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The Spinuet

April 10, 2024

by Daisy Deaton

Once upon a time, there lived a spider on her web.

She was a lonely spider, with no family or friends.

Although a lovely spider, still quite lonely was she.

And every night she wished, “Please let someone come to me.”

Now, Atha was this spider’s name, and what she loved most of all

was the music made by autumn leaves when from the trees they fall,

the blooming of the flowers and the sprouting of the plants,

the crunching of the snowbanks. All made Atha want to dance.

What she wanted most was to make music of her own,

but she had no inspiration. As I’ve said, she was alone.

“Oh, how I wish,” said Atha, “there was someone by my side

to stay with me and live with me. And if there were, then I’d

write them pretty music.” But she had no one, so she cried.

 

One day Atha sat outside, just basking in the sun.

A caterpillar moved in next door, a fat and happy one.

“Hello,” said he, “My name is Gus. I’ll be staying here a while.

How nice to meet you. And your home is lovely.” Atha smiled.

The spider quickly learned this caterpillar meant no harm.

The pair sat and laughed together, clasping their many arms.

“Finally,” the spider thought. “I finally have a friend.

I hope he stays forever so our friendship never ends.”

As time went on a small idea bloomed in Atha’s mind.

She had the inspiration she had always tried to find.

“I finally have something that I thought I’d never get.

He seems to be a friend, at least he hasn’t bolted yet.”

And so the spider Atha decided to write her Spinuet.

 

Every evening after she had spent the day with Gus,

she stayed up late working on her music. And she’d fuss,

“This bit’s too fast. This here? Too short. I’ll have to change this part.”

It wasn’t just a piece of music, it was a work of heart.

The fiery summer days soon slowly segued into fall.

When days were cold the pair wore webby blankets as a shawl.

Gus was often tired, so Atha gave him time to rest.

While he slept she worked on her music. She wanted it to be the best.

Her song was coming on quite well. Atha couldn’t wait to show

her caterpillar friend how he had inspired her so.

The winter days were coming fast. Gus always stayed indoors.

Atha hardly noticed, engrossed in music and her chores.

Her Spinuet was getting long; it covered all her floors.

 

One day she finally finished it! How Atha did rejoice!

She couldn’t wait to sing it with her friend of charming voice.

“Oh, Gus!” she cried, “Come outside! I have a surprise for you!”

No answer came, so she called out another time or two.

Still no answer, so Atha went into the house to see

where Gus had gone. “He couldn’t have gotten far,” thought she.

There was no Gus, but there was a large greenish-brown mass.

Around the room were scattered leaves and bits of nibbled grass.

The spider stood in shock. Her friend was gone. She was alone.

Her Spinuet meant nothing now if she was on her own.

She mourned Gus all the winter long and even into spring.

Atha felt no happiness; she had no happy thing.

“Without my Gus,” she wondered, “how am I supposed to sing?”

 

She checked the caterpillar’s home each day, though nothing ever changed.

She swept the floor and collected meadow flowers, which she arranged.

The Spinuet lay forgotten in a corner of Atha’s home,

but slowly she overcame the sadness and the gloam.

She sat out on her porch one day, just soaking up the sun,

and a butterfly flew past, a very pretty one.

“Hello,” said he. “My name is Gus.” He gave a beautiful smile.

“I hope we can still be friends. I know I was gone for a while.”

“Gus! You’re back!” Atha cried as she gave her friend a hug.

She told him about her Spinuet. You’d never seen happier bugs.

Atha performed the song that night for her butterfly friend.

The pair knew together many more happy days they’d spend.

So goes the story of the Spinuet. Thank you, and the end.

  • The Spinuet
  • Neighborhood.
  • Eve
  • I´m Better
  • Poppies
  • Daisies
  • Not from Around Here
  • Z61.9
  • The Day We Buried Forever
  • Homegrown Sunsets

· Poetry, Spring 2023, Volume 2

Neighborhood.

April 10, 2024

by Lex Foresha

I am from the outdoors.

From all the whining and crying.

I am from the thorn bushes that sat underneath my porch.

Sharp, full of questions and splinters.

The history I cannot hinder.

I am from the tall oak tree that peered through my window.

Always trying to climb to the top but never succeeded.

 

The smell of the grass and flowers I hold dear.

I am from the rashes and all the gashes I got riding my bike.

The taste of blood when I busted my face that one time.

Remember? Of course you don’t. You never did remember.

You weren’t there, I was alone.

 

I am from tenderness.

Two friends finding a way for themselves.

We were Constantly laughing until we could not breathe.

From all of the apologies that came out of my mouth.

I’m sorry can we be friends again?

 

I am from sympathy.

From the acceptance I gave that you took for granted.

We used to always make up until we didn’t.

It’s your fault we don’t speak.

I am from loneliness.

You left and it was just me.

  • The Spinuet
  • Neighborhood.
  • Eve
  • I´m Better
  • Poppies
  • Daisies
  • Not from Around Here
  • Z61.9
  • The Day We Buried Forever
  • Homegrown Sunsets

· Poetry, Spring 2023, Volume 2

Eve

April 10, 2024

by Emma McFarland

I watched in the dimming evening’s light

The milk light of moon shone thick and bright

Laid white upon your supple skin

Full red lips drawn up and thin

 

Honeydew hair flung over shoulders bold

Hands warm and sweet and careful to hold

In between mine they did lay

Cold reach heat like the night to day

 

O, sweet providence, might I declare

Any deep night I find my light standing there

Justice to your splendor could never be done

Not by any words, none even Sappho had sung

 

O, let us be lain under the moon’s milk light

In the always ever gentle throes of the night

  • The Spinuet
  • Neighborhood.
  • Eve
  • I´m Better
  • Poppies
  • Daisies
  • Not from Around Here
  • Z61.9
  • The Day We Buried Forever
  • Homegrown Sunsets

· Poetry, Spring 2023, Volume 2

I´m Better

April 10, 2024

by Allyson Hager

I never thought I would get this far

All of my thoughts are sad and dark

The world looks bleak and I’m too meek

To see the brighter side of things

It’s all too tough, like I’m not enough, and I know I’m not enough

Crying, and shaking, like my heart breaking in pieces

I can barely put them together, but I’m better

I’ll tell them I’m better

 

Have you ever felt like there was no turning back?

When the world turns black?

Like no one has your back.

There’s a pit and it’s empty. Nothing to fill it but lies, and an oversupply of worthless alibi’s

I am a pen with no paper

A question with no answer, but I’m better

I’ll pray that I’m better

 

Sadly, I don’t remember how to feel at all

The mask I wear is becoming too small

I bleed, I break, I fall apart

Like glass, I’m left in fragments and shards

But I try to get better, to put me back together

I really do try, but the best I do is cry, and why don’t tears fix our past goodbyes?

Was that a lie?

 

It’s as if my life doesn’t matter

An envelope with no letter

Like whoever said together is forever, or to continue your endeavor despite all your failures, but whatever, I’m better

For now, I’ll say I’m better

  • The Spinuet
  • Neighborhood.
  • Eve
  • I´m Better
  • Poppies
  • Daisies
  • Not from Around Here
  • Z61.9
  • The Day We Buried Forever
  • Homegrown Sunsets

· Poetry, Spring 2022, Volume 1

Poppies

April 10, 2024

by Creed Kidney

Red poppies dot my mind,

flowering,

in opium haze.

 

I tend to them alone,

watering them

with my body;

my blood, my sweat

and tears.

 

My essence is captured,

withheld

within their pod.

 

I look to them in silence,

apathetic

in their health.

 

There are those

who trample

my poppies;

there are those

who wish them

dead.

 

Some people ask me to grow

sunflowers,

perhaps,

an ornamental grass.

 

But I will continue to grow

my poppies,

learn to smile

as they thrive.

 

As I lean back into

the opiate,

I remember caring for my flowers.

  • The Spinuet
  • Neighborhood.
  • Eve
  • I´m Better
  • Poppies
  • Daisies
  • Not from Around Here
  • Z61.9
  • The Day We Buried Forever
  • Homegrown Sunsets

· Poetry, Spring 2022, Volume 1

Daisies

April 10, 2024

by Creed Kidney

The field whispers,

gossip,

thrown between the trees.

 

A newborn foal,

lies beside her mother,

skin, an arboreal red,

it twitches,

beneath the taught canvas.

 

She bats her eyes,

flicking her tail to

ward away

the flies;

they buzz about,

anxious to see

the baby.

 

I reach out my hand,

alone

in the field with them,

the little one looks up,

whinnying softly,

we sit in reverence of one another.

 

My hand is met

with the softness of a newborn filly,

her plush nose,

her warm breath,

the smell of the earth and

molasses.

 

Nutmeg and I,

cradled

in the daisies.

  • The Spinuet
  • Neighborhood.
  • Eve
  • I´m Better
  • Poppies
  • Daisies
  • Not from Around Here
  • Z61.9
  • The Day We Buried Forever
  • Homegrown Sunsets

· Poetry, Spring 2022, Volume 1

Not from Around Here

April 10, 2024

by Michelle Yadrick

Tell me about your heart’s home

where your seasick grand-grandpa landed

and took an American name

so that someday his children, their children, and you

could reap what he had sown

 

My grand-grandpa’s mountains endured cuts for mines

and our miners endured cuts for execs

I can taste the difference

between Allegheny and Ohio tap water

but not fine wines

 

Traveled feet and wandering eyes

Urban legend to my folktale

you quenched my thirst for knowledge

unshelled me in crowds and

undressed my old disguise

 

I’m halfway between milk teeth and beast

Hell, what could I ever teach you?

How to read the cycles of the moon

stop fearing your shadow

tell when a ginkgo will lose its leaves?

 

I can’t imagine ginkgoes and gibbous

being of much use

to your great ideas and grand plans

Then again, these things amuse you

I just bide the time they give us

 

It’s not my job to keep you here

We both know I can’t be planted out

and this isn’t exactly the land of opportunity

unless you’re a Texan fracker or a pothole

If not my job, I’ll volunteer

 

When you first touched Appalachian stone

what haunted hill-song made you stay?

I listen closely, humming and hoping

that someday I will hold you flush to my heartbeat

like the first out-of-town book I ever borrowed

on interlibrary loan

 

Hometown

I used to pick up insects with my bare hands

and wade for crawdads

Now my hands are hospital raw

and I’m supposed to say “crayfish”

This is the place where

I skinned both my knees

You fell and got bruised

like fruit from the tree

There are lots of berries only birds can eat

We’re animals, too, with very special adaptations

We’re the only animal that can

make fun of itself

This is the porch where

you did trick-or-treat

But the ghosts I saw

were not in white sheets

Did your mom check your candy

the way my mom did?

Or did you gobble it up rotten

before her busy hands could get to it?

This is the office where

they checked my eyes

They said mine won’t make it

to age forty-five

E, F, P, T, O…

I know beauty when I see it

but my Snellen chart ends long

before I can spot genuineness

This is the pavement

we colored with chalk

before I lost my marbles

and you lost your rocks

There’s an old park around here

where the gnats and mosquitos

were drawn to the carbon dioxide

in our tired breath

This is the church where

they scrubbed off my sins

where some of us end

and far more begin

We sat through the whole thing and reek of incense

You’re named for a saint and, I, an angel

but I just didn’t live up to it

after I shed my plaid

Stick out your tongue

and scrunch up your nose

The wound over you

hurts worse when it’s closed

Well I’ve talked with lots of people

about everything just short of you, and I learned

the single most dangerous human condition

is loneliness

Hold my hands, dance with me,

One, two, and fro

Your kiss gave me fireblight

I finally let go

  • The Spinuet
  • Neighborhood.
  • Eve
  • I´m Better
  • Poppies
  • Daisies
  • Not from Around Here
  • Z61.9
  • The Day We Buried Forever
  • Homegrown Sunsets

· Poetry, Spring 2022, Volume 1

Z61.9

April 10, 2024

by Michelle Yadrick

An invisible threat is a germ

Mere touch will lead to illness

It’s not an extraordinary part of the day

Just a door lock or lightswitch

 

Some klutz over there has a cut

and a Dora bandaid

Why on earth would I stick a bandaid

on nothing

 

An invisible threat is a curse

They say 7 years bad luck

but what’s 7 years matter anyway

You’re not counting

 

Some klutz just spilled the salt

in a circle around me

Why on earth would I need protection

from nothing

 

Pediatricians ran against

pre-tornadic wind, prescribing

stickers and lollipops

like they’re controlled substances —

 

butterscotch treatments

to cure my chief complaint

of being dragged here

over nothing

  • The Spinuet
  • Neighborhood.
  • Eve
  • I´m Better
  • Poppies
  • Daisies
  • Not from Around Here
  • Z61.9
  • The Day We Buried Forever
  • Homegrown Sunsets

· Poetry, Spring 2022, Volume 1

The Day We Buried Forever

April 10, 2024

by Ashton Wronikowski

On the day we buried forever,

we went shopping for the casket.

Mahogany, walnut, maple,

each grain and groove gleaming

under the staging lights,

too beautiful to belong

in the ground.

 

You paused at one only three feet long,

eyes held by the satin interior

promising a safe sleep

free of monsters.

I remember forever being that small—

too scared to let her go, we kept indoors.

We built her blanket forts

and mastered make believe,

making sure the blinds were drawn,

so she wouldn’t have a reason to crack a window.

 

Maybe that’s why we lost her.

After she grew out of our arms,

we tried to wrap her in “maybe’s”

and “what ifs”

and “we can make it work”

stretching and

reaching and

telling ourselves

we were all she needed

 

The mortician offered his condolences.

“There’s nothing worse than losing

someone before their time. I’m sorry

you don’t get to see the life

they would’ve lived.”

I’ll never know if he meant it,

eyeing the casket in the rearview.

Tragedy makes a great sales pitch.

 

We found a spot for her,

soft grass whispering,

a willow tree promising to

keep her safer than we could.

We had shovels

but I wanted to claw at the ground,

encrust my nails with dark earth,

tear my knuckles on jagged rocks,

bruise my palms wrenching up roots

deep as our wounds…

 

sewn deeper than we would ever see.

 

We started to fill her box with all we had left—

you put in the coffee mug

whose porcelain cradled my kiss,

I laid in the t-shirt that had

you woven in the thread.

Piece by piece, we laid us to rest,

not just what we had,

but what we never would.

Dog collars.

Ring boxes.

Tiny shoes.

 

I made you close the lid,

another act of selfishness,

and began pushing the dirt back home.

Every thud

a nail,

a period,

a bullet

tearing through her, and us,

and what we could’ve been.

 

There are days when I wish I could dig her up,

to cradle her bones and stroke her hair,

to play dress up and have

just five more minutes.

 

But my nails are finally clean of earth,

my knuckles scabbed over

and my palms faded yellow.

so I’ll let the willow

keep his promise

from the day we were buried forever.

  • The Spinuet
  • Neighborhood.
  • Eve
  • I´m Better
  • Poppies
  • Daisies
  • Not from Around Here
  • Z61.9
  • The Day We Buried Forever
  • Homegrown Sunsets

· Poetry, Spring 2022, Volume 1

Homegrown Sunsets

March 27, 2024

by Kiarra Palmer

The sky paints the picture of a salty goodbye kiss,
the red projected from the sun shows the world
how bloodshot eyes can be a beautiful tragedy.
Different shades of pink floating behind the trees
look like his lips when he closed his eyes,
and told me to drive safe.

The blue fades into colors that sound like love and pain.
The song playing through the car radio reminds me,
reminds me of the first time he said, ‘I love you.’
The next reminds me of the top level of a parking garage,
where he held my hand in his and smiled at the lowering sun,
nodding his head to the music, drinking from my cup of lemonade.

When the sky begins to lie down,
the world squints atand the burning light in adoration,
and I caught myself looking at you how others
look at the resting sun. With adoration,
but also with anger, because I can never fully
open my eyes and let you overtake my being.

The clouds move to form new friendships, new love,
new beginnings, new stories, and new pain.
The pigments of the Heavens pave the road of change.
Limbs on trees glide in the air like fountain pens,
all simultaneously writing the next chapter
of the Earth’s autobiography.

[ display-posts category=”poetry”]

· Poetry, Spring 2023, Volume 2

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