give to their captain as a Christmas presentâI mean my descriptionâbecause the captain, well, he loved that tree and he loved my writing and every one of the cops hoped to be promoted in the captainâs heart and, who knows, maybe get a raise. Still, after all that sitting around in the courtyard eating sandwich halves, I had a nice feeling of sharing, so when they asked me if I had anything else to say I told them that in the beginning you understand the world but not yourself, and when you finally understand yourself you no longer understand the world. They seemed satisfied with that. Cops, theyâre all so young.
from Ecotone and Harperâs
MAUREEN SEATON
Chelsea/Suicide
for Joe
In every myth thereâs a secret. Like the time I was looking for my childhood around the next bend after Newark and missed it, or the time teeth were discovered in my favorite uncleâs yard and he disclaimed ownership and sang falsettos.
I went to a meeting on 28th Street. The guy next to me had eyes exactly like yours, corpuscles hardening inside blue irises. He stood too close when he told me I would die if I didnât ease up on myself. I thought he was right but I wanted him to step back so I didnât have to see inside his liver, which was sodden, like mine, and dark with tinges of red, white, and rosé.
He talked to himself in the middle of the room, the way he would talk to anyone who used hyperbole. He said: I tried suicide but it didnât work. When he stuck out his hand I shook it.
I walked with him down 8th and we parted at 21st. I thought of all the times Iâd dozed in my car near the river, how cops would come to my window and tap, telling me it wasnât safe for a woman alone in the middle of the day in a car near the river in a world like this one. Iâm sober, Iâd say, pointlessly.
Now thereâs snow in Chelsea and my soul leaps in something Iâve heard described as bliss. Youâre never far, I realize, and here is the secret: If youâd lived youâd be asleep now beside me, bent around me like an aura, keeping me safer than I ever thought I had the right to be.
from Columbia Poetry Review
TIM SEIBLES
Sotto Voce: Othello, Unplugged
Iago, it was not Desdemona but myself
I loved too much. So many battles found me
unharmed, but the want of beauty struck
like a kind of death. My rank only served
to wound my head with bigger dreams.
Didnât I deserve better than the tricks
every season brings? All my years
had stumbled into shadow: my own
dark face, harder and harder to find
in this cold kingdom. You knew my soul
ached for a woman who could conduct
my bloodâthat I might be in love alive
with the sharp sublime flinting
her eyes. All mine! My heart nearly
doubled     until you made me doubtâ
not so much Desdemona as my own
worthiness: if what I was couldnât make love
faithful     I thought better to be done with
her     than to know myself a smaller man.
from Alaska Quarterly Review
VIJAY SESHADRI
Trailing Clouds of Glory
Even though Iâm an immigrant,
the angel with the flaming sword seems fine with me.
He unhooks the velvet rope. He ushers me into the club.
Some activity in the mosh pit, a banquet here, a panhandler there,
a gray curtain drawn down over the infinitely curving lunette,
Jupiter in its crescent phase, huge,
a vista of a waterfall, with a rainbow in the spray,
a few desultory orgies, a billboard
of the snub-nosed electric car of the futureâ
the inside is exactly the same as the outside,
down to the m.c. in the yellow spats.
So why the angel with the flaming sword
bringing in the sheep and waving away the goats,
and the men with the binoculars,
elbows resting on the roll bars of jeeps,
peering into the desert? There is a border,
but it is not fixed, it wavers, it shimmies, it rises
and plunges into the unimaginable seventh
Lori G. Armstrong
Anthony McGowan
Unknown
Andrew Norriss
Jenni James
Adrienne Wilder
Will Molinar
Alaric Longward
Desireé Prosapio
Isabelle Drake