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bryan-henry-imke
Dark children reaching up to touch my neck, A bead of sweat rolls down my fleshy cheek In I they see a moment, torn from wreck. a shudder, search for sounds apart from speech. My children, what is it you leave behind, To find this woman, knife has never known? A kiss of strife, my life to yours it binds, As I reach out to you, my flesh, my bone. The raft that gave you birth will stay with me. Your wrinkled, hallow gaze will keep my mind. When you were carried by the neutral sea for me to wrap you in these clothes of mine. “How God, can You be there? You are not there.” Think not for now; for now You’re in my care.
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Jun 15, 2016
Jun 15, 2016 at 1:57 PM UTC
Sonnet of Aphrodite at ******
Do you think God held the sopping clod with warm hands, lifting and bending to kiss it? Did God wipe the mud from those worldwide lips or stick out a slippery tongue and taste the beginnings of new joyous life? Or do you suppose God never bent down or breathed or buried warm hands in an untilled field? Did a soft stirring of wind eventually crash and thunder and roar across nations of trees before an expected rain? And once it did, did it fall to find the beginnings of you and I? And when it found us, did we look back to our sister of dirt and up to our mother the sky and laugh and breathe and call both a holy prayer?
0
Jun 15, 2016
Jun 15, 2016 at 1:53 PM UTC
Untitled
When they taught me to fear the world I listened. I read each revelatory word and strained to cherish and bury it like treasure. What I didn’t realize was that the field I buried it in was meant to grow little tomatoes. What could be more wicked than the engorged flesh of a red and watery orb that gasps and stretches to caress a cow’s steaming pile of ****
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Jun 15, 2016
Jun 15, 2016 at 1:51 PM UTC
Little Tomatoes
Please do not feed the birds. $100 fine. As if to say to ask with an open hand to be taught the way of gentleness is not worth the out of pocket expense. If we knew the value Of timidity and pigeon toes, If we understood A delicate look of apprehension As it wrestles with Hope, You and I would search for quarters in the street And skip each tender dinner And declare our overall bankruptcy Until we had enough money to Proffer the judge and take our communion with the seagulls.
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Jun 15, 2016
Jun 15, 2016 at 1:50 PM UTC
Please Do Not Feed The Birds
To my beloved family, mourning alone without a sanctuary to gather, And to the 49 bodies my eyes know only as that: My body calls you my own and feels your absence achingly. He crawled into our homes as children. He took his position, aimed, and unloaded from the disappointed eyes of our fathers. He shot his rounds of shame in the words of our mothers. But he did not leave us there. He found us again in the pews. We threw our bodies face down under the altar, eyes closed and bodies heaving. He held us in his sight through the prayers of our pastors that erased you and I. He called for support from the holy assembly, teaching them to gag again and again and again and again and called us Abomination. But he did not leave us there. He placed the target on our chests when we sat quietly in class. We sat there drawing pictures from our dreams; pictures of dancing bears and rainbows and flowers and tall queens. His war cry, ****** echoed in the halls as we counted each step towards the shelter of home. But he did not leave us there. So you and I, we found each other. We held each other close and wiped the tears away with the gauze we knew to carry close at hand. We built our own sanctuary And sent out a search party to invite our God. I remember our surprise when we found that she was already there, laughing and dancing as our priests conducted their holy music. We invited the tall queens and dancing bears that we thought only existed in our minds; bulldogs in tuxedos and foxes and a princess. And we all laughed and cried and danced and kissed Because we were safe. And our walls and hymns and sacred prayers kept him from finding us. But he did not leave us there. He found us again. They call him Omar, son of ISIS. We call him natural fate, familiar face, child and messenger of every word and deed and stare and sermon we have ever run from. In the midst of celebrating our life you ran, trampling over those you loved as he hunted us like dumb animals. You ran for the exits as our family was mown down, member by member. Each scream systematically and irreversibly silenced. In your final moment you let out a desperate cry, fingers still on a keyboard; your words forever unfinished, forever unsent to the mothers who still loved us. I heard your cry that night. I heard it as I left another sanctuary. I clasped my heaving chest trying to hold it together. I ran my hands along my body, pushing fingers into bullet holes that I felt from miles away.
0
Jun 15, 2016
Jun 15, 2016 at 1:37 PM UTC
He Did Not Leave Us There
To my beloved family, mourning alone without a sanctuary to gather, And to the 49 bodies my eyes know only as that: My body calls you my own and feels your absence achingly. He crawled into our homes as children. He took his position, aimed, and unloaded from the disappointed eyes of our fathers. He shot his rounds of shame in the words of our mothers. But he did not leave us there. He found us again in the pews. We threw our bodies face down under the altar, eyes closed and bodies heaving. He held us in his sight through the prayers of our pastors that erased you and I. He called for support from the holy assembly, teaching them to gag again and again and again and again and called us Abomination. But he did not leave us there. He placed the target on our chests when we sat quietly in class. We sat there drawing pictures from our dreams; pictures of dancing bears and rainbows and flowers and tall queens. His war cry, ****** echoed in the halls as we counted each step towards the shelter of home. But he did not leave us there. So you and I, we found each other. We held each other close and wiped the tears away with the gauze we knew to carry close at hand. We built our own sanctuary And sent out a search party to invite our God. I remember our surprise when we found that she was already there, laughing and dancing as our priests conducted their holy music. We invited the tall queens and dancing bears that we thought only existed in our minds; bulldogs in tuxedos and foxes and a princess. And we all laughed and cried and danced and kissed Because we were safe. And our walls and hymns and sacred prayers kept him from finding us. But he did not leave us there. He found us again. They call him Omar, son of ISIS. We call him natural fate, familiar face, child and messenger of every word and deed and stare and sermon we have ever run from. In the midst of celebrating our life you ran, trampling over those you loved as he hunted us like dumb animals. You ran for the exits as our family was mown down, member by member. Each scream systematically and irreversibly silenced. In your final moment you let out a desperate cry, fingers still on a keyboard; your words forever unfinished, forever unsent to the mothers who still loved us. I heard your cry that night. I heard it as I left another sanctuary. I clasped my heaving chest trying to hold it together. I ran my hands along my body, pushing fingers into bullet holes that I felt from miles away.
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115
According to what I’ve been told The voice of God is deep like a river, does not quiver, and would never have my gay lisp. It rumbles in its righteous wrath while simultaneously Whispering to all the sleeping children in America. I have nodded my head in agreement But I’ve secretly tried my best to Rearrange His pronouns. From what I’ve heard, The voice I should hear would be located somewhere between my ears Or behind my sternum. However, the only voice I’ve heard Coming from those places Has sounded oddly vague and often undecided, What a funny way to describe The sound of a prowling lion! Ha! If you would like me to be honest with you The voice of God does not sound like a Father, a Son, Or even a pale benevolent Ghost. Because of this I try to wrangle it into the throat of my grandfather or at least the mouth of Morgan Freeman, But it just hollers and squawks and eventually I find That it wiggles out of My bunched up fists And perches in the rafters, smirking, Always just out of reach! When I am listening for it it doesn’t sound like a voice at all. In fact, it sounds oddly like The throb of veins in my temples Or the ocean of air Harnessed by the gravity of My lungs. I do not explain it in those terms to most people Because I’m afraid they’ll figure out That I'm the kind of person who Smokes *** Maybe somewhere in my doughy brain A battery has rotted into a pool of acid Or one single electrical chord has wriggled free From the gaping mouth and geometric eyes of its socket. Even still, would you believe me when I say no one has heard God speak? Not even Moses! But I am sure even he (and especially Tagore) have heard God’s voice. Yes, that must be right! My friend heard it on the sidewalk just last week. This man let out a primal grunt After he kissed his boyfriend and A stranger stabbed him in the shoulder. No! Actually I hear it often from cousin Tamir; The one whose vocal chords no longer Clap joyously together. Somehow I can still watch as it thunders and crashes with uncompromising power Across sterile court rooms and silent mothers. But please, don’t stop there! That’s almost right but it’s not everything. I think the smell of Auntie Walker’s breath could contain at least One syllable. What I know about God’s voice is that it is set loose by everything. It shakes and dances and tickles the bellies Of everyone And everything that lives in this holy space. My head, my heart, and All the fathers on the earth cannot contain it to A single bass. My only prayer is that maybe God’s voice wouldn’t always sound so deep to the people who have told me this. I pray to God, Whoever she is, That she would let her words land upon the vibrations of my own gay lisp From time to time.
0
Mar 20, 2016
Mar 20, 2016 at 11:20 PM UTC
A Squawking God
According to what I’ve been told The voice of God is deep like a river, does not quiver, and would never have my gay lisp. It rumbles in its righteous wrath while simultaneously Whispering to all the sleeping children in America. I have nodded my head in agreement But I’ve secretly tried my best to Rearrange His pronouns. From what I’ve heard, The voice I should hear would be located somewhere between my ears Or behind my sternum. However, the only voice I’ve heard Coming from those places Has sounded oddly vague and often undecided, What a funny way to describe The sound of a prowling lion! Ha! If you would like me to be honest with you The voice of God does not sound like a Father, a Son, Or even a pale benevolent Ghost. Because of this I try to wrangle it into the throat of my grandfather or at least the mouth of Morgan Freeman, But it just hollers and squawks and eventually I find That it wiggles out of My bunched up fists And perches in the rafters, smirking, Always just out of reach! When I am listening for it it doesn’t sound like a voice at all. In fact, it sounds oddly like The throb of veins in my temples Or the ocean of air Harnessed by the gravity of My lungs. I do not explain it in those terms to most people Because I’m afraid they’ll figure out That I'm the kind of person who Smokes *** Maybe somewhere in my doughy brain A battery has rotted into a pool of acid Or one single electrical chord has wriggled free From the gaping mouth and geometric eyes of its socket. Even still, would you believe me when I say no one has heard God speak? Not even Moses! But I am sure even he (and especially Tagore) have heard God’s voice. Yes, that must be right! My friend heard it on the sidewalk just last week. This man let out a primal grunt After he kissed his boyfriend and A stranger stabbed him in the shoulder. No! Actually I hear it often from cousin Tamir; The one whose vocal chords no longer Clap joyously together. Somehow I can still watch as it thunders and crashes with uncompromising power Across sterile court rooms and silent mothers. But please, don’t stop there! That’s almost right but it’s not everything. I think the smell of Auntie Walker’s breath could contain at least One syllable. What I know about God’s voice is that it is set loose by everything. It shakes and dances and tickles the bellies Of everyone And everything that lives in this holy space. My head, my heart, and All the fathers on the earth cannot contain it to A single bass. My only prayer is that maybe God’s voice wouldn’t always sound so deep to the people who have told me this. I pray to God, Whoever she is, That she would let her words land upon the vibrations of my own gay lisp From time to time.
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91
Wrinkled Right Hand, with your heavy weight of dull iron veins: Today you find my shoulder through streams of morning light. “I need you my son.” Do you remember the night I journeyed to the kitchen to find A cup of water? My shoulder was two feet closer to the earth then, But you would still plunge down to find it Anyway. All of a sudden I saw the body you belonged to (that severe, vertical line) pale green in the light of the clock on the Kitchen microwave. Those neon numbers made you look just like You’d fit perfectly on the arm of a great alien god. In fact, I think you ****** the brown from the freckles on my shoulder once you found it. And what about the Indians and Pilgrims scotch-taped to the skyscraper cabinets? All they ever did was wave down to me with their hands, fat faces grinning in two dimensions. You did not let go while Your extraterrestrial colleague stashed the ***** behind the Cheerful White Squanto. Words hovered above the surface Of my head: “I need you, (please don’t tell your mother) my son.” I stopped believing in Martians And God When I left for school. Still, my shoulder follows your familiar pressure to the piles of wood in The kitchen cellar. When you have finally left and the fury in my shoulder loosens all the knots, My hands throw splintered logs through the air But for a moment I mistake them for flying saucers.
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Mar 20, 2016
Mar 20, 2016 at 11:08 PM UTC
Martians & God