Anand

distant hill
a river carrying
the spring

waters of spring
father backstrokes
into healthiness

spring drizzle
the bipinnate leaves
fold into shyness

spring day
spots of rosiness
in the bud

spring morning
a rose wallah
dresses a boquet

 

sky

Haiga by Máire Morrissey-Cummins

 

 

AUTUMN
Ramesh Anand

autumn sky
patches of twilight
in the falling leaf

autumn dawn
mother serves white rice
on an almond leaf

autumn dawn
she sees a white hair
in my mustache

autumn
listening deep
to my inner voice

on a stone bench
mother fingers her wrinkles
autumn loneliness

 

 

CITY SEASONS
Don Ammons

 Copenhagen, Denmark; observed
      from a third floor window

spring warmth bursting buds
leaves suddenly embrace trees
slumbering flowers
stir to odoriferous life
smells reaching me on high

summer shower stops
wet asphalt glistens under
a chrome sky     car tires swish
trash swirls down gurgling culverts
crowds congest steaming sidewalks

autumn colors fade
leaves fall     crinkle and turn brown
cover back gardens
front walks     sidewalks     sight and sound
of neighbors raking     sweeping

winter     snow falling
covering back gardens     front walks
sidewalks     sight and sound
of neighbors shoveling     sweeping
and trucks slinging salted sand

 

 

WIDOW’S WALK
Edward Baranosky
                        I see my beauty in you.
                                                Rumi

The portrait happens
when the brush disappears
 
stroking a precarious image
drawn from the sheer form
 
My studio chair stands empty,
the one of existence.

Bereft of consolation.
even the pulse of the tide

carries your sated heartbeat
with the salted blood.

 The truth is neither a door,
nor mirror between times,

but once awake, what beauty
is there to dreamless sleep?

 


 
 
NOTHING TO LOSE
Owen Bullock 

nothing to lose
I open
my hands
 
nothing to lose
today
won’t come again
 
nothing to lose
I give myself
what I need
 
nothing to lose
tears come
to my eyes
 
nothing to lose
but hair, teeth
illusions

 

peeper

Haiga by Máire Morrissey-Cummins

 

 

THE STEADFASTNESS OF THE LEAF PEEPERS
 Robert Demaree

foliage in the rain
yellows do better than reds
tourists not deterred

damp gray October
orange and red in the mist
glow with inner light

leaving New Hampshire
oak trees umber in the fog
winter not far off

 

 

TRAIL MIX
Ruth Holzer

over the bay
a long string of pelicans
wavering
thoughts
that pass

a span
the length
of a breath–
yellow butterfly
on these bluets

not much
wildlife today–
a stag
with a bad leg, trying
to cross Sugarland Run

the green curl
brushed with fine black lines
swings on a thread
from my finger:
brother cankerworm

chocolate chips
nuts, berries, seeds–
trail mix
for when I
find a trail

 

 

IN REMEMBRANCE
Elizabeth Howard

mother’s wake
I feel faint
from the scent of lilies

honoring dad’s wishes
I place her worn Bible
at her bare feet

grandchildren gather
a cluster of field daisies
on the satin pillow

filling the new grave
even at a distance
the thunk of earth

wanting to hold on
I transplant her heirloom lilies
to my garden

 

 

  VISIT TO A JAPANESE GARDEN
  Jeanne Jorgensen

  dedication plaque
  beside the teahouse
  . . . these words
 
  a fence
  around the garden
  everything greener here
 
  Japanese Garden
  the hedge in bonsai form
  by still water
 
  bright, afternoon sun
  the candle in the stone lantern
  unlit
 
  stone temple
  engraved Buddha
  faces all directions
 
  the wooden bridge
  over a shallow pond
  no fish at all
 
  on her way back
  to the Japanese teahouse
  the gong sounds

 

water
 Haiga by Máire Morrissey-Cummins

    

 

 SILENCE IN THE DARK
 Chen-ou Liu

  the Faith Saves sign
  on the manicured lawn
  of a white church...
  in its long shadow
  one dog mounts another
 
  in the shade
  of a wooden cross
  the mute man cries
  with his trembling hands
  I was abused as a child
 
  bang! bang! bang!
  shatters this midsummer night
  lingering
  in the moist air
  Knockin' on Heaven's Door
 
  at daybreak
  as I remember the look
  in his eyes...
  did he see the face of God
  in cherry blossoms?
 

 

 


NEBULA
John Martone

down a long hill
into fog
that lens

 

no one
at your side
fog is all

 

winter fog
just like any
other book

 

lost in fog
you remember
how to fly

 

pissing
right through the fog
that sound

 

winter fog
one lightbulb
bare as can be

 

in winter fog a clearness about the body

 

winter fog
you still hear
that crow

 

winter fog
everything else
is skin

 

coming home
from winter fog
to sketchbook

 

same as everyone else this fog

everything else the same – this fog

 

 

Een dolende ziel
Paul Merken

hef hoog het glas
voor het lentefestival
Highlands Amersfoort

te dronken
om de uitleg van de gids te snappen

de dolende ziel
rust in de wachtkamer
even uit

zij verwaardigt zich niet
op zijn sloomheid te reageren

zet je schrap liefje
voor de zomerfilmmarathon
van Novecento

Depardieus nieuwjaarsverrassing
een knuffel van een goddeloze Rus

rode bosbessensaus druipt uit de dankszeg­gingsdagdoos

geboren tussen de stoomtelefoon
en het vloeibare Tetris-spel

de politie vond hem
verplet door de boekenkast
met al zijn romans

in bed aan mijn vriendje
ma’s laatste brief voorgelezen

onder de dekens
ruik ik de ontbijtovenschotel
ik zal verrast zijn

Jefferson versmaadde de etiquette
op iedere gast een toast uit te brengen

A Wandering Soul
Paul Merken

raise high your glass
to the spring festival
HowTheLightGetsIn

too drunk
to catch the guide’s explanation

the wandering soul
finds in the waiting room
a moment of rest

she refuses to dignify
his indolence with a comment

brace yourself love
for the summer film marathon
of Novecento

Depardieu’s new year’s surprise
a hug from a godless Russian

cranberry sauce drips from the thanksgiving box

born between the steam telephone
and the liquid Tetris

the police found him
crushed by the bookcase that held
his latest novels

reading in bed to my friend
mother’s recent letter

still snuggled down
I smell breakfast casserole
I shall act surprised

Jefferson spurned the etiquette
of toasting to each of one’s guests

 

 

FOLDED AND MUTILATED
Sergio Ortiz

I am what is left
of his life
the black map
describing his voyage
of deep descent into himself

I am the map
of a wet dreary town…
exchanging
secrets in whispers
lilies bend beneath our bodies

you grasp my hand
steer it to a place
beyond maps…
I am scared of the shock of arrival
the raw landscape

if my life were a map
it would be one of a man
in the snow…

picking mushrooms
at the edge of dread

 

 

hawthorn

Haiga by Máire Morrissey-Cummins

 


 
 LEARNING ENGLISH IN CHOLON
Nu Quang


no language lab
some teachers read to us
with thick accent
the spoken English I learn
a version of Englishes

"in" or "at" or "on"
singular or plural
for "eye," for "thought"
no small matters
for a non-native speaker

"I" in uppercase
for a moment it pumps me up
right away
Father’s dry cough within earshot
"pardon me, it is English"

verb tense?
I say "go" for the past, present,
and future in Chinese
to get the grammar right
I have to learn it by heart

memorizing
all the irregular verbs
I repeat
go went gone, Mother says,
"That sounds like English"

 

 

wavers

 Haiga by Máire Morrissey-Cummins

 

SINGLE POEMS

Ellis Island
wearing her crown, I become
the Statue of Liberty
with the borrowed torch
I brighten my own dark corner
                                    Nu Quang


night-light –
the sleeping child
curls one hand
Joanna M. Weston

the house I build
will stand forever . . .
a smile
at the corners of my mouth,
stars sitting on my tongue
                                     Sergio Ortiz

 

sunlight fades
your favourite cushion
empty chair
Rachel Sutcliffe

deep valley –
a rip
in the map
            Joanna M. Weston

 


Chinese books
brought from Vietnam
keep me
in touch with my roots . . .
a country I’ve not set foot on
                                    Nu Quang



inching
nearer my toes
incoming tide
Rachel Sutcliffe




putting side by side
what I have planned to do;
what is done
I see a void . . .
evening is approaching
                                    Nu Quang



rollercoaster
screaming louder
upside down
                        Rachel Sutcliffe



my sister and I
competed for the best clothes
for our paper dolls–
she wears Chinese-style pant set
I’m wrapped in skirts and blue jeans
                                    Nu Quang


her stiff lip
breaks into a smile
clown for hire
                        Alegria Imperial





adopted
by ethnic Chinese in Vietnam
birth parents unknown
Ancestry.com cannot help me
dig up my roots
                                    Nu Quang

steady rain
the long grass
shrouds a doe
Joanna M. Weston


why should I mourn
so much our cat’s death?
she’s now in Kitty’s Heaven
I still have to worry about
a roof and three meals
                        Nu Quang

 

swinging
on hooped earrings
bag lady's air
            Alegria Imperial

 

 

ambulance siren–
smoke from the gun
splits apart
Pravat Kumar Padhy

 

weaving in and out
of whole conversations
his Pinocchio nose
            Alegria Imperial

 

 

Curonian Spit ...
our boat divides the flow
of the spring light
lost in dreams
I breath your silence
            Ramona Linke


 

I carry
silted water from my well
come to you
with damp earth and capillaries
of change on my surface
                        Sergio Ortiz
 
 
 
Vanilla fragrance
rises from the jade bowl
shivering
I feel your whisper
as once in May
                        Ramona Linke

 

last night
weary eyes blossomed
in the closet
his cold cotton shirts
warmed by my hands
                         Sergio Ortiz

 

 

chaos all around
the graveyard remains
in silence
                        Pravat Kumar Padhy

 

simplicity,
a pendant chained to my heart—
dolphins swim
around the aura
of a lunar eclipse
Sergio Ortiz

.

 

 

she bears her decline
with a toothless mouth,
silent
under a barrage
of unkind words
                        Sergio Ortiz

 

I draw a smile
in the misty train window
last goodbye
                        Rachel Sutcliffe

 

AMBER
 Ellen Summers


 Tree’s teardrops once, thick
honey rheum oozed
from wounds, redgolden
sap dripped decades,
centuries, flecked
with insects sipping their
sarcophagus, slowed
into stone. 

 Polished, drilled,
strung round a woman’s neck, wee
headstones glisten.  Gems
of honey-glass drop
yet, drop still, glowing spilled
life of tree and fly,
blood arboreal shed,
healed, sealed, and
sweet.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

SOLO POETRY

 SYMBIOTIC POETRY

 LAKE POND OVER LAKE POND 3
 Micah Cavalerie

PORTRAIT OF A LADY
Steven Carter

Haiga by Elizabeth McFarland

BEFORE A COLD FIREPLACE
Steven Carter

HAIBUN
Gerard John Conforti

CLASS REUNION
Alexander Jankiewicz

Haiga by Elizabeth McFarland

HEAVEN
Alexander Jankiewicz

THE WORK WEEK
Roger Jones

Haiga by Elizabeth McFarland


SLEEPING IN
Roger Jones

 

SEQUENCES
   
the way through
Jenny Ward Angyal

Haiga by Colin Stewart Jones 

hide and seek    
Jenny Ward Angyal

TO THE EDGE OF TWILIGHT
asni amin

SPRING
Ramesh Anand

Haiga by Máire Morrissey-Cummins

AUTUMN
Ramesh Anand

CITY SEASONS
Don Ammons

WIDOW’S WALK
Edward Baranosky

NOTHING TO LOSE
Owen Bullock 

Haiga by Máire Morrissey-Cummins

THE STEADFASTNESS OF THE LEAF PEEPERS
 Robert Demaree

TRAIL MIX
Ruth Holzer

IN REMEMBRANCE
Elizabeth Howard

VISIT TO A JAPANESE GARDEN
 Jeanne Jorgensen

Haiga by Máire Morrissey-Cummins

 SILENCE IN THE DARK
 Chen-ou Liu

NEBULA
John Martone

Een dolende ziel
Paul Merken/A Wandering Soul
Paul Merken

FOLDED AND MUTILATED
Sergio Ortiz

Haiga by Máire Morrissey-Cummins

 LEARNING ENGLISH IN CHOLON
Nu Quang

Haiga by Máire Morrissey-Cummins

SINGLE POEMS

from                                   Nu Quang

Joanna M. Weston

 Sergio Ortiz

Rachel Sutcliffe

Alegria Imperial

Pravat Kumar Padhy

Ramona Linke

AMBER
 Ellen Summers

   
     
     

Back issues of Lynx:

XV:2 June, 2000
XV:3 October, 2000
XVI:1 Feb. 2001
XVI:2 June, 2001
XVI:3 October, 2001  
XVII:1 February, 2002
XVII:2 June, 2002
XVII:3 October, 2002
XVIII:1 February, 2003
XVIII:2 June, 2003
XVIII:3, October, 2003
XIX:1 February, 2004
XIX:2 June, 2004

XIX:3 October, 2004

XX:1,February, 2005

XX:2 June, 2005
XX:3 October, 2005
XXI:1February, 2006 
XXI:2, June, 2006

XXI:3,October, 2006

XXII:1 January, 2007
XXII:2 June, 2007
XXII:3 October, 2007

XXIII:1February, 2008
XXIII:2 June, 2008

XXIII:3, October, 2008
XXIV:1, February, 2009

XXIV:2, June, 2009
XXIV:3, October, 2009
XXV:1 January, 2010
XXV:2 June, 2010
XXV:3 October, 2010
XXVI:1 February, 2011
XXVI:2, June, 2011
XXVI:3 October, 20111XXVII:1 February, 2012XXVII:2 June, 2012XXVII:3 October, 2012

XXVIII:1 February, 2013

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