Wednesday, March 25, 2020

Dawn

--by Malka Gorbunov

There is a life to see before the dawn,
a world in hiding from the shameless sun
a world of creatures shunning human eyes
a world of dampest cold and darkest blue
a world that sings and hunts before the dawn.

The winter finches jumping in the snow
in keen contention for a fallen seed,
that leave no prints, and dare not make a sound,
a comic squabble in the feeble light;
The great horned owl's final journey home,
a stately shade beneath its massive wings;
The gentle call of drowsy mourning doves,
the homely sparrows singing out their souls.

A softer blue dilutes the inky sky.
A fawn, so proud of waking into March
pulls needles from a spruce with baby-glee;
Its mother watches from the forest's edge,
a grave and graceful sentry, still and keen,
observant, poised to signal and to fly.

A streak of gold upon unbroken snow.
The hawk who makes his habitat up north
and only strays by winter to New York,
swoops from the darkness of a shaggy pine
to claim a vole. There is a muted shriek,
a sudden flash of feathered sun- then dawn,
a bloody light. Both beings are no more.

Tuesday, March 17, 2020

Those I Wish I Knew

--Talya Hyman

The man with the melodic, steady voice and the worn out sneakers walking up and down the downtown-bound 1 train. His eyes closed. He hits every note. “Isn’t she lovely,” he serenades hundreds of commuters who do not wish to be serenaded.

The religious man standing on a cardboard mat along the side of a New York City street. Backwards baseball cap atop his head and shoes beside him on the pavement. He bows in his devotion, stands up, and bows again. The parked cab awaits its driver.

The old woman clanking a tin canister of coins at prayer-goers and tourists on their way down the slippery stairs to the Western Wall. Rain or shine, there she is. Baggy shawls, draped in layers around her head and across her body. "Please," she says to no one, but everyone, in particular. A tattered, crinkled prayer book is frozen in her other hand.

The man in yellow, or maybe it’s green, hanging off the side of the garbage truck early every Monday morning. He has it down to a science. Hop off. Trash can lid off. Trash dumped into the back end of the truck. Trash can left forgotten at the end of some neighbor's driveway. Hop on. He’s already at the next street over.

The small and alone African-American boy sitting in a subway car reading a paperback. Eyes dizzyingly dart from left to right. He only looks up when he realizes his stop is next. He walks over to the white, older couple sitting across the way. They smile as they lovingly clutch his shoulder, then his hands. The doors clank open and together, they descend onto the platform and head off into the night.

Tuesday, March 10, 2020

The "What"

--by Ellie Parker

(in the style of Alice Notley)

What are you in love with? What. Not
who. Who implies a face, a name, a some
body. What. What turned that lump of flesh
into a beating heart?
It can't be a mantra of "because I told you so's" & norms & have to's.
It must be an endless list
of want to's & need to's & the slightest of inflections &
feelings beyond what can be encompassed in a he/she/it/they/them
Or even us.
That is the meaning of the "what".
It surpasses the who's & how's.
It is the what.
It is the dichotomy of never understanding why,
but knowing that it's right all the same.

Friday, March 6, 2020

Your Turn at the Blog

As we discussed in class, I am inviting all of you to take a turn at handling how this blog appears visually. A few of you indicated you would like to try your own versions.
If you wish to do this, simply reply to this post (or to the email I sent on Canvas) and let me know and also provide the email address you use for blogging. I will then assign you as a blog editor, and you will be able to access it in your Blogger dashboard, along with the blog you use for posting your own poems, by selecting it from a dropbox in the upper left corner of the screen. After selecting "215Lexicon," you can use the formatting and customization features available through Blogger to make it appear however you wish. I only have this one restriction: please do not change the format so that the links to your blogs or the list of poets for workshop disappear. We need those there to conduct the class, so people can easily find each others' sites.
Thanks, and I look forward to seeing what you come up with for blog design. Whoever signs up first can have the first crack at it.