~These poems were selected
by Clara Jane Hallar, Assistant Editor for Poetry.
~This poem was previously
published in Nimrod International Journal (2011).
A
Broken Abecedarius of How Things Might Be if the World Were Saved
Achoo! at the beginning of a tale.
Beasts
wandering in daylight, unafraid of being shot, even
Centaurs,
who would not be drunk any more if invited to your wedding.
A dragon
or a dinosaur named
Ellen.
Flies who
would go to the front screen door on command so you could
let them out.
Galumphing
as the normal gait of soldiers.
Hazelnuts
that fall one by one into the mouth of the Salmon of Wisdom who swims
beneath, until the time comes for her
to be caught by a wizard’s
apprentice and cooked over a slow
fire until she has rendered up all the
wisdom remaining in her unsung
parts. But
I digress. . . .
Intoxication
once a day by the scent from white
Jasmine
flowers tumbling over a garden wall, except for the
Keepers of
Butterflies, who would need to remain sober.
Loping as
an alternate choice (see G above).
More
respect for Dame Love, who has thoughtfully abolished Reason.
Nearly all
the children reaching the house in the middle of the forest, where they will be
temporarily changed into birds, and
introduced to their hearts’ desire by a very
Old bear,
who knows all the tales with caves in them.
Pearls of
music rolling around between the warm, uneven bricks, under the chairs.
Quiet
Regales of
yellow leaves, and the musk of grapes.
Sisyphus
released from duty but staying on as a volunteer on weekends when he has
Time off
from being a taxi driver in New York, something he has always wanted to
try.
An upset
Victory by
Whim, who
has finally convinced Steven Hawking that she is indeed the final black hole
into-which-and-from-which comes
Xanadu
with its plazas and feasts, its gardens of endless endings for which we have
all
secretly
Yearned—and
to which we have spent the last million years
Zigging
and Zagging (see G above) and where we will arrive this very
AFTERNOON.
*****