empyrean
By Martha McCollough
a silent biplane loops
the loop through blue air
as if up there it’s long ago
as if time happened differently
in the sky and looking up
we might see anything —
spaceship or huge shadow
of passenger pigeons
migrating toward absence
bookish house
By Martha McCollough
beneath the floorboards
even the rat’s composing its memoirs
on the backs of my ancient homework
(blotty blue cursive
list of kinds of coal —
anthracite bituminous lignite —
a diagrammed sentence
chief exports of south america
nun’s red pencilled blah blah blah)
my childish diligence
no one cares about any of that
thinks the rat, correctly
Grasshopper
By Carolyn Gelland
Grasshopper’s ears
live in their forelegs.
If one of two
membranes is destroyed,
she only finds
him by
a series of mistaken
flights.
That girl, stoned
to zero, one,
one, zero,
sat on the front steps
of the Forty–Second Street
Library
ten years ago, picking
pills from her vomit,
re–popping them.
Dead in six months, you think.
I saw her yesterday —
still looking for the last
judgment that can find
someone
to resurrect.
Walking By The Place Where They Toss
By Linda Buckmaster
It’s at the back of the yard beyond where the lawn is mowed
and witchgrass grows beneath a brushy tangle of wan raspberry.
They dragged the tree out here after New Years, a few bits of color
still stuck to it, saying, we’ll have a winter bonfire later in the new
snow.
But time passed and the brown grass now waits for green,
and they talk instead of pushing the tree over the edge
to the beach below for a summer fire in a lingering twilight.
It’s that kind of place — where children of a certain age go to be
naughty
in the sweet fern, not knowing they could be seen from the
second story,
if anyone bothered to look. And later as a solitary adolescent, sit
in the fog
and gaze on what can be seen of the gray–faced bay and ponder
big questions
about small things. Where the husband goes after an argument to
smoke
a forbidden cigarette, wanting to think about the marriage, but
planning,
instead, repair of the wooden steps down to the beach. And
where she wanders
sometimes, wondering about the empty beer can and thinking,
we should clear this and plant a nice row of rosa rogosas.
But now spring pushes and heaves itself forward. The one–note
tune of peep frogs
plaits the air. The tree lies on its side, and the spike where the
star once was
now points toward the horizon, the outer needles rusting with
age, but close
to the trunk still deep green, so that as you brush past, it lets out a
sharp cry of balsam.

