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robert-kralapp
American
i In all this white and grey the world dissolves, first flakes gone slanting to the folding river, gathering at last in grey velvet streets. Wet snow laying on the reaching trees, the waking trees - yellow-haired willow waiting in a field of white. ii Something wild stands alone in a rift of open water. Spindle legs, body white as simplicity, serpent neck and jaws narrowing to a fine point. How still! He dreams the snowy land.
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Mar 28, 2013
Mar 28, 2013 at 7:33 PM UTC
Last Snowfall of the Season
Hear that barking gabble coming across the land. The people of the air shout Remember, Remember the closing of the season, and going somewhere we remembered only in our being, that we announce in this great song of departure, this song of approaching cold and the moon's velvet breath. See how gray gathers on the harvested land and in the south the moon anchors an archipelago of orange smoke-cloud. So here they come around again, shouting, guided in single-hearted delirium, gliding through the long slow turns that lead at last to the final letting go. See them stringing now across the the evening sky, beating their wild hearts across the smooth, blurred horizon.
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Dec 16, 2012
Dec 16, 2012 at 4:59 PM UTC
Departure
The car runs rough today, labors over low hills that lay between me and the city. Clouds like enormous white feathers fan across the watery blue. The sun's warmth has lifted a rime of frost from the land. The farmer who owns this field has gone mad it seems, has taken his tractor on a joy ride leaving behind a rough arabesque of dark earth, an unintended and fugitive art. What moved him to this rash act? Was it a bitter phone call? Did he sell the land for enough cash to break even this year?
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Nov 6, 2012
Nov 6, 2012 at 4:19 PM UTC
Sunday Morning
The wheels on either side his chair blaze morning light. Rusted cars and trucks rattle along the street. Mustard yellow buses slow and stop to let children in. From the patchy sidewalks women and infants wave. Evenly he examines all of this, indifferent, wide awake. It is the spotless way in which he lifts and sets his cigarette against his mouth that suggests a lifetime of practice. A wild, white wreath, a silk dragon streams around his slick cranium - smoke in the mouth, in the eyes.
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Sep 10, 2012
Sep 10, 2012 at 2:23 PM UTC
Smoker
The West End wanders in my recollection like a quiet madman. All the times we were reminded of the War, pointed out the bullet-riddled walls of the Old Tate, the Arch, guided through the rooms where Churchill walked. All that aside, we looked to keep homesickness in its box with strong black beer or red, by wandering Regent's Park strewn with fallen gold, or the Garden's rioting roar of flowers, apples, oranges, potatoes and all of it turning to the ceaseless industry of men and women. Mystery was the grey-haired Underground men, grey clothes stuffed with crumpled paper. Once, I stumbled on a scrap of unreclaimed, timeless London: shattered glass and rubble carpeting the dull ceramic tile. Ghosts and dusk entered where ceiling once had been, the silence of a grainy, blackandwhite Blitz echoing.
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Aug 25, 2012
Aug 25, 2012 at 5:00 PM UTC
London 1973
Back of a barn along these frozen roads, a month of scrap and splintered wood falters to ash in irresistible flames that rage and lick the passing afternoon into sustaining dark. The lantern moon lingers just above bare, sweeping trees.
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Aug 23, 2012
Aug 23, 2012 at 4:08 PM UTC
February
Some hawk-nosed dude in a blue bandana is laying down his shaggy, reckless legend for a woman who has surely heard it all before. She leans back in her chair, and eggs him on with an easy smile, a word or two, and he is off, laying down his tale like so much smoking rubber, and the speed limit does not apply. Even so, you have to give him credit for the way he floors the same old stories, makes them sing again, or maybe something else that he's just recalled or fishtailed into. That's fine, though, with the blonde sitting in the chair across the table from him. Notice how she cradles her cup of tepid coffee and chuckles easily from time to time.
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Aug 16, 2012
Aug 16, 2012 at 1:49 AM UTC
Coffee Shop Sunday Morning
Long legged woman-girl, step across the parking lot, slap cool asphalt with your pink, rubber sandals. Pay no mind to the man who studies you from the sidewalk. He is old enough to be your father or your uncle. He is full of morning and sweet surprise for someone lovely as you. With his free hand he shakes a smoke from its pack and blows white wreaths into the pale day. Keep walking, cool, long legged woman-girl. Keep watching her grey-bearded man, caught between admiration and desire's husk.
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Aug 4, 2012
Aug 4, 2012 at 3:26 PM UTC
Street Scene
The animal inside me wears a sweater when it snows. He lives in Logan's house with his new wife, and is afraid of the neighbor's electric fence. The animal inside me eats only cold food from a can that Logen scrapes into a metal bowl, and plays with scuffed, rubber toys. The animal inside me hates the toys and the Alpo, though he gulps it down and makes a show of play, ever eager to please. The animal inside me sings of the Ones who ran wild. He has a fine collection of bones buried in the back yard, and revels in rolling in fresh deer **** Sometimes, when no one is there to see, the animal inside me chews the new wife's leather shoes, although this is mainly a thing of the past. The animal inside me loves to run, which hardly happens anymore. He is waiting on the doe-eyed collie who lives down the road, and wishes that Logan would just burn the stupid sweater.
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Aug 4, 2012
Aug 4, 2012 at 3:14 PM UTC
The Animal Inside Me
For Randall Kruk Although no stranger to yourself, you were your own undiscovered country, always pressing on some border of awareness, always asking more of who you were. You were the one who asked of life, who spoke for spirits and for memory, who wished us at that last meeting over coffee to have the time of our lives in Madison. You demonstrated time and time again the plain necessity of kindness, of honesty. That would be your legacy, my friend, your gift - and in the giving, you became that gift. After all the words spoken in memoriam, the Guinness and the soul-soothing jazz, there came a shifting bow of color in the sky - rain pouring from a blue cloud at evening.
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Jul 31, 2012
Jul 31, 2012 at 2:16 PM UTC
Elegy