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Creator And Other Poems

Creator

by Julian Schild

 

Voice of my inner ambition.

single spire, body of plastic, ballpoint tip,

miniature tower, a single arrow

paper its target, words its momentum.

 

Creator of knowledge, recorder of thoughts.

Actions never undone, only hidden

by those who made mistakes through you, 

obscured with paper or ink.

 

Spear of literature, 

cutting your story of inky blood

into the very history of my existence.

Mortality expressed by ink, 

life expressed by your work

weaving a legacy of knowledge,

old as the sands of time

a humble tool, complex in its simplicities

an unresting instrument of sagas and legends.

 

Destroyer and creator of worlds, lands, peoples

your power is unmatched by presidents, dictators, even gods

for your bounds are only that of the imagination.

 

And when we all die out,

civilizations crumbling into dust,

your legacy still stands,

unbreaking.

 

Pop!

by Jack Owens

 

They litter the air with a sound smooth as butter,

yet sharp as a shock, repetition as stutter.

The microwave dings after a minute or two,

overjoyed by the news I let out a “Woohoo!”

The bag opens to reveal this gold haze,

I admit, I like dipping each kernel in mayonnaise,

I don’t feel shame as I reach my hand afar,

as I pop open the lid of that sleek mayo jar.

I imagine each popcorn just like a real person,

running and dodging as my reach my hands towards it,

I waterboard each one in white creamy goop

grinding the masses before they get sent down my chute

I couldn’t be happier as I play popcorn festivities,

ruin the popcorn metropolis with popcorn atrocities.

Yes, I like popcorn in my twisted own way,

because frankly, I just dont give a damn what they say!

 

Now I Prefer Blue

by Jorja Reed

 

You told me you like red, 

I like red too. 

Red reminds me of you.

Not rose red, more of a cherry red.

 

But not Rainier or Maraschino cherries,

not even tart Balaton cherries.

You remind me of a Sweetheart cherry. 

Cherries with deep red skin, 

and a hard pit. 

 

You told me you like red –

that makes sense

I liked red too.

Red still reminds me of you. 

But now I prefer blue.

 

Fossils

by Wren Alger

 

Fossils

that sting, biting with bruising stabs underfoot

out of sight, soot and dust keep them submerged

sunk and scuttled, unseen forgotten wrecks therefore made pointless.

What a relief, seeing as the point – that those fuzzy memories keep fading –

Can remain

 

Buried under slightly younger fossils.

Lines of a song that echo through empty halls,

reverberate off walls, air turning fuzzy as chords tightly knot

not loosening till the chorus crescendos, blaring sunbeams

that distort and blur like a daydream’s crayon drawing

a crude lime green dinosaur, bones now scattered underground
  

Buried under fossils that are younger still.

Something else, mostly taking, seldom giving, its hands spin

what’s your name again? Locking faced behind frosted glass 

The rest left a mystery, old friends suddenly but easily lost to history 

a vault with an open door but too much gold to carry it all out 

 

Buried under scattered gleaming things 

Exhibits lovingly curated, left as gifts for me to unearth

soothing silky down that wraps warmly around me like an embrace

petals on the bubbling surface of a spitting sea, currents that pull them down 

becoming fossils, layered on forever.

 

Leaves

by Anonymous

 

Leaves who breathe before the morning’s rise

leaving us with nothing but goodbyes.

The summer we once had leaves without a trace

and the leaves fall throughout the twilight breeze.

Singing from the wind telling us to fly,

faces in orange light scaring us out.

 

Air dancing with small makeshift metal chimes

whispering about the season of pie.

Green, yellow and everything orange piled together

layered into mountains of dead and deceased.

Houses covered in fall, wood and tile,

rain carrying memories and empty space.

 

The yard that grieves is covered in leaves,

most haunted part of fall, scarecrows never fall

Heavy clouds form a wall over the sea

mazes formed from scare and things that crawl.

 

Rain pouring over trees flying in the breeze.

The river that flows, forming its weave.

when the day turns to eve…

 

…and the season finally takes its leave.

 

Photos by Shambhava Srikanth

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The Pigeon Press staff is committed to truth, justice, accuracy and the American way.

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