Heart o'Heart


Tuesday, November 07, 2006

“Cruising Lake City”
by Chris Forhan

Car full of fuckups, unlaureled easy ironists,
’twas witlack we suffered, ’twas sixteen
and Emerson, Lake, and Palmer
and inexact timing, fingers drumming the dash
and seat backs, a kind of piety in that,
Scott’s mom’s dilapidated Plymouth,
burger bags, bullhorn for public wisecracks
in Kurt’s Pakistani accent, ’twas certitude
and love, love
like a fox that gnawed at our chests, Al
rolling his window down on Beth’s block
to place in each mailbox
a tiny mustard pack, I
slouched in the back, a mistake with a face,
what fuse in Sue Cardinal’s heart
had blown so it could not want me, so it would not
grieve if I kneeled and died
beneath her window, unhouseled, how about that,
night fog like wool in the trees,
none of us mentioned it, directionless
we rode, conjunctionless, without
although, without because, just
this, this, this
and us, which was almost enough.


Thursday, November 02, 2006

None of Them Wanted to be a Cloud
by Tom Hunley

a line from Lorca's “Ode for Walt Whitman”

I wanted to be a cloud. Clouds are going places.
Clouds are never voted most likely to succeed,
but they're always the most likely to surprise,
which is a kind of success, if that is the goal.
Only a fool would write “Don't ever change”
in a cloud's high school yearbook.
A cloud knows what it is like to be white
and what it is like to be black.
A cloud knows what it is like to live as a man,
what it is like to live as a woman,
what it is like to take the form of a dog
with only three legs, the form of a beheaded octopus,
its legs stretched and then pulled apart.

Clouds are not lonely, William Wordsworth.
For I have seen them travel in crowds.
They have reminded me of sheep.
I've seen a sunburned cloud. Its suffering
filled the sky with such beauty!
Clouds are the sky's chameleon poets.
I have seen clouds weep, unashamed.
They cover a multitude of sins, and when
they're full of all they've seen, they burst.
When clouds part, good things happen:
a streak of sunlight dividing the sky
into two delicious pieces of blueberry pie,
a Jacob's Ladder, a holy dove,
a sign from up above that says
We're having a party and everyone's invited .

Clouds have such lovely, comforting names,
cirrus , nimbus , stratus , cumulus ,
bestowed on them by the Quaker chemist Luke Howard (1772-1864).
But you can't count on clouds.
You don't know how they'll vote.
Whether they'll dissipate before election day,
float far away from the polling places,
or what winds they'll let themselves be steered by.
You can't shop for a cloud.
A cloud's trouser size differs from day to day.
You can't bring a cloud in for show-and-tell.
You can't give a cloud a proper burial.
You can't afford to let a cloud enter your door.
It will camp out over your head.
It will eat at your memories.
It will affect your judgment.
It will cruelly enact what is happening
little by little, to each of us.