Poetry |

“100 Year Flood” and “Freedom on Earth Ain’t Enough for Me”

100 Year Flood

 

A barn owl teases the bright dark,

and you are unmanageable.

The people of the area have a

standby way to talk about it,

a right to ferment content

that’s forever pushing guidelines

on how to guillotine the poor.

Buildings unhinged and running,

mud trickling through synaptic bricks.

Not sure what we can say

except repeating the obvious,

and for that some aren’t ungrateful

for an interruption. Disaster brings

lemon pepper frogs and antsy canines,

plenty of puffy men eager to drape

their hero’s pose tendons.

I feel satiated by their confidence

or at least, its familiar performance,

an elderly woman told a volunteer

fireman she was too old to care.

What happens when you

struggle for generations

and a storm ejects what you’re

still struggling for? In the end

infrastructure owned her,

as shelter remains temporary

yet seductive. She refused to patch

her excitement while she reported

on the damage. Decades of keeping

house, children, and working shit jobs

had unsettled her more than a

flood ever could.

 

Ø     Ø     Ø     Ø

 

Freedom on Earth Ain’t Enough For Me

Two male cardinals fight

over trees for territory,

 

ancient story orbiting

into supernova.

 

“Fe-males” nowhere to

be seen, particles of a

 

solar system delayed,

cheer-cheer to yearlings

 

a new one, make a

new one, a new one

 

Build us a starship

before it’s too late.

 

In the meantime we

battle our imaginations

 

watch birds & Star Trek

our future looks so easy,

 

you get into a crisp

shuttle and off you go,

 

away from pretty avians

who think they own you,

 

fly my roots elsewhere

or nowhere

however we please.

 

 

Contributor
Nikki Wallschlaeger

Nikki Wallschlaeger’s work has been featured in The Nation, Georgia Review, Brick, Poetry, American Poetry Review, Witness and others. She is the author of the full-length collections Houses (Horseless Press, 2015) and Crawlspace (Bloof Books, 2017) as well as the graphic chapbook I Hate Telling You How I Really Feel also from Bloof Books.

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