Poetry |

“A Multi-Stemmed Deciduous Shrub of Great Beauty When in Bloom,” “The Art of the Novel” & The History of Music”

A Multi-Stemmed Deciduous Shrub of Great Beauty When in Bloom

 

 

To pour oneself back

into the shape of retired thoughts

is an exercise for boom times.

Were it not for the scent of

Philadelphus in the apartment

were it not for love knocking

at the back of the throat and

were we not no longer friends —

how many people do you meet

in each life to call your own?

 

The run-on sentence of seeing

the one you didn’t make

made with another

children in the sun.

I pulled stems from

the wall of sound to pour

spirits into a cup. Each

day forty hours in the making

a renaissance for some.

 

Have you ever walked a thought

back and forth along the water until

it turned into a table? It would be

unpleasant to enjoy the mood

as Darwinian, the sundries procured

to reward ourselves for following

the rules. Pause the season

finale so I can turn off the light.

Put them in a pool and pull the ladder up.

 

 

◆     ◆     ◆     ◆     ◆

 

 

The Art of the Novel

 

 

It wasn’t clear

how long the muses

dressed as lunch ladies

kept the place open

 

The room got dark

though the sun was still out

I went home to think about it

 

I said to the sea

there is a full moon sensation

and it nodded back

its beard pulling a wave

through the air with one hand

 

I’d intended to be open

to whatever life was

to offer love

where I found its plot

 

You had to check the date

Milk went bad even in heaven

 

This wasn’t it

I brushed my teeth

for entertainment

 

 

◆     ◆     ◆     ◆     ◆

 

 

The History of Music

 

 

Can language mimic

what 28 seconds of guitar

achieve on the first track

of a record by someone

born in the ‘90s? What

would Stein hear if her

heart hovered in her mouth

a bartender of speech.

Try again.

 

When he asked, I said

salt, clouds, and linen

made my nature. If I

close your eyes I can

tell you anything, the

audience as performers

birds prompting us to

look outside, the yard

a lake of sun. There’s

a bassoon drawing on air.

I’m often waiting

for the trumpets to come in.

Contributor
Amanda Nadelberg

Amanda Nadelberg‘s new fourth collection is Shake Until Cloudy (The Song Cave). She is also the author of Isa the Truck Named Isadore, Bright Brave Phenomena and Songs from a Mountain. She is the founder of Culture Forms and lives in Oakland, CA.

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