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christian-sammartino
christian-sammartino
I am a 25 year old poet from south-western Pennsylvania. I am the the co-founder and Editor-In-Chief for an online magazine called The Rising Phoenix Review. / / I studied English Literature and Asian Religions at Elizabethtown College. My writing is influenced by life in the Pennsylvania Rustbelt near my hometown of Coatesville. My poetry has appeared in Words Dance Publishing, Voicemail Poems, -Ology Journal, and Lehigh Valley Vanguard. I was a Resident Poet for Lehigh Lalley Vanguard during the summer of 2015. My first collection of poetry, Keystones, was released by Rising Phoenix Press in December 2014. / / Find my first collection of poetry here: / / https://www.etsy.com/listing/215383084/keystones-christian-sammartino? / / / Rising Phoenix Review: / / https://therisingphoenixreview.com/
The hunter’s bullet lodges in my side like the pin bones of salmon wedged in the back of my throat. My life balances on the border between my favorite comfort foods, and the blade of the taxidermist. You would make me into a trophy, gutted and cured to become an ornament, in your seasonal hunting cabin. Raw honeycomb, Caribou marrow, salmon roe stuck to my tongue, psalms of my home made flesh, call me back into my survival instincts for my sleeping children. She who outruns deer & devours strong bucks with antlers the size of sequoias could not outrun the champion sprinter, American made bullets. But when you realize your rumpus disturbed wild things, there is no time to reload. You brought a potluck into the den of a slumbering mother with cubs. My teeth are agonizingly real And my jaws are in your belly, rooting for the lost rib of Adam.
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Mar 17, 2017
Mar 17, 2017 at 1:01 PM UTC
Portrait of Kodiak Grizzly with Cubs
I am prepared to caravan our Cargo across the country into New times zones. Carpool with our college friends Through rush hour traffic and back roads Without street lights or deer crossing signs. Pledge my allegiance to the Fraternity of road trippers who Believe all homes are mobile. Measure myself by interstate Mile markers—every township line We cross is an invisible stamp On the passport of my soul. Spend bathroom breaks between pilgrimages Gluing Polaroid pictures of our expedition Next to city names in our road atlas. Learn how to **** into coke Bottles in bumper to bumper Traffic between rest stops. Discover new reasons to live As the glow of brake lights guides Me toward the next exit.
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Dec 26, 2015
Dec 26, 2015 at 12:12 PM UTC
Road Trip
She is not a paper doll pressed between Sheets of cellophane in my notebook for The world to undress with their eyes. She elbows me out of dreams featuring Peter Pan with his Lost Boys, and leaves A bruise the shape of Illinois on my ribs. She sews on the Metro without a thimble and ****** Her fingers stitching buttons onto her black pea coat— White thread bleeds red in her hand. When she rides the North Line in the winter, She sails past her stop for the thrill of surveying New parts of the city bundled in winter clothes. She collects deserted train tickets with expired Destinations, and passes the minutes between Stops speaking with strangers. Most of them grumble that the Cubs won’t win The series until they let a goat into Wrigley. I would trade her every canceled ticket stub In my wallet to buy her hot chocolate at the Next random stop she chooses. But she and I will always be passengers on Opposite trains traveling to different cities.
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Dec 19, 2015
Dec 19, 2015 at 5:37 PM UTC
Passengers on the Metro
Railroad tracks along the Keystone Line Gleamed with a copper luster under light From the Dog Star and the solstice moon. Those slivers of metal became more valuable After they were squished by the weight of train cargo And blessed by the red light of the railroad crossing. The coins we minted weren’t trinkets We could spend at the general store. They didn’t belong to the government. We created a currency for our neighborhood. We stockpiled them in mason jars, Traded them for boyhood commodities, And made necklaces for our girlfriends. I can’t say when the others cashed out. Maybe it was the day they started earning Bigger coin in the mines and the mills. I walk the tracks at night, searching for the Cents we lost beneath the splintered ties. There is a rusty coffee can in my garage Filled with distorted faces and Lincoln memorials. I recognize those weathered shapes Better than my friends’ faces
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Dec 18, 2015
Dec 18, 2015 at 6:48 PM UTC
Currency of Summer
She wears my military Issue jacket into the cold. We stalk the empty platform. Our breath trails behind us, Like the smoke of a locomotive. She wants to travel in shadows Beneath a veil of frost. I want to give her the diamond My former fiancé left me. But I would feel like a conductor Returning a ticket stub, proclaiming I am a passenger without my own momentum. We trudge through the snow And board the late train to Harrisburg. I incinerate the love left in my heart. One day I will wake up and She will tell me it’s spring.
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Dec 16, 2015
Dec 16, 2015 at 5:17 PM UTC
Midnight Locomotion