SurVision Magazine |
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An
international online magazine that
publishes Surrealist poetry in English.
Issue
Nine
DIANA RICKARD Leonora
Leonora stood in the
moonlight
amid serpent-like trees and we stood frozen frightened of her green orb and her tail. Inside we sorted through handbags like large birds took an inventory of our many possessions. This was the last day so close to fire to a heart dark as the sea. We divided the eggs and looked at each other like strangers while Leonora waited with woodsy patience. I did not want to forget this but there was a dense vision inside me and I knew I would succumb. How old were we all those years ago? What happened to my persona, to that specific November breeze, to the soft grass of my own psychic territory? Meret
The
utopian dream of androgyny packs negative space
with an ugly mustard, straw twigs of hair like my hair. Whatever you do, do not have babies. Do not paint six indistinct shapes, playdough tied to a chain, a giant dust bunny a suffocating lint cloud. The anatomy of vocal emptiness is a pastel stroller behind wire, rumble of branches, leaves, blurring trunk, chicken-feet limbs that tip on grass and the belly is a place of rest, a malleable mound hugging deep sounds and slow moves like the belly of the earth. I'm a maggot in the face of beauty. They can't count me. The utopian dream is a thick charcoal line and an unmistakable fallopian tube. My head is teeming with angels, Fiorucci kitsch curls above spotted attire, flag of white trees and flimsy pantaloons. Mud horizon, mud ground, mud hill oppress tiny people, dark with primordial woodsy fear. I'm a single lamb in a bleak landscape flecked with the cruelty of war and even more mud. The comedy of death at night a jumble of bright bones, slithering silverfish. My eye is moony and beguiles. It beholds spring, an April near to me in the creeping shade just beyond, fashioned with knotty nests, dented, coiled greens. Diana Rickard lives in Brooklyn, New York. She is Associate Professor at Borough of Manhattan Community College, CUNY. Her recent poems appear in Across the Margin, The Outrider Review, Mayday, and Streetnotes. |
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