Saturday, 19 October 2024

Scything

 

Photograph by Mathstop from Flickr


Dear readers, and contributors,

After much reflection, I have decided to close down Urtica: the blog and the press. This decision was not made lightly, as this space has been a cherished home for creativity, connection, and the beautiful art of poetry.

I am incredibly grateful for all the poets, readers, and supporters who have contributed to the adventure. Your passion and engagement have made this journey truly special.

While this chapter is coming to an end, I encourage you to continue exploring and sharing poetry in your own lives. Thank you for being a part of the journey.

***

Chers lecteurs et contributeurs,

Après mûre réflexion, j'ai décidé de fermer Urtica : le blog et les éditions. Cette décision n'a pas été prise à la légère, car cet espace a été un foyer précieux pour la créativité, la connexion et l'art magnifique de la poésie.

Je suis incroyablement reconnaissante à tous les poètes, lecteurs et sympathisants qui ont contribué à l'aventure. Votre passion et votre engagement ont rendu ce voyage vraiment spécial.

Alors que ce chapitre touche à sa fin, je vous encourage à continuer d'explorer et de partager la poésie dans votre vie. Merci d'avoir participé à cette aventure.

WR

Wednesday, 25 September 2024

The Sound of Pornography by Frederick Frankenberg

 

Photograph by Posterboy from Flickr

A mulleted old man was stuck in a genre:

the sloshing casual music of porn

He played it in the breakroom

of the Dubois supermarket.

He played it in the bathroom

He played it on an alto sax

A spectacular spectacle

His mesmerizing lyrics

were forced and nonsensical

in a jocular refrain, its excited interval

Until the manager came

and said, “Put it away”

***


Frederick Frankenberg (he/him) - Twitter handle: @FredIsAWriter

Saturday, 24 August 2024

Billygoat by Ian C. Smith

Warning Hazchem by Adrian Scottow from Flickr


Emptied of the night’s mad dreams; old grief, boyish expectations, in my blood, I boil a kettle on my stove, discreet about smoke’s egress, check my phone to see how much I can afford to eat today.  If you sought me you would never track me here, a wraith hidden behind a nondescript door I bar from inside on which I attached a HAZCHEM sign, my lone caller the wind, industrial traffic belching past.  I imagine I am shipboard, master of a creaking galleon.  

Since my arrival, the only time people thronged these West Melbourne streets was when their football team won the championship after sixty-two barren years.  Stricken by lost time, their revelry alarmed me at first.  Small finds like the trove of abandoned sawn wood discovered when scrounging for sticks to crackle my stove into life, delight.  I relayed the small logs to my squat accompanied by an unseen barking dog’s forlorn protest, fantasising about a chance meeting with a kind, intelligent woman as if we were characters in a novel.  As if.

Gossiped about by pigeons on high, I sip tea wreathed in steam, click on old messages from habit, ward off remorse with poetry archived in memory, perfect words rubbing together read in a shaft of sunlight like a stage set: through willow-herb, cranesbill, and meadowsweet, I roamed, ghostlike companions savoured during solitary seasons, a faith against troubled times.  In vile contrast, the newspaper that flamed my fire was filled with atrocities and moneyed politicians’ damned lies among other abuses.  When I venture abroad again, in fine rain preferred, so, nobody else afoot, shielded by that traffic noise and my hoodie, I hope to magpie more serendipity to improve my Robinson Crusoe freedom.

On my reconnaissance of this derelict district of rusted steel I am borne back to scarred tables in dim bars of distant cities once more: Glasgow, Barcelona, Berlin, Gothenburg, dissecting my life.  With a woman then, both of us wearing the long-term travellers’ monotony of wretched oft-rinsed same clothes, we see vehicles, Matchbox toys, traversing a bridge soaring over an historic river as we explore the beautiful havoc of ancient Europe bickering in our clapped-out van that amused Austrian border guards.  Acting nonchalant to mask my true anxious self, I google enigmatic maps, all these yesterdays leading me irrevocably back here. 

I treasure vignettes, my print of Vindstille by the Danish painter Anton Dorph special.  Depicted from behind, a woman holding a child stands on a revetment gazing across still water at a fishing boat.  When I bought it I admired its timelessness in a bar, glasses tinkling, a barmaid flirting on the phone, wondering what Dorph’s watching woman represented.  A man’s return?  Hope?  The calm before a storm I thought in italics.  Then, through a window, I noticed a woman cross the street in a gust of rain.  Downing my drink in one draught, I paid, rushing, not for the first time, into the drama of a teeming city, breath catching because of the familiar way her curls bounced. 

Stepping around ferries’ and refugees’ jetsam, a shimmer of wintry salt blurring our eyes, we scoffed at the idea of deckchairs in pebbles on what some might call a beach after retreating from Europe across the English Channel’s murk to our ancestral home.  A single tourist railway line ran behind our cheap off-season coastal let; Romney Marsh beyond better days, stubble, thistles, a goat chained to a water trough.  At dusk wan yellow lights blinked on in bungalows, a daguerreotype now recalled in sepia.  How could we imagine the future?  Were we lovers, close teammates, tourists creating scenes, or just curious about genes?  When it was over we left no trace.  The goat had fouled its patch, stench powerful.  After the sweet slow train of the past’s shrill whistle faded I remember hearing that lone goat bleating at the end of its tether. 

Sunday, 18 August 2024

Vagrancy by John Grey

Rock Bottom by Thomas Hawk from Flickr



There’s the bridge that Stella jumped from.
“What a life” screams the vagrant.
A car drives by with its radio thumping.
The moon is orange.
Its shadows seem to dance.
And Stella. Twenty-three years old.
And some guy says,
“Stella, such a shame.”
And then off to the bar,
the usual crowd,
the blue light of the bottles.
The vagrant, all creaking joints,
stumbles across a parking lot,
dressed for death in mid-November,
looking for a bed of dismembered leaves.
Fifteen years before, Stella was in Milwaukee.
And now cop cars blast by 
the last place she was seen alive.
Stella, I’m sure, didn’t mean to make a fuss.
But we all die
and the survivors have to do something about it.
There were others of course.
Insane Hal who cut his own throat.
And JT who went off to war
so those of us left behind
would have someone to mourn.
Now there’s these scratches on the door
from people long ago,
aching to be let in.
And neighbors of course,
mapped into their little squares.
This occasional desecration of life
means nothing to those raking in cash,
Or maybe something to the one
who spends all day staring at the wall.
The vagrant plays at life 
from a mound beside the river.
He watches boats. 
Or drags himself through the park.
Someone calls a taxi.
Someone waits at the bus stop.
All to the sound of ice-cubes rattling in glass.

Saturday, 17 August 2024

One day when I'm dead I'll come back to life, by Gale Acuff

Superman Stick by A. Currell from Flickr



I don't mean the life eternal but real
life like I had before I croaked or God croaked
me, flesh and blood and bone and tacos and
all that, root beer and grape Nehi and that
candy you pop into your mouth and it
explodes, the candy that is, not your mouth,
ha ha, and I wonder if Superman
can eat it and feel it or is he too
invulnerable or is it even
better for him, he's super-sensitive 
they say so how could he have sex and not
snuff his lover with satisfaction though
you can bet that he wouldn't be selfish,
he'd croak, too, if he could. Up and away.

Saturday, 15 June 2024

Stick by Dominik Slusarczyk

Eros by Egon Schiele


This stick is

The biggest bit of my life.

It is long and

Knobbly and

Nice like dry ice.

Watch me swing it

Like a lightsabre.

I would swing you like

A lightsabre if you’d

Let me.


***

Dominik Slusarczyk is an artist who makes everything from music to painting. His poetry has been published in various literary magazines including California Quarterly and Berlin Lit. His poetry was long listed in the VOLE Books Summer Competition 2023 and was a finalist in the Flying South Contest 2023.

Saturday, 25 May 2024

Nike by Brad Liening

EEIM, CC BY-SA 3.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0>, via Wikimedia Commons

 

Maybe the worst
Or at least
Funniest part

Of your slow demise
Is that it’s nothing
Personal.

Coca-Cola
Exxon
Et al.

Are thriving
At your expense
But they don’t know

You exist. They
Don’t even exist.

You have a body.

A fuck up tough
To come back from.

***

 Brad Liening lives in Minneapolis, MN, USA, and at bradliening.blogspot.com

Saturday, 20 April 2024

A Grizzly Possibility by John Grey


 

I don't blame the grizzly
for the night-time tent raid,
the mauling of the wife,
the maiming of the husband.

The bear was old and tired
and winter had been long.
And the couple knew the risks.
The guy had said so on TV.

At any given moment,
we're as close to desires and hungers
as we are to rats.
We're all of us capable

of fulfilling another's need
A mugger could slay me for my wallet.
A car could knock me sideways
and all for the space I'm standing in.

Some people camp out in the danger.
Others just live where anything is possible.
I don't blame my vulnerability.
I've been mauled and maimed by worse.

***

John Grey is an Australian poet, US resident, recently published in New World Writing, North Dakota Quarterly and Lost Pilots. Latest books, ”Between Two Fires”, “Covert” and  “Memory Outside The Head” are available through Amazon. Work upcoming in California Quarterly, Seventh Quarry, La Presa and Doubly Mad.

Monday, 18 March 2024

The Disclaimers by Salvatore Difalco

 

Blooshed by Erich Ferdinand from Flickr


People with tiny souls controlled the peace.
“We are professionally rational,” they argued.

War is irrational in some respects.
As is art.

And yet we practice it,
flicking blood around like paint

or flicking paint around like blood.
Some of us, the catatonic, watch these goings on

with muted interest. “You catching flies, Joe?”
Joe shuts his mouth with a clack.

The real thing is more than word association.
No fake blood on set, the director

forbade it. He visited an abattoir.
That’s why he smells of excrement.

Let’s go on a date
with another kind of animal.

This one’s into pharmacology.
Later, we trip balls.

But the commingle mutually
disturbs and thus is hauled off to the archives.

In another life
chivalry will return and piccolo trumpets will blow

when you spill onto the podium
dreading a natural death.

Everyone is guilty of something here.
Their beetle brows and overbites don’t go

over nicely with the Guineveres of the kingdom.
An ideal situation would make us fear

the asylum escapees, rather than embrace them,
though yes, we live not far from the asylum.  


*****

Sicilian Canadian poet Salvatore Difalco lives up in Toronto, Canada.

Sunday, 17 March 2024

Lethe’s Banks by Frederick Frankenberg

 

The Inferno, Canto 32
Gustave Dore

I died. Cupid bashed my brains
with a club of hearts.

I awoke near a rivulet
churning up nacreous secretion.
The skies were mauve
and the blue grass had not one
diffident daffodil ruining it.
I sat underneath the
burning sycamore tree.

There stood a placid man’s granddaughter
in lingerie so small,
it had to be custom ordered.
A little girl of destructive desire
with a russet armpit
and a patch of tender hair
where her legs and hips met.
Her nipples in full bloom
in virile pollinated spring air.
Like mercury marinating in my meat,
there’s that poison inside me.

My Civic drove over
on its own self will.
I snatched up my target, the
little eye catcher, and
pushed her into the
passenger side.
She gave me a
vacant lascivious grin.

Lewd kids ran from over
the hazy hillock and
made obscene gestures
and degrading requests.
“Bring me, too!” they said.
“There’s not enough room
in the inner circle of Hell!”
I ejaculated.

***

Frederick Frankenberg lives in Highland, NY. @FredIsAWriter 

Tuesday, 5 March 2024

Lightning by Thomas Zimmerman

Elsa Lanchester in The Bride of Frankenstein, 1935



The streaks of gray like lightning in your mother’s
hair: like Elsa Lanchester, The Bride 

of Frankenstein. You’ve stomped around like Karloff

all your life, a magpie of a man,


an animated corpse. You think you died 

again, mid-2010s, imagined price 


of childlessness. Your introspection’s garnered 

little. You’ve had stitches in your head,


you’ve stood in lightning–Texas, Iowa,

and North Dakota–screaming It’s alive!


Some friends of yours got drunk one night, burned down

a farmer’s barn. Imagine fire reaching


heaven, Zeus in anger hurling it

back down some night as summer lightning. Almost


half a century ago, you and

your red-haired girlfriend loved beneath a massive


oak tree later struck by lightning. Lost

a limb. These branches, bolts, and veins: in skies,


in breasts, in backs of parents’ hands. Now yours.

And something quickens in you. Pray for rain.


***


Thomas Zimmerman teaches English and directs the Writing Center at Washtenaw Community College, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA. His latest book is Dead Man's Quintet (Cyberwit, 2023).  https://thomaszimmerman.wordpress.com/



Saturday, 3 February 2024

Wee-Hour Woes by James Croal Jackson

On the couch by tps12 from Flickr


on the couch
with your black cats
the room is sticky
and my fingers
are attached
to everything
including
but not limited to
my palm
the gum beneath
the end table
and the beery
lamplight switch
we used to turn
off everything
then glue our
eyes to sleep

***

James Croal Jackson lives in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA. His latest chapbook is A God You Believed In (Pinhole Poetry, 2023). jamescroaljackson.com

Wednesday, 31 January 2024

Poem by Mykyta Ryzhykh



 Previously published in Pegasus

my mother counts the amount of lead and uranium in the earth’s soil
the earth is round like the earth
the sky is black like a mining night
my mom takes the button out of her stomach
father is eloquently silent
the father is not sure that he is the father
Mary is not sure about anything either
and only the baby puts his feet on the milky ground
the Magi bring gifts to the baby Jesus – gills and a gas mask

Saturday, 13 January 2024

RISK by Elizabeth Buchan-Kimmerly

 

Previously published in Dribbles, Drabbles and Postcards

The door latch is broken, of course. It's been four years since The Event. All the canned goods are gone from the kitchen. Looted or eaten by the long gone owners? 

Hard to tell.


No one has lived here in months, maybe years. There's rat shit all over. The dog whines. Must be some rats still around. Some one took all the warm clothes. Blankets too. For use or for trade?

Hard to tell.

Looks like no one has taken the risk of the cellar. The wooden stairs have collapsed into a pile of termite ridden rot ten feet below the door. That could have been before The Event though. 

Hard to tell.

Drop a knotted rope down and another with a canvas duffel bag for whatever can be useful. A workbench offers rusty hammers and screwdrivers. Put them in the duffel. The power tools are useless of course, but there would be some copper in the electric motors. Worth salvaging? 

Hard to tell.

The dim light from dirty windows shows another door and behind it a root cellar. With row upon row of home-canned fruit and tomatoes. Dust off the bottles. How long have they been here? Fill the duffel and hoist them into the light . No signs of leakage, fermentation or mold. How safe would they be to eat? 

Hard to tell.

Try some on the dog. If she lives, we eat. If not, we eat her.