About Posit Editor

Susan Lewis (susanlewis.net) is the Editor-in-chief and founder of Posit (positjournal.com) and the author of ten books and chapbooks, including Zoom (winner of the Washington Prize), Heisenberg's Salon, This Visit, and State of the Union. Her poetry has appeared in anthologies such as Walkers in the City (Rain Taxi), They Said (Black Lawrence Press), and Resist Much, Obey Little (Dispatches/Spuyten Duyvil), as well as in journals such as Agni, Boston Review, The Brooklyn Rail, Conjunctions online, Diode, Interim, New American Writing, and VOLT.

Emily Kingery

Home Front

The night of our wedding, another couple pounded beers at a frat party. They slurred their love-yous, collapsed on a bed with rope lights wound on the posts.

In the morning, they ate pancakes. They talked about spring, booked a hotel, nursed their headaches and awaited the declaration. When it arrived, they threw shoes at the television, missed the President’s face by inches.

We stood in the stale-coffee air of a Midwest church, blood harelike in our legs and a blizzard coming through. We sucked in champagne like helium, and somewhere, lovers waited for bombs to explode in their rooms.

We bore the explosions of old friends in tuxedos. They passed a microphone and slurred into the black foam sponge.

Things would get ugly. Our friends would split like a wishbone: one part seething stay the course, one part turn back, thou pretty bride. It would continue this way, without exit. Shores would continue to recede with our hairlines; footage of far-off countries would loop.

The watch turned to a warning. Snow drifted onto mute cars in the parking lot, poured static into the local screens. The private companies soon rushed in to unbury us.

God bless, our relatives crooned through the cake. They drove their forks like tanks through the roses, leaving streaks of raspberry filling behind.

The Shelley Disciples

The Shelley disciples keep dirt in their kitchens, in rinsed-out hummus containers. They plant mint and basil, sometimes; they never pick the leaves. They look bruised. They fall apart at the windowsills and stay there for days.

What they say: “Who knows what to do with it?” What they mean: “We wish our mothers were here. We wish you would be our mothers.”

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When we were girls, we filled a banged-up pot with puddle water and mint. We crouched on the porch, used branches to stir while mosquitos swirled, haloed us in sound.

Once, a brother came out. He played along; he tucked a napkin at his chin. But when we gave him a spoon, he laughed: “You can’t really cook.” He spat.

He grew up to be a father of girls. Remember how he raised his spoon to the cat, how it hissed and pawed it to the ground?

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I was a daughter fond of families, unbodied. I would dunk my hands in paint and smear the legs and arms right from the heads. No stomachs, lungs– just heads. Moons, reaching to the edges of things.

My father boasted that I used every color: “So thorough,” he laughed. “Such a smart girl.”

He kept a box of my paper monsters because he was like any father. He has never missed what’s missing.

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The Shelley disciples press books to their laps. The room creaks under the ache of desks.

And what were thou, he asks a mountain, and rivulets wet their chins. They nod and nod like lunatics or limbs in the wind.

We walk to their houses, shifting weight. We imagine the sand of snack crumbs making headlands of their mattresses. Some of us who imagine less think of books before we lay them down: how they slap our hip bones like the sea.

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The Shelley disciples admire our hair, or how words about hair turn to song in their mouths. They sing of our hair spread over wood grain, of locks of the approaching storm. The notes quicken; the castors glide. Chairs catch poems beneath us.

After, they weep for their fair copies torn. We are sorry, as though for typewriter errors. We twist open, like vials of correction fluid.

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They set flame to hand-rolled cigarettes. When they speak, they move like acolytes. They dream of expulsion, of snuffing out God, of women who receive men in graveyards.

We group at their elbows to hear. In this town, what isn’t a grave?

Smoke perfumes our clothes and the spike of their unshaved skin. We trace the dizzy embers when their hands float, flick cherries to their feet.

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I stood at the arm of my grandfather’s lawn chair. He tousled my hair, his hand warm from a Bic. “You get prettier each time I see you,” he said. I breathed in beer, prettiness; I studied the float of ash in a half-drunk lemonade.

When the Shelley disciples talk anarchy in their kitchens, wine bloodies their teeth into the teeth of lions. The beers of men before them haunt their refrigerator doors.

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We sew loose buttons, purchase hummus. We are Mary: mother of God, mother of infants dead enough before born. Some of us who imagine less sew stones in pockets, dream of water: bodies of it; steeping leaves.

The Shelley disciples speak, unbound. We brutalize. Our pens turn blades in the knife games they play in dive-bar light.

After, their doors hide empty plots. After, they sigh in kitchens.

We are Mary, whose hair drapes down from her head to her prophet’s unclean feet.

A Made Place, That Is Mine

Often I am permitted to return to a meadow
as if it were a given property of the mind
that certain bounds hold against chaos,

that is a place of first permission,
everlasting omen of what is.

—Robert Duncan

In Bambi, the part that breaks me comes before the doe is shot. A frantic bird is told, Don’t fly, but she can’t bear waiting for the gun. She showed me what to do when you came. When you fit the needle in crackling grooves. When you poured gin in an orange juice glass.

I think of your hands breaking eggs, your fingers swirling butter pats. I was broke and ate what you made me. Can I bring you more? you said. My yes held still in an open field for you, quailed in the light. Your hands raised over the expanse.

I was broke. I took your paper: thick, expensive sheets. I made them into fat-creased birds and with a sewing kit I pricked them, put a needle through the peaks. I love them, you said. The thread came cheap as bloodshed, air.

For years, your threaded bird-heads have hung starry in the hall. At night, I run a finger in my mind across their backs. I make for them a thicket, and beyond that place, a field. It is featureless as an egg. I raise a shovel to it and break.

Emily Kingery is the author of Invasives (Finishing Line Press, 2023). Her work appears widely in journals and has been selected for multiple honors and awards. She teaches creative writing and literature at St. Ambrose University and is an emeritus member of the Board of Directors at the Midwest Writing Center, a non-profit supporting writers in the Quad Cities community.

Sharon Horvath

—click on any image to enlarge—

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Artist’s Statement
 

I like it when my paintings make me feel like I am not alone in the room, when a painting shows me a new code to play with. I begin with a pair of colors which might derive from a painting of a Tantric deity or a cereal box from the 1960’s. I paint lines as if I am following tributaries I’ve never seen before but seem familiar. Within the lines are sometimes stars. Or, I place tiny obstacles in the path to shift the scale and throw the lines off the trail on purpose. At those junctures, the lines become inflamed and secrete larger shapes. I try to see a syntax forming within the composition and make the whole thing rhyme with itself. Rhyming is the key.

In the composition of the painting, circulation is everything. Like water bubbling with air, blood effervesces into thoughts in the brain, flesh eventually transfigures; ashes and dust disperse and magnetize the mists exhaled by trees. Clouds fill and fall as rain into rivers flowing on and on, their journey destined for your teacup. I’d like my painting to be like offering you that cup of tea.

Sharon Horvath grew up in Cleveland, Ohio and moved to New York City to attend The Cooper Union. She lived abroad in Rome (MFA, Tyler School of Art) and Amsterdam, and currently works in the Brooklyn Navy Yard and Andes, NY. Horvath is Professor of Art in Painting and Drawing at Purchase College, SUNY, and was inducted into the National Academy Museum in 2016. She received a Fulbright Research Fellowship to India in 2013-14. Other distinctions include a John Simon Guggenheim fellowship, the Rome Prize from the American Academy in Rome, the Anonymous was a Woman award, and a Painting Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters. Horvath has had numerous solo exhibitions with Tibor de Nagy Gallery, Lori Bookstein Projects, Victoria Munroe Fine Art, and Pierogi Gallery in New York City, as well as the Drawing Room Gallery in East Hampton, New York.

David Hornung

—click on any image to enlarge—

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Artist’s Statement

My paintings are never based on a preparatory sketch or plan. I usually begin with quickly painted shapes, lines, or a configuration. It’s a casual, energetic start and a proposition to contend with. Once I’m locked in, I try to sharpen my focus without extinguishing the life of the nascent image. If I suspend judgement and maintain an open, playful attitude, unexpected pathways emerge, and I can find my way forward.

When I too quickly feel a sense of satisfaction and control, I get suspicious that I’m trading on what I already know; not discovering. When this happens, I need to kill the lovely thing so the unexpected can come into view. It takes a surprising number of adjustments in color and composition along with layering, blotting, scraping, and sanding to arrive at a resolution. It’s the interplay between physicality and thought that makes a painting real.

David Hornung is a painter and collage artist whose work has been widely exhibited in the US and UK. As an educator, he has served on the faculties of The Rhode Island School of Design, Indiana University, Skidmore College, Pratt Institute, and Adelphi University. He is the author of Color: A Workshop for Artists and Designers (Laurence King Pub Ltd.), a color theory and practice textbook that has been translated into six languages and is used in art schools and private studios around the world. He shows at the J.J. Murphy Gallery in NYC, Elena Zang Gallery in Woodstock New York, Pulp Gallery in Holyoke Ma., and Cynthia Winings Gallery at Blue Hill, Maine.

Dennis Hinrichsen

DEMENTIA LYRIC :: unbeknownst

a short film on engram theory called the forgetting

was confusion substrate
all

along :: dispossessed

of memory he
basks

there now ::

a pre-death
uterine

clutching at nothing’s
wall ::

still
some part of what

I recognize
as him

wondering :: how did I get here ::

what purpose
is

contained
in next :: he roils in damp

covers saying this :: I watch him
roil ::

not even a bird
of

prey anymore :: there is no
grand

seeking :: he has woken ::
immediately

desires sleep ::
wants

to know how it is
he knows

me :: whatever constellation
of neurons

I am to him
dead-sky locked ::

as for emotion :: it is mine ::

I rub his neck and shoulders
as if to say

you possess
a body still :: this is how

blood moves ::
this

is a muscle :: I am
indicating

care with thumb and fingers
which

you will forget ::
it has

relaxed you
which you will forget ::

I have flown here I am

leaving
tomorrow before you wake ::

it will be
as if

I were never here :: gone ::

not even ghost :: memory
of ghost ::

therefore :: never grieved

TU•MOR•SE•QUENCE

(near the Palisades Nuclear Power Station)

that line from Whitman that still resonates in bone ::
that’s the chemo ::

as for the rest:: the world :: it drinks
its own urine::

it will drink its own radioactivity soon ::
lifestyle loaded to the edges

even now
with future :: children screaming

in warm water discharge ::
thyroid

still butterfly either side of the windpipe
pulsing

as they swallow ::
they

may have to love cancer
again :: fission

needs lake to survive ::
it happens ::

it’s accidental ::
if not here then… somewhere ::

spent rods
(that other malignancy) piling ::

how
dune sand dry-sizzles when I piss ::

eroding as poem erodes :: lines
(its cell walls)

that break and
break

until all I see are black trunks
uprooted ::

tumorous veins exposed ::
meanwhile

this language-stare ::
I have driven 100 miles in rain

to confront
the site :: and so I stand :: in rain ::

sky fallout ::
collateral damage :: feelings ::

I had them :: they needed burial somewhere

RE•AC•TOR•SE•QUENCE

cloud-turbine churning of moisture

high in the troposphere ::

wind off lake

drizzling clear
plastic ::

I think the

poem is big
enough

now it has sky in it ::
brain

still a field :: summer
dusk :: fireflies sparking

neuronal

gaps :: it would like to live
in the world

forever

the brain would :: its demise
will be

death of fresh
water :: the body

aquifer :: I can feel it
as self-

shining
dries :: handbacks leathered ::

spotted :: the cerebellar
pinching

at memory already
beginning

maybe :: neural nets

tearing :: knots
(that

kiss in the dark) ::

coming
undone :: I am

forever
‘twixt the wings of it :: wanting

to ride the overwhelm
and let

quantum purring ingest
this better

Eucharist :: body
and blood

of me :: raised by dogs ::

it can chew
and spit

the rest :: it can play
and bite

at fingers
until I am mineral

blown through hollow
bone ::

anonymous
(I

embrace this) cave-wall
portrait :: death

the portal :: death

yellow

and feral :: uranium-
pellet

spine loaded
to the

skull as I feed
atomic fracture to the air

Dennis Hinrichsen’s twelfth full-length collection, dementia lyrics, will appear early 2026 from Green Linden Press. Other recent books include Dominion + Selected Poems, gathering work from forty years of publishing, Flesh-plastique, schema geometrica, winner of the Wishing Jewel Prize for poetic innovation, and This Is Where I Live I Have Nowhere Else To Go, winner of the Grid Poetry Prize. He lives in Michigan, where he served as the first Poet Laureate of the Greater Lansing area.

Oz Hardwick

Hustings in the Age of Uncertainty

A man in a blue suit speaks in a whisper but carries a megaphone, tunes his preparatory breaths to the pitch of air raid sirens, and coughs up fragments of glass animals. His voice is a crack in the polar ice, through which sabre-toothed tigers, dire wolves, and other apex predators crawl, shaking crystals from their shaggy manes and blinking blood-lusty eyes. It’s a predictable avalanche that leaves peaks denuded of snow, with frostbitten corpses staring at the sky, toilet tissue wreathes, and flies. The man in the blue suit pays his own audience in luxury flights, flattery, and fast-tracked passage through loopholes paved with false intentions, his wheezing laugh lingering long after the last plant is plucked and the last polar bear blasted through its hot skull. When the bombs come, or when the Sun catches in bare branches and refuses to set, the man in the blue suit needles tears from the corners of his eyes as he photoshops his hands out of pictures of star-struck girls; and when he waves from low-slung cars and ornate balconies, he’s just a stand-in for himself, or a shop dummy with a blue suit slapped on in cut-price paint. Meanwhile, mammoths and mastodons march two by two, waving fire that turns mountains into cracked glass, while a disembodied voice gags in the throat of a dropped megaphone, summoning the two-faced faithful to free lunches, free holidays, melting ice creams, and blue suits for each new wailing infant.

Bargain

Contrary to counterindications, we are not flying. We are not fleeing the scenes of crimes in which we may or may not have been complicit. It’s complicated, but we were not created – in God’s image? A dog’s image? A cat, perhaps. Me? How? – to comprehend, any more than to combust from the fire in our bellies. Believe it or not, we are falling, in love like teenage sweethearts, and into the machinery like nameless sweatshop drones. We’re like kids in a sweetshop: not children but goats, sorted from the sheep by Disgusted of Godalming, Surrey, with his fringe on top. Stop. Why-oh-why-oh-why must we distrust the scores and indentations spread out as plain as the noses on our faces? Two wings don’t make a plane. We walk with backs bent through a stately pile falling down. The relationship of verb to subject remains. Ambiguous.

Interpretive Malacology: The Arecibo Division

We monitor the snails with cameras and trackers, then chart their movements with coloured pens on sturdy paper. The technology’s changed, but it’s much the same as it was in our parents’ day and, for all we know, their parents’ day, and on and on, until the Gods of your choice and their analogues and avatars first created snails. To the casual observer, they’re just scaling the fence for the finest leafy greens, then retracing their trails to sleep through the day beneath rusting bins and barrows. But if you look at the charts – here, and here, and particularly here – you can see the patterns and their relation to language, the script of slime on weathered creosote. We send out scouts in the cool of morning to scour chewed stalks for our new Rosetta stone. See how the lines caress the edge of meaning. We know in our bones that this is important, but we don’t quite yet know why.

The Assassin’s Last Bow

Reviews are in and they’re not looking good. Three stars at best, and one of those is O-type, hot and massive, its hydrogen burning out as it swallows itself into a black hole. Another is a washed-up lush in a downtown bar, repeating the same tired tales of the road to anyone who’ll listen. No one will listen. The last one’s more ambivalent, pinned to a five-year-old’s jacket, a tangible signifier of law and order in a clapboard frontier town. He looks at his tears in the mirror, as if they belong to someone else, as if they’re the binary stars he can only dream of. The reviews, he reflects, are disappointing to say the least, peppered with typos and tired tales. Maybe he should jack it in? The old man in the mirror weighs a gun in his innocent palm and aims it at the stars.

Oz Hardwick is a York-based poet, who has published “maybe fifteen?” full collections and chapbooks, most recently Retrofuturism for the Dispossessed (Hedgehog Poetry Press, 2024). Oz has held residencies in the UK, Europe, the US and Australia, and has performed internationally at major festivals and in tiny coffee shops. In 2022, he was awarded the ARC Poetry Prize for “a lifetime devotion and service to the cause of prose poetry.”

John Gallaher

Modern Life Is a Porno

Life, like any fancy dinner, started with soup.
And then an inflatable backyard nightclub
and terracotta army. What if I told you it’s a time bomb
and neither the red wire nor the black wire
are connected to anything important?
Joke’s on you then. You should have cut the red one.
The only acceptable growth is infinite growth. That’s what the explosion says.
And look how well that’s going. One can sleep through an alarm
and be awoken by a whisper. And then I died
and got into composting. End of season one.
I climbed through the window, so the window’s a door.
Kindness was also a survival strategy. Thank you.
Can you pass the salt, please? Thank you.
I’m going to try eating my heart and having it too.

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Knowing it’s an advertisement doesn’t keep it
from persuading you. Like when they talk about sex and death
as foreplay. Hold on.
I’ve not yet gotten over my desire to be beautiful.
Walking down the hall just now I imagined I was
someone else, far away from mirrors, and one of the rest
of these people. That beautiful one.
I decided it was a simulation and that didn’t change anything.
We still debated free will and that didn’t change anything
either. The point of vistas is to be cumbersome
in their staring. And then desire pops up, and all bets are off.
Pull down the shades on these shady streets,
the remote viewing and hideout. You’re not fooling me.
Oh, America, at long last. Everyone’s in drag.

Anything Outside Our Senses Is Invisible

You’re a goldfish watching a feather. Maybe it’s ash.
You have a concept of ground and sea coming to a point.
Your truck goes airborne on ranch Road 12, flipping
and then landing flat back down into oncoming traffic.
A woman drives under, with a concept
of tunnel, maybe trellis. Or force field. God.
Everything is proof, says light to the double slit,
but I keep coming back to bed, saying “Yes, but.”
I’ve run out of variations on my approach. Hopscotch.
Bunny hop. Pogo stick. It’s paratactic. Floors
shine. My forehead crinkles and shines,
an edifice rising across the stars of noon. Say three “Hail Marys”
and don’t forget to vote. Be the statue
in a long conversation with the courthouse atrium wall.

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Holding a warm cup will cause you to feel
that other people are warmer, meaning nicer. Friendlier.
Somewhere in my body the decision is already made.
What gets you here won’t get you there,
unless it does, as things are both complicated
and redundant. You have just enough milk for your recipe.
If I could describe something closely enough. You escape
with only minor bruises. Sorry for all the jumping around.
A clear version of how and why, which ends up
on a cliff face where someone hands you a menu
to explain your hunger. New names for weather events include:
Thundersnow. Bomb cyclone. Heatflation. Atmospheric
lake. How about some fancy chess move as metaphor.
And my plans for a speedy recovery.

At Moments Such As This

They say positive people live longer and I’m not a positive person.
Define “positive.” Define “longer” and “person.” Meanwhile,
these freakishly normal things keep happening.
This toothbrush, for instance. Divorce.
Remarriage. Like that feeling you get when someone’s
looking at you, and you look around suddenly
and you don’t see anyone looking at you, or you see people
who might have been looking at you but have now
looked some other direction. Why might they have been looking
at you? What of this napkin on the floor? Is it a signal?
I’m holding on for a loophole, and what a positive person
might do, like the unexpected appearance of mercy
or it’s some girl scouts selling cookies. “Yes, we have Thin Mints!”
Concentrate on your breathing. Breathing is a positive development.

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Context demands action coherent within that context.
Sail on, sailor. Mow on, mower. Etcetera on,
etc. In history, before the rise of the industrial revolution,
most people didn’t live long enough to see all that much
change. But now we’re all dizzy. Falling over
is an action. So is panic. Living in a loud place,
one will be awoken by silence. I’m going to make signs
to hang around the kitchens of America on this and other matters.
I’m going to write something about life that doesn’t say death.
A car can last as long as you want it to, if you’re OK
with it not being (What was I even thinking about?)
a wise financial decision. This is a study of change. Maybe
you choose wrong in the fire, but an escape opens anyway.
Maybe you freeze as the bull charges, but it passes by.

As One Navigates the Hapless Colonnades

At night, the body says “roll over,” but to roll over a specific way,
and so why that? I flip the pillow, and then again,
like I’ve lost something. It’s one of those overnights
I wake up at 4am to do philosophy. And this clock
keeping everything in order. 4am is a great time for clocks.
Waking up, visualizing your skeleton lying there
in demure repose. It’s got a good beat and I can dance to it.
“Let’s create a threat level hierarchy,” the clock says.
Ants are going to carry this house away. “Wait for us,”
they cry, in their tiny, adorable voices.
The mental health marketplace is so different now. The brochures
are in color. The smiles terrifying. Like the world
is filled with teeth. I look in the mirror
and wonder what it would be like to be this person.

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You can say all sorts of things that you imagine are true,
later, when everything’s calmed into day, and truth
only matters generally, full of dictionaries and breath mints.
But 4am is very clear. It’s April 1st, 4:15,
a perfect time for saying what you really mean.
I really mean a set of reactionary diamonds. Like a framed picture
of one’s elementary school. Here’s a list
of everything there is. Here’s a list of everything
there isn’t. Ignoring the picture and holding the frame instead,
saying all I can hold is beauty, as I hold you, some you,
the band revving up for a big finish, the lights on my
neighbor’s garage, perfectly aligned through my window,
like feeling terrible about the news, sleeping with it
under the mattress, rubbing myself with it in the shower.

John Gallaher’s most recent collection of poetry is My Life in Brutalist Architecture (Four Way Books 2024). Recent poems appear in APR, Ploughshares, New Letters and Copper Nickel, among others. Gallaher lives in northwest Missouri and co-edits the Laurel Review.

Brenda Coultas

Untitled 1

Stockings hung
On the mantel
The toes dipped bitterly toward the floor

An old dog
Smells the lumps
The light is yellow
The chimney lets the sky have it

Rub and rub
Lamps of truth
Shine, shine
Black clean lines

Untitled 2

I wrote myself into being
A seed
Willing itself into becoming
A tree

Where there was nothing:
Clouds basketballs traffic cones cows

I pull away from reason
As folks in nursing homes do
but then a seed carried by
(I won’t say wind as it has meaning.
Won’t talk about trees because talk about trees leads to forests)
The seed’s soft down
a silken parachute

a heart is fodder for butterflies
I vow to lose my reason.

Vanitas

There’s a red rose behind my eyes
My brain eats the rose

With easy thoughts
I function

Pulsing on green stems, or is the rose
On a cloth with books and a burning candle?

I brown my skull with roses
and arrange my papers

Yellowed with acid
Reddened by fire

Ornaments
Glistening
In the light

In the mid-90s, Brenda Coultas moved to New York City to work on the staff of the Poetry Project. Her essay on her origins as a poet can be found in the anthology Other Influences: Essays on Feminist Avant-garde Poetic Lineages. Her latest collection, The Writing of an Hour, an ars poetica, was published by Wesleyan University Press in 2022.

Martine Bellen

Petrifying Jack Things

Unguent horsehair. Horse people glued together by bits of hoof. Deer people. Jack-in-the-Box people. Our spirit mammals. Jack Torrance trapped in his house, wrapped in his head, while Jack Sprat haunts no-fat food. Then there’s Jack with his bean stalk stalking jackfruit. We frame our Jacks and nail them to our coffin headboards. They mirror us in mirrors. They shift mood and tense depending on our fear level. The jack-o-lantern lighters savor them in our dreams. Mother guffaws. Father and Jack do too. Wisp phantoms hide in the divine jack pine forests. As do jackdaws, dressed for the midnight masquerade, and Night shudders. Night’s wide padded shoulders. We stutter, enveloped by the shrieks of jagged Night. All the lichen laugh. Our goose flesh bumps into Night’s knife, the heat of Night, the seat in Night’s sleigh. Shredded Wheat Night, watery milk we wade in to travel through Night and the Milky Way. Jack jumps over the candlestick. Toward windows he’ll creep while we’re asleep. He puts in his thumb and pulls it out. A plum! All the boys are Jack now. Nimblest at slipping through cracked windows, spired domiciles, riding their loping wild neighs.

Mountain

Clip-clop and underground cicadas clank as first echoes of walking
mountain unmoors the morning.

Mountain-crossing dressed as a cross-dressing mountain, dragging its train
over Yellow Earth, sweeping up crumbs of lives in its wake.

Mountain sits on the throne of a passageless passage of time.
Sentiency pinned to mountain as a butterfly to a mesh net.

Mountain removes its skirts—Layers of textile cover the dancing, ecstatic,
never-static mountain. It disrobes in spring, steps out of the wedding dress at winter’s end.

Mountain churns the oceanic pot; it bellows into a hallowed abyss of emptiness,
lassoing mountains with woven fogbows of light.

From where we stand, we can’t see mountain though perceive its height and sleight of hand.
Mountain humbly bows and hums in our ear.

Mountain as earth’s primal tree with roots combing the underworld;
its crown commanding the firmament by ropy wands of wind.

All night mountain prays on its knees, shuckling, davening
to the divine feet that tread its rocky skin.

The Older One Becomes, the More Out of Order Time Comes to Be

Between stage and spectators, our assemblage of visitant relatives
debate over the recent debacle: mother has fallen

off Humpty Dumpty’s wall, has broken vibrational string-theory threads,
has cracked the relative mirror in which we watch others who behave

as our worst selves, our wolf selves, mocking us
from our bathroom mirror where we play hide-and-seek with time.

Today the family unit unites in a unisonous performance,
superimposing its appearance from a half century ago.

The children are willing to resume old roles as frightened youngsters
of a frightened young mother. They singsong lines from bygone eras,

whereas mother refuses to mimic the body-memory motions
of being alive, and lies all day on a bed, which will be recast as her deathbed

that the children purchased for this theatrical revival. Mother refuses to play
her role as savior, and the children roll mother over. She shifts from right

to left and lolls. The family says it has run out of lines, the narrative thread
snipped. The family says it doesn’t know what happens next. They know

what will happen but cannot say without lines, and then the apparition
of father manifests at the foot of mother’s bed. Death has entered

through the fourth wall in father’s guise. Violent death who awaits, waves
his arms and spits curses into the family’s mouth. He orders

mother to accept his proposal. He slams his fist
into the children’s chests, and they wail. They rent their garments

as father sucks out mother’s breath with a deep marital kiss,
draping inky velvet cloth over brimstone mirrors.

Martine Bellen is the author of ten books, most recently, An Anatomy of Curiosity (MadHat Press, 2023), This Amazing Cage of Light: New and Selected Poems (Spuyten Duyvil); The Vulnerability of Order (Copper Canyon Press); and Tales of Murasaki and Other Poems (Sun & Moon Press), which won the National Poetry Series Award. Her work appeared in The Best American Poetry, 2023, edited by Elaine Equi. As a librettist, Bellen has collaborated with David Rosenboom on AH! Opera No-Opera, which world premiered at REDCAT in L.A. Additionally, she cowrote Moon in the Mirror (composer: Stephen Dembski) with Zhang Er, which was performed at Flushing Town Hall, California State University in L.A., Cleveland State University, and the Blue Building in New York City.

Editors’ Notes (Posit 40)

 

Welcome to Posit 40!

The literary and visual art in this issue shines a rich variety of “lamps of truth” (Brenda Coultas, “Untitled I”) on these dark and dangerous times. These works share the courage and ambition to tackle the deepest, most fundamental quandaries of “this glittery self-contained life” (Mia Malhotra, “Wave Organ II”) in which “it takes a lifetime to be born” (Ma Yongbo, “Sleeping on the Street”). Time, death, love, and loss loom large in this issue, set against a background in which “somewhere, lovers wait[] for bombs to explode in their rooms” (Emily Kingery, “Home Front”) while “the man in the blue suit pays his own audience in luxury flights, flattery, and fast-tracked passage through loopholes paved with false intentions, his wheezing laugh lingering long after the last plant is plucked and the last polar bear blasted through its hot skull” (Oz Hardwick, “Hustings in the Age of Uncertainty”). “Saying anything and everything” about how “we fall upon the thorns of life, we / bleed” (Joseph Lease, “Wake”), the literary and visual art gathered here manages to find transcendence — assuring us, in various and stunning ways, that despite everything, “the light keeps coming over the mountain” (Bryan Price, “Light Coming Over the Mountain”).

In Marine Bellen’s poems featured here, language itself is set free to dream. Spectacularly in tune with language as a natural force, Bellen allows words to flow idiosyncratically into form and meaning as water creates its own stream bed. In “Petrifying Jack Things,” we are invited to wade into the dream of a single word, “Our goose flesh bumps into Night’s knife, the heat of Night, the seat in Night’s sleigh. Shredded Wheat Night, watery milk we wade in to travel though Night and the Milky Way.” In the sonically exciting “Mountain,” the “never static mountain” does just about all and everything to remake the world “as first echoes of walking mountain unmoors the morning.” Both the actual mountain in the landscape, “mountain as earth’s primal tree,” and the sound net Bellen magically weaves of the word mountain “bellow[s] into a hallowed abyss of emptiness.” Bellen’s take on a family narrative, “The Older One Becomes, the More Out of Order Time Comes to Be,” sidesteps storytelling’s so-called realism to revel in its intrinsic surreality as we follow the poet’s sonic breadcrumb trails until “The family says it has run out of lines, the narrative thread / snipped. The family says it doesn’t know what happens next. They know // what will happen but cannot say without lines, and then the apparition of father manifests at the foot of mother’s bed.”

The focused attention of these chiseled lyrics by Brenda Coultas is energized by their understated discipline. These superbly lean, densely packed poems can be read as ars poeticas, mining the resonance embedded in fragments of ordinary life, such as holiday stockings sniffed by old dogs, and “clouds basketballs traffic cones cows,” to contemplate the utility and imperatives of poetry. Through stanzas like “ornaments / glistening / in the light,” these oracular poems highlight the provocative distinction between truth and reason. What’s more, they enact what they exhort: their “lamps of truth” “let the sky have it” even as they “pull away from reason.” As graceful and sober as the Dutch masters’ Vanitas paintings they invoke, these poems both rue and honor the fragile ephemerality of life and art, akin to the “silken parachute” of “the seed’s soft down.”

We’re not surprised when a sonnet takes the famous “turn” we all learned about in school, but we are riveted to the page when John Gallaher’s vastly pleasurable sonnets start out turning and never stop. Gallaher has fashioned double sonnets that are dizzy with turns, all made, one after the other, with odd, lovely, and humorous conviction. Instead of expanding upon lines of amazing, yet logical-seeming premises, such as “Life, like any fancy dinner, started with soup,” we are given a new idea, contradiction, or unrelated image in the following lines. “Forgive me for jumping around,” says the poet, and we do. Directly after the poem opens with life’s soupy origin story come the lines “And then an inflatable backyard night club/and terracotta army.” In another poem Gallaher proposes, “You’re a goldfish watching a feather. Maybe it’s ash. / You have a concept of ground and sea coming to a point.” Yet, in these sonnets Gallaher refuses to follow landscape’s prerogative and come to a fixed point. If you like your sonnets with rhymes, they are here, too, but you may have to look for them. As Gallaher says, “What gets you here won’t get you there, /unless it does, as things are both complicated/and redundant.”

With sharp and insightful wit, Oz Hardwick uncovers the present of our world deep in the ruins of ancient and recent history. Both warning and reminding us what our failings may lead to, Hardwick captures the shallowness of our political life: its banality, dishonesty, and even danger, as the mindless followers of future generations march on: “A man in a blue suit speaks in a whisper but carries a megaphone, tunes his preparatory breaths to the pitch of air raid sirens” as he “summon(s) the two-faced faithful to free lunches.” In the face of our present dangers, the poet cautions, “we are falling . . . into the machinery like nameless sweatshop drones.” Not only are we falling into the machinery, but the machinations as well; we think we are using the technology, but we are the ones being used. Our knowledge is incomplete (“two wings don’t make a plane”), and our labor serves only to build mansions that won’t last as we “walk with backs bent through a stately pile falling down.” In an imagined scientific study of snails, Hardwick wittily leaves open the question of whether our endeavors will yield any valuable insight into our future: “We send out scouts in the cool of morning to scour chewed stalks for our new Rosetta stone. . . . We know in our bones that this is important, but we don’t quite yet know why.”

Dennis Hinrichsen’s poignant new poems stitch together and unify the damage and suffering afflicting our world on every scale: from fireflies to synaptic sparks, clouds to turbines, rain to fallout, Whitman’s “thin red jellies” to chemotherapy, and tumors to radioactive waste. With these verses, he constructs a bleak and exquisite multi-part elegy for human and planetary destruction. Courageously and thoughtfully exploring what dementia has taken from a barely recognizable father and his son, up to and including either’s chance to grieve, and what our absorption in our present needs has taken from our earth and bodies, these poems confront the “collateral damage :: feelings” of the wreckage inflicted by our “lifestyle loaded to the edges // even now / with future.” In a climax of despair and transcendence, the narrator even voices the desire to lose himself in the anonymous fabric of the universe: “to ride the overwhelm / and let // quantum purring ingest / this better // Eucharist :: body / and blood // of me.”

In David Hornung’s loose but constructed compositions, akin in some respects to Paul Klee’s whimsical works, playfulness and a certain logic combine with subtle and striking colors. Hornung’s colors, indeed, have the nuance of dreams, where we know what we are seeing is unworldly: a mauve bird-shape, a blue-green reminiscent of darkness, but no darkness has that shade. The elements in the paintings partake of the same sensibility: the geometries and the subtly-edged patches of color, the shapes that almost resemble identifiable objects, as well as the shapes that definitely don’t. Hornung’s process is also intuitive, but with purpose. The artist says that he has to kill the “lovely thing so the unexpected can come into view.” The charm of the work is in that challenge; each stroke, area, or color is unexpected, and no two works are recognizably painted in the same style, although the unity of the work is like a poem spoken in another language, alive and transporting, if not completely understood.

The high-key colors and swirling forms animating Sharon Horvath’s extraordinary collages contribute to their dynamic complexity. Psychedelic and hyperreal, her vertiginous assemblages are studded with primal, collectively remembered iconography that integrates the real and the imagined, the physical and the psychological. Each opulent composition is not only a visual feast but a psychological treasure map, populated with an abundance of resonant references: fish bones and antlers, totems and mandalas, feathers and fronds, light rays and flames, amoebas and nuclei, and especially planets and galaxies, with the infinite mysteries they represent. Glowing and jewel-like, pulsing with energy and movement, these lush cornucopias of grand and tiny marvels teem with sparkling, sparking bits of light and energy. Horvath’s is a heartening, optimistic vision of a reality — an amalgam of our physical and psychic landscapes — that is overflowing with sensory delights, if only we can open our minds to perceive them.

Emily Kingery conjures the real nature of home and family, considering the subtle interplay of people and place against a larger social context. In “Homefront,” Kingery’s powerful imagery hints at fissures and ruptures at a wedding of friends. There is violence in the wings as well as beyond the borders: “God bless, our relatives crooned through the cake. They drove their forks like tanks through the roses,” as “we sucked in champagne like helium, and somewhere, lovers waited for bombs to explode in their rooms.” Indeed, Kingery’s double-sided impressions of domestic life begin early: “I was a daughter fond of families, unbodied. I would dunk my hands in paint and smear the legs and arms right from the heads. No stomachs, lungs – just heads.” In “The Shelly Disciples,” girlhood memories alternate with glimpses into another kind of freedom. “I stood at the arm of my grandfather’s lawn chair. . . . I breathed in beer, prettiness; I studied the float of ash in a half-drunk lemonade.” In the narrator’s observations, we see the flicker of creation in the disciples’ own club, created for survival. We feel a kinship with their secrets and their unbinding, even when it is infused with violence: “The Shelley disciples speak, unbound. We brutalize. Our pens turn blades in the knife games they play in dive-bar light.” In “A Made Place, That is Mine,” Kingery again makes the connection between freedom and violence as it extends even to the closest personal relationships, and makes clear the aching role love often plays in both: “For years, your threaded bird-heads have hung starry in the hall. At night, I run a finger in my mind across their backs. I make for them a thicket, and beyond that place, a field. It is featureless as an egg. I raise a shovel to it and break.”

Joseph Lease’s “Wake” takes on the varied meanings of its title: a wake for the dead, a desired reunion with the loved one, the longing to follow in their wake, and waking to a new reality when we realize that person is gone for good. The poem shifts between speakers in both the remembered words of the dead and the responses of the survivor, urgent to be understood: “daydreams in hand,” although “there’s less now, just, there are . . . fewer useable minutes.” The artifacts and memories left behind shimmer with meaning: “he just doubled down and tripled / down on knowing the names of flowers / he seemed to come out of nowhere / filling the page with light, the page / as slab of light.” The poet asks bedrock questions, like “how can / you leave me, how could you die,” before turning to comforting the dead: “read this and imagine me: in Berkeley / in Chicago, drinking tea, eating apples / walking slowly in the blustery day, the / day . . . full of talking animals.” In “Buried Life,” Lease continues the theme of death, but on an existential scale, with the questions that come to us in the face of danger or other moments of fear and despair, when “(we’re / waiting to / die (we’re / waiting to / pray (God / the rabbit / afraid.” How easily it can all disappear: our flimsy buildings, the forests full of trees and animals. The poet asks the questions whose answers we are afraid to confront as the sensations of present and future meld: “(are / we / extinct? / (colors burn / like garbage / on fire,” while the spacing in the poem brilliantly evokes the fragmentations of mind, and perhaps the rush and flash of fire at the world’s end.

In Ma Yongbo’s lyrical, melancholy English-language poems, modernity and tradition seamlessly coexist. Although situated in the modern world, these poems’ reliance on traditional imagery and symbolism reveals the relevance of historical culture to the timeless philosophical concerns these poems address: matters no less weighty than change, time, and death. Like the placid surface of a lake, the ostensibly simple events populating Ma’s verses cover depths of submerged resonance. “Night Stay by Gongchen Bridge” considers events on a canal in imagery both ancient (dowries, lanterns, poetry scrolls, and swords) and modern (white plastic boxes), making the case for the wisdom of acceptance in the face of the inexorable passage of time: “Don’t regret, just turn off the lights, / this is your night, this is the world’s way.” Acceptance is an aspiration in the other two poems as well. Although “it takes a lifetime to be born,” and we may dread being “engulfed by endless darkness,” Ma’s poems reveal the beauty of that eradication. In lyrical verses, the snow, like death itself, can ease life’s tension by erasing the self, transforming us “beyond the ancient struggle between being and nothingness” until we are “relaxed and nameless.”

Mia Ayumi Malhotra’s poems featured here are remarkable for their intimacy. The reader is drawn close not by way of personal revelation, but by an openness to possibility and suggestion, to uncertainty and imaginative collaboration. Malhotra’s syntax in “If With You” is of anaphora and incompletion, of thought being interrupted before it is fully expressed — “If we made our way     past lichens & bearded moss;” “If I followed you     to where the trees thin;” “If I lay myself among the bracken fern.” When the concluding “then clause” never arrives, we recognize a modality of wonder — “if we pause to listen — sound poured.” The radical openness of Malhotra’s lyricism is expressed formally in “Wave Organ II” and “V.” Here the initial blocks of text reopen into fragmentary, impressionist collage. We join the poet in the middle of an ongoing speculation of what “might” be, but which, despite vivid description, ultimately resides in the tender realm of imaginative proposal — “she might feel her own frequency slow to a steady whoosh &     the little one sensing this shift / might draw nearer     & they might find themselves entering into phase all around them.”

A sense of wonder is both elicited and expressed by the ethereal beauty of Shari Mendelson’s delicate, glowing sculptures crafted from discarded plastic bottles. Mendelson has spoken of her admiration for the craftsmanship of her artist forbears, and her own virtuosity makes her a worthy heir. The reverence of these delicately beautiful works recalls not only their ancient devotional inspirations but art’s stunning capacity to fashion sublimity from scraps. Mendelson’s re-imagined votive sculptures are also boundary-defying, bridging the gaps between cultures and faiths, eras and species, through their representations of animal-human as well as animal-vessel hybrids, and even a reimagined, literal “lamb of god” in the arms of a human-ewe Madonna. By painstakingly using detritus to reference ancient artifacts that have managed to outlive the civilizations that created them, Mendelson comments upon our apparent indifference to our own future. These works push back against a culture of disposability that is part and parcel of our insatiable appetite for the new, and which increasingly threatens our own survival.

At their tender, plain-spoken core, these new poems by Stephen Paul Miller are devotional. Imbued with his customary wry but gentle optimism, the open-hearted candor of their wide-ranging appreciation is part and parcel of the radical/ecstatic acceptance they model. Most if not all of these poems are anchored by the transcendent nature of the moments they capture: as the walls of paradise are lifted by the arrival of poet and friend David Shapiro; as, in a vision, the narrator’s deceased “Angel Boss” mother orders him “around your [god’s] / sonnet factory;” as the speaker is transformed “heart in hand over a new aura” (and new era) by holding the “Living Force Field” of his beloved’s hand; and as the speaker becomes one with everything and time itself recedes: “when I / become the cliff I hover over / and time goes out with the /tide.” The candor and open-heartedness of Miller’s ecstasy underscores the depth of its conviction. These are love poems in the most universal sense, whose breadth of affection is as irresistible as it is restorative.

Finely attuned to the strobing presences of light and darkness in our lives, Bryan Price’s poems are searing and beautiful depictions of human vulnerability and violence amid nature’s troubled yet inspired and inspiring persistence. Images of light and dark seesaw ecstatically through these poems accreting to a spare, mythological intensity — “and when/he gave us his teeth we sharpened them on / a landmine the shape and color of a new moon.” Price’s light and dark world is pierced by the poet’s recognition of the limits of art-marking and of our desire for transcendence — “one cannot wear black theoretical tightrope-walker’s shoes and just walk into the distance between hazel and hazelnut” — but also by a sustaining, flickering hope because “a lilac a little finger a grain of sand / dust into dust but the light / keeps coming over the mountain.”

Gary Sloboda’s city is a gift of transcription, perfectly depicted images translated into the transcendental. In this poet’s view, our lives are both fragile and decorative; we seem almost another species. we live in the shadow of “tall buildings’ windows once dazed by the river. . . . of pressed wood and carpenter’s glue. glitter paint job in the moonlight.” We’re imperfect: “we stumble with our bags. as the last days’ dark melodies unwind from passing cars. in the salt pinch of the waves that corrodes the metal railings. along the walls of rock where the ocean begins. and goes on forever,” unlike our impermanence. But how human we are, how alive and how aware: “hollering on the street like it’s the end of the world. and on the walkway of the bridge. how the form of our breath ascended. like the ghosts of pigeons. floating through the city. and the stars fetchingly arranged.” This hollering, the ascending form of our breath, blossoms into a kind of freedom, an exhilaration, and possibly a deep empathy with the stars. Or maybe, we’re irrevocably earthbound, interpreting our lives as best we can, “our belongings piled everywhere. as if we’re about to or will never leave.”

We’re immensely grateful for your time and attention. Please take care of each another.

Susan Lewis, Carol Ciavonne, Bernd Sauermann, and Barbara Tomash

Dan Rosenberg

The Small Hour

the furnace clicks to flame

the wax amaryllis peeks through the blinds
from a thick stalk hinting at yellow

headlights shuffle downcast along

the first scrap of Sappho
“rescued from the City of Crocodiles”

The chairs have square holes mid-spine

empty as a sleeping television

“they caught friendship in a dragnet”
says the first bad read of fragment 1

the silver cup recalls a bell
but makes no sound

the carbon monoxide detector shines
between the curtain and the records

one more bottle will break the bar

stillness like a disease I’m drinking

with bad kid art taped to the walls
deformed blue jay

marker on diamonds of cardboard
soaked from toilet paper rolls

no bear no boar not even a beaver
as the streetlight paints the snow

bittersweet

this quiet on the ground floor
while the warmth crawls up the stairs

this alone with history

The Thin Blanket of Atmosphere

May a fist of clover and white cotton
rise from the mouths of the dead —

until they loose their memories.
The winds are blurry. The water thin.

Up close each face is a garden
seeded from another planet.

May the generative thrust find
its holster on the wall of the sea.

May the concept of bird
rub roughly across the day’s eye.

Brutal melons, sensual hoodie.
I’m holding a motorcycle

in each hand like a judge,
but I’m no judge. I’m reeling

in low-Earth orbit with all the trash
we’re raising like a sloppy wall.

May the distance between stars
stop hoarding time and light.

Who doesn’t deserve to feel small
in the pocket of a cloud? Just

in the evenings, when numbers
forget their cudgels and kiss.

Poor Kegler

You bolted the book shut. The
book of good names & the book
of off-cuts. You rendered from a pelt

the spoon & cup. We all want
around the gallery like a garden,
lurk behind the light you turn

when you’ve turned your face
to another. We touch your hangdog
postcards, say they are a kind

of cold that forgets what’s dead,
what’s a bust in lime, what’s a wing,
what’s a brick. The cold bustles

long among us churls who want
your altars to assemble a grin
we can track like root paths

under the sidewalk. Instead,
you spun the shapes of the States
into a map of Europe. Planted

some golden arches in a woodcut
of the famous Scream. We hang on
as you take each letter & render it

a stranger to itself, like soldiers
in skull masks & bunny ears.
& now we open our mouths

& a parliament of rooks uncurls
from our brains to drink your sky
with one long and many-pointed beak.

Arrivals

Pax Brittanica. Aminal crackers. Switch.
Pedometer. Clotted cream. Bedside pillow
pile. I shamble along the canal with my sweat
diadem & bad knees. But when summer sits
on my chest, I open my belly in welcome.

They’re airborne in the past but catching up
over a world at the throat of the world.
They’re fragile vowels, poking that throat.
What bridges do to riverbanks, they do to me.

The finale of green holes up in heaven. Its arms
shake. No exit, no giftshop. Its arms shake.
I grow tired as a tarmac, where the geese gather.
Flowing larger and alone. I stay up late.
Stir with my pen the unfiltered cider.

Arrivals extend the horizon with their hands.
This body I’ve scraped together. Sunburst
like a flasher on the sidewalk. Sunburst
tumbles from the bus yard like he missed me.

The Heavens

hitched horses drag a globe of light
we used to believe      in people, animals

nothing beyond our scale, ontology      of one
as if a footprint on the moon
is a human thing

//

above some fixed point      we bank
right and nothing follows      freely

pulled and pulling the thread of being things

right now undressed to spring I hurtle
remember red lights weeping from the wing
and me a half-conscious geranium
with head rested against a plastic window

slipping not past but present

//

The maculate female clucks
with options      into the swarm of air
she sees lunch      buzzing the ditch
and clucks again pregnant with sameness

then spies the rooster absurdly above
surprise landlord of the crabapple

//

with enough tongue      nectar
with a furious flapping      stillness

from my roots I say what is small
and more      solar eclipses blinked
away I believe

my body terrestrial except      bathed
in late light      the visible dust      rises

//

when I die I say      so much
of me will continue its ascent

Buckle

As the milk sogs the bowl of mixed grains,
so comes the too-much, heaving

its own highway before it, disgorged
tarmac, the clouds a trash bag

behind last call. And like a savage
I don’t stop at the perfect. I score

my tongue before it enters
the oven. Nabokov called Tolstoy

a groping purist in the face of too-much,
he could one-shot an ottoman but not

the umbilical powerline and the flat
squirrel beneath it, new lamps studding

the cul-de-sac, the fitted sheet gone
flaccid under uneven weight, the black

sky interrupted by stars. Maybe
our heft is the force of attraction sewn

to the stutters of a rusty Honda.
Our breath declines along the trail

of twigs and down and milkweed fluff,
the bright, fibrous undoing

of a sparrow’s nest reaching for
the sidewalk. What exerts itself upon

the world. To break the fast we must
first understand not-eating as an action.

Dan Rosenberg’s books include Bassinet, cadabra, and The Crushing Organ, which won the American Poetry Journal Book Prize. He has also published the chapbooks A Thread of Hands and Thigh’s Hollow, which won the Omnidawn Poetry Chapbook Contest, and he co-translated Slovenian poet Miklavž Komelj’s Hippodrome. Rosenberg teaches at Cornell University and lives in Ithaca, NY, where he currently serves as the Tompkins County Poet Laureate.