CHRYSANTHEMUM / FIVE WILLOWS LITERARY REVIEW is an Online literary review of the Chrysanthemum Literary Society for selected works that fit the spirit of Mr. Five Willows. Send your work via email to koonwoon@gmail.com both in the body of the email and as an attached Word file. Response time is immediate to 2 weeks. Thank you. All donations are tax-deductible.
Sunday, January 16, 2022
Thursday, January 13, 2022
Poem _____________________ Deanna Scott
Changing Seasons
Trampling on shining
sumac
Sitting at the edge of
the meadow
The
trees hummed a soft melody at the end of fall
Winter responded by
grabbing the baton
I didn’t know I was ready
The last of the shrubs
forming a colony with shiny leaves Resembling the birds flying
Stop worrying
I will always protect your
gentle footsteps
A cluster of red
berries fell on my head
Silly girl
This is the easiest
transition
Fall leaves turn scarlet
red
Allow things to come
Accept the universe’s treasure
As nature rotates
The gift of seasons.
Tuesday, January 11, 2022
David Gilmour __________________ two poems
DREAM-DOG
Say, it
was vivid! -- akin to something --
Someone
alive and kicking.
I know I
should have caught that 4:11 am
Dream
lingering at the empty platform,
When I sat
bolt upright, I saw myself
As if
myself saw me in the high-
Density reflective
mirror of that world.
A crisis
whether to arise,
Dress,
eat, and climb aboard the blank page;
Whether to
drop back down the rabbit's hole to sleep.
Had it,
fed it, bled it, died!
Alas, that
frisky puppy of a dream-dog
Up and
abandoned me. Carried on a carriage,
Taken on
the brain-train,
Chuffing
on down those serpentine tracks
Until the
rails went skew,
Now's
blowing smoke in distant fields
Where
poetic frogs used to croak.
Through
channels reamed by rumination,
The barge
hangs by some mooring post,
Along by
now a narrow ditch, a psychic lair
Where
something more than frog was spawned,
Where it's
at home,
Like
simple souls a while ago,
Who
chattered, smoked, and sipped green tea
Over
yellow formica breakfast tables,
Morning
sun in streams of gold,
Through
the hazy kitchen windows.
TRANCE FORMATION
The cosmic
picture or the uncosmetic chaos
Is pressed
by the spirit of Life
Upon the
walls of its own awareness.
Rainbow
arcs, moon above the pyramids,
Cliff faces,
glassy mountain ribs.
The listener
might see a spectral fragment,
The large
red,
A lamp
glowing upon a triangular plane,
A rough
stone, tragic ledges,
A dead drop
into blue chasms.
Nature’s
mass can be reordered:
Coherent
line, measure, form, and word.
The singer’s
synesthetic eye,
A wild iris,
savage thought.
A maelstrom
of meanings:
Pristine is
white,
Black is
pure, men are wheat,
Women
violets with a deep, deep core.
Raven, a
nightjar,
And a sign
of spring—cuckoo!
All
concocted transformations,
Laden
galleons sailing across classifications
To an
unknown shore,
The blades
from bristling pines
Palming the
foaming eddies,
Skimming
across orders
To an
ineffable shore,
Down to
earth experience,
Amber and
frankincense.
Out they fly
from the cave of dreams,
Carlsbad-like
gusts of plumage,
Beauties
once worn by cargo cultists
Now extinct
in paradise
In faraway
Sarawak.
Soaring,
Focusing on
all divine planes,
Swift
squadrons,
Drawing
evening in,
John Grey _____________________ three poems
I HAVE BUT ONE TRUE HOME
Here is the house in which I lived.
There is the quiet
spot
where I could
inhabit the darkness,
a womb where I was
moved into
after my mother’s could
no longer hold me.
Other people live
there now.
A woman waters the
garden.
Kids play in the
yard.
A small dog barks at
me,
like I’m some
burglar casing the joint.
I’m really casing
the past,
a different dog,
different woman,
and one of those
kids,
the smallest one, is
me.
The eyes have done
their job.
Now memory takes
over.
THE TRUCKS AT NIGHT
I'm going home to sleep
but who knows where they're headed.
Sleep could be
and maybe there's no sleep,
just uppers and the monotony
of route 95.
Maybe there's a truck stop or two
along the way
where they can park these roaring behemoths
and pass the dead of night
with fellow creatures,
taste the coffee,
see the trips they've made,
have still to make,
in the red of other trucker's eyes.
I think I've got it bad
until I read of miners stuck in hell-holes,
chemical workers breathing cancer
on the job,
or see these weary road knights
rattling down the highway,
full tank of diesel,
head almost on empty.
WHY TRY TO CHANGE ME
I share an apartment with a gelded dog.
I was in a long-term relationship.
It broke up a year ago.
Her mother was a harridan of the old school.
I did the best I could for her.
Not enough of course.
And I do see her now and then
at the local hangouts,
We refer to ourselves as friends.
(We’re not really but there is
no personal noun to go with indifferent.)
My dog looks on me
as everything there is
and more besides.
And I was the one who had him fixed.
I was once shacked up with
a series of misunderstandings.
Now I live with an irony.
Once I was on my own.
With no nouns to speak of.
Sunday, January 9, 2022
John Gorski -------------- three poems
Questioning Poets
Queries for Keats
Why did you walk through twenty-five
miles of November rain
in a flimsy springtime waistcoat,
immune to thoughts insane?
Did you think death was no more
than a laudanum dream –
an apparition murmuring
of that not fully seen?
But you knew it had arrived
like the Italian sun
in your fevered rooms in Rome
of breathless consumption.
Did you ever hear portents
in the nightingale’s song
that you wouldn’t live to Wordsworth’s age
or even half as long?
A Query for Clare
Why did bird song stay in your head
from Emmingsale’s heath
where Night Jars called and the hawk
whistled like a thief?
You didn’t heed the cold-eyed
men of science in London
who peered through the sterile glass
at the corpses of robins.
Ignorant henchmen of commerce
lived in that city,
their black thorn hearts icy toward
avian poetry.
How could they hear other bird tunes
as nightingale music
which you still heard within the walls
that housed lunatics?
2021 John
Gorski
Childhood Idles
Teddy Bricks, my one-time ursine companion,
slouches in a corner chair – his faded green
vest and feathered Robin Hood cap askew.
His metal limbs are old and twisted.
When I wind him up, he can no longer
execute his mechanical somersaults.
Sad in disrepair, he commiserates
with my sister’s bear, Teddy Bebe,
who’s grown pudgy and moth eaten.
Now they rest in the spent morning’s
shadows, as I reach for my shoe box
of baseball cards. I shuffle the smiles
and stances of Walt Dropo, Elroy Face,
Ted Kluzewski and Yogi Berra through my hands.
After lunch, I go out to our back yard
with my bat and rubber ball and pretend
to be Gene Woodling – the only Baltimore
Oriole hitting over 2.60. I’m swinging
for the fences (sixty feet away) and
trying to hit that red orb all the way
to Glen Burnie (a half mile away).
Through the kitchen window, the Coasters
harmonizing “Young Blood” draws me out
of that August Maryland swelter to drop
a lemon-lime Fizzie in a glass of ice water.
Then, I look through my collection
of Rhythm and Blues trading cards
to see if I can find one of The Coasters
among Laverne Baker, Little Richard and Elvis.
At twelve years, I finally learn
to ride a bicycle and pedal out
with my friends to beaches on the Severn River.
There, I watch sails billow over glittering
liquid blue towards Chesapeake Bay.
2021
John Gorski
Hamilton County Purgatory
“He would have
convicted Jesus Christ too,” the thirtyish
Corrections official exclaimed when he saw me enter
the third floor of the Hamilton County jail. I had just come
from the Common Pleas court of Donald White where I was
found guilty of possession of marijuana – still a felony in
1970.
I guess I looked
innocent in my suit and tie and Ivy League
short hair. I said, “ I think I’ll get probation because I’m
going to college.” “So, you’re smarter than the average
bear,”
he shot back, using the culturally dated TV lingo typical of
the
Ohio River valley.
Then a guard
escorted me to my cell and I met the other
occupant, who was waiting to be remanded to a hospital
for the criminally insane. Other detainees drifted into my
cell
over the next twelve days. Some would be going to the Ohio
pen.
Some asked if I had brought any weed with me. Of course, I
hadn’t
since “I was smarter than the average bear.”
During that time,
I met an assortment of interesting people. One
of them was in for smuggling. He was from my high school and
a first
string member of the basketball team. He told me about my
senior
class president who got busted with two others for smashing
a plastic
statue of a llama in a city park. The llama was stuffed with
packets of hashish. Another was a member of a motorcycle
gang
who discussed the merits of eating grasshoppers. One got
drunk
and forged a check.
One day, the
warden let us watch an old black and white B movie
from the forties. In it, a gang of convicts were on a train
chugging
over an elevated railroad bridge when one of them was thrown
from the train. Everyone cheered.
On Sundays, Top
40 radio was piped in over the public address
system. Melanie wailed “Candles in the Rain” while someone
said:
“That white girl sounds kind of weak; why can’t they play
Aretha.”
Then Norman Greenbaum was singing “Spirit in the Sky.” I
closed
my eyes and saw myself in a dark earthen cellar, looking up
at
a door flooding with white light. It reminded me of reading
Pilgrim’s Progress where the pen and ink sketched sun seemed
to expand at the end of every chapter.
Then one day the
guard said I was getting out tomorrow. The next
morning, the “key” arrived in the form of a probation
officer. It seemed
“The Curse of Harry Anslinger” was beginning to lift and the
1930’s era
marijuana laws were receding.
Then my father arrived and we rode into a
pulsing March morning of
of rainy light. After two weeks in windowless halls, it
lifted me in a rhapsody.
That night the purgatory of jailed voices vanished from my
sleep.
2021 John
Gorski
Friday, January 7, 2022
"The Warsaw Pact" by Koon Woon
The
Warsaw Pact
There
are losers from Eastern Europe living in this apartment building, as well as
Asians, and Blacks and a couple of indigenous people. We are sometimes a
conflicting community. But the Whites, albeit poor, rule. The Russian is seldom
home for this reason? I am China-born Chinese and my age should command
respect, but it doesn’t. Things are not like they are in the old country.
In
some ways, this is a Jean-Paul Sartre story. There are a few viable exits and so
we wait for Godot. Sometimes one can smell death coming on and sometimes one
can narrow it down to which of the nine floors. And when an occupant is not
seen for a prolonged period of time, their worried relatives will find a
putrefying mess in that room. And so it goes, Kurt Vonnegut Jr.
It
seems though that the formula 3% Chinese living here is both admired and
resented. According to Emily the Black lady with one functioning eye, the Whites
and the Chinese got all the money. It could be so, but the Chinese who don’t
play along with the white agenda remain in Chinatown, where massage parlors
mushroom in recent times when smuggled aliens are well hidden in the Chinatown conclave
where the police seldom assess unless it is horrendous enough of a crime such
as Wah Mee.
There
are all kinds of misconceptions here, of course. Approximately half of the people
here are disabled and of those, half are mentally ill, and the other half are
seniors enough they either don’t care or unable to care. But it is like Roethke’s
“Root Cellar,” the Congress of stink here struggles to survive.
(To
be continued…)
-
Koon Woon
January
7, 2022
Thursday, December 30, 2021
David Gilmour
Encounter with Frogs
What is an impression worth?
A frog. And a jar of ruddy leeches.
When I say “frog,” I think “Frogs.
Frogs are good to think.”
The matter of frog experience first floats
Then sinks mostly unknowable, spuriously
Into the spawning pond of memory.
It’s a rich seminal soup, full of eyes,
Magnified, each a natural universe.
These eyes are vocal once they spring
Breaking through the skin of things.
In season, everywhere. Then they’re out.
Wonders of compromise, they extend themselves
To bridge the poles of water world and padded land.
And the extensions can be perceived from the eyes
As orderly change, clear and strange,
As leggy fish with iguana tails,
As animals flying on all fours,
Fully outstretched, twice their size,
Jumping, climbing piggy-back,
Unabashedly clambering onto one another’s backs,
Orange on orange, green on green,
Clinging colorfully, eyes bulging,
They seem a surprise even to themselves.
When they leap
From the dense compact of bone and skin,
The plastic tapestry
Takes shape. As lightning bolts or spotted lilies on fresh
green waters.
Frogs.
Frogs are naturally good to think,
To take inside as part of insubstantial life,
Changing order, cruising the classifications.
Their song defeats the ears, allegro!
The rhythmic noise communicates,
Encroaching on all other senses,
Setting forth reverie:
Bullrushes,
Against the moon and stars,
Spiked grasses on the mirror lake,
Edging the weeds, where
Sedge warblers are sleeping on blue eggs.
The scene you see cannot be forced,
Cannot be tidily arranged
By science or dulling habit.
My eyes within no longer truly see.
There they swim in thicker waters,
As Comets,
Shooting across the neural galaxies,
Where they re-connect icons.
From a blade of grass, the rest:
The moon,
Stars
Pond
Echoing ripples across
Shattering the constellations,
Ruffling the lily pad
And its camping amphibious motility.
Making the connections symphonic, concrete,
Like visiting forgotten shrines,
So much depends on Memory.
Glazed frogs transporting—déjà vu—
Faint essences to flush meadowlarks
From the nesting spirit
To wild flights of fancy.
Each a winged message,
Calling, answering unasked questions.
My gaze, pilgrim in a landscape
Painting itself inside,
Inviting me to choose the color and the brush.
This is a risky business,
Uninhibited mind-blooming,
Thinking
On the odd chance a relevant word
Will leap the illogical impasse.
by David Gilmour
Day
Hike, Whidbey Island
(for Joy)
On
the prairie’s far north side we strike
the bluff trail, wind lush with salt,
with
stories pried from kelp.
Or
have we always owned their song?
An eagle glides forty feet above us,
wings
held aloft without a quiver.
Dark
as anthracite, it drifts toward terrain
only it can occupy, more stunning
than
even the lagoon trapped between beach
and
bluff. When we pause by a stark,
sun-bleached log I see beyond you
the
path it takes, the descent into myth,
a
port I long to visit. No, not visit—
recover.
Fling my net over a dream
claimed
as birthright, a child’s first realm.
Baseball,
fairy tales, hazelnut trees atop
a wild ravine—all food to nourish
the
living no less than a prodigal rain.
Like
this bird’s passive flight. Such
creatures
open us like shells. What tide must
we
invoke to cross the water?
Perego’s Trail at Ebey’s Landing
A few miles
from home, our get-away from months
Of
melancholic habitation,
Dolorous
rounds of merest metabolism,
Out here,
even flat fields lay as still wonders,
Farmed
prairies leveled in spring plantings,
Inspiring us
out of ourfallow bodies like clouds
About to
burst after too much drinking in the dark.
Was high time
for two of us to center on one
From perverse
suburban cycles of delivery and receipt,
To get up for
some other purpose than habit presents.
Across from
Coupeville on the Whidbey map, Perego’s Trail,
Ascending on
the outermost edge of the yellow bluff, took us,
Upward from
Ebey’s Landing, hundreds of feet, treading
The line
between the wild and the good, the lower Straits
Opposite
Dungeness and cultures plats of Sherman’s Land.
Out of limbo
we trod the path toward the north where
Perego’s
brackish ponds limn the narrow strand below,
Heaped around
with drifted logs and scraggly stumps
Once bound
for Skagit mills. Claims in every
direction
Had been
named with history’s lumber, now standing
In shacks and
mansions that coursed down rivers
Into weirs
and settled at last vagabond in tamed banks
With tired
sailors’ dreams for safe landings and boarding
A welcoming
community nestles in.
From the
beach, the trail rose northward up sturdy planks,
Switch-backing
to land, then angling west to the Sound,
Narrowing to
the line climbing the lower bluff’s rim,
Where at
stations crude benches were set for those soon weary.
Our eyes
askance, we strode past turning points, glancing
Out to sea at
fingertip islands and the peninsular thumb
Of the giant
who held the Sound as a mirror in his palm.
Climbing
still to take the trail where the air hummed
In the
pockets of morning sun, music of a million bees,
Dancing on
cello wings, busy among the dog rose, pink
Gems on hedges,
spikey, thick and green against the fields
Of fox tails waving
to the east as we glanced that way.
At first the
swath was worn by companies into three
Tracks: one
clear, black sand; the two beside it, matted grass,
Leading us up
past Sherman’s rich green acres to the right
And higher
over the gray shingled shore to the left, where
Covered heads
and backs crouched low, combing the leavings
By the driftwood
webbing that snagged worthless treasures
Brought in by
last night’s rough tide.
Luminous the
calm waters over Admiralty Inlet spread constant,
Vast splendor
of the fading turquoise horizon of Juan de Fuca Straits.
Gleaming
furrows of the tilled fields had a distant meeting
Beyond the
red-winged blackbird balancing on the fence line.
Rising further,
the path retreated along the wild ridge, stitched
In firs and
patches of Oregon Grape merging on shimmering borders,
The nature of
our minds wakened in the see-saw of thought,
As the brown
buntings we noticed hovering before, alighted
Like
illusionists on the soft silk of fragile stalks,
Waving light
as air, bowing them double with their scant weight,
A moment’s
bare clinging, then snapping like catapults into the breeze.
Emotion
arising, the whistle of the blackbird perched on the post,
Grass heads
brushed against our calves and feather ticked the bends
Of our knees,
as bees led the way before our feet, without a drone,
At controlled
and reasoned distance from our slowing footfalls.
Upward.
Upward.
Throbbing
reflections on the dappled turquoise below met a bluing line
Where a
solitary seal arced over and glided in its elemental quest
Out into the
darker depths.
Throbbing
reflections penetrating the inward currents
Washed the
outer gleam from wide-eyed questioning—
What is that
within me, self-directed in what direction?
Who is behind
me?
Two hundred feet up we
stood to gaze behind
At the
boomerang arc of the strand stretching back.
Here, the
grasses flattened down near the bluff’s edge
Brought us to
rest on the next rise of the narrowing path.
Lying supine,
We closed our
lids to the blue dome.
A purple
ceiling of the temple with a yellow eye pulled away
From my
being, taking all noise, purpose, and thought,
Carried aloft
on an ethereal balloon beyond geometry,
As Apollo
might have lifted off once from his Delphic throne.
She, my wife
not the oracular priestess type, lay suspended
In her temple
at my side, always more practical, stirred
When she
heard the drone of an airplane
Flying too
close to her distant reveries,
or else the
wind came and so the stars began to fizzle
as the breeze
mounted against the cliff and strummed upon the grasses.
Then it grew
quiet as a desert.
The first
fire nearby was a simple, pink rose she plucked
To savor in
her cupped hands the warm, sweet balm
And held it
close for me to breathe, her eyes closing,
Indicating
much more than the closing of the lids, that,
Bending down,
in that floral bowl I watched for stars
Until her
hands withdrew the fiery scent.
Sun at
zenith, dazzled by the sky, righting ourselves
We faced
further north, resuming the rhythm in earnest.
Epics took
place between our feet.
Ranks of
frantic ants crossed the trail, swimming
Through the
dusty track, risking all the tribe.
One loner
clung to the head of an upturned pill-bug,
Writhing like
a many legged turtle, ant legs
Scrambling in
the sandy grains, yanking at its load,
Going, going
nowhere, getting but getting nowhere,
Just like
Sisyphus.
A spider lay
crumpled in the corrugated treads of a biker’s
Tire
marks. A centipede, two inches of coild
black chain
Wound around
itself, a sun spiral in eclipse.
The trail
twitched with injured insects as we rose
To the
bluff’s height, where the wind was harping
A new harmony
among the tattered pines.
Eerily, to
the seaward, as if clawing a my ear,
An eagle held
itself braced on the updraft,
Mere yards
distant, wings rattling like bronze quills.
I heard no
kite like it for stability,
And I saw its
eye, an eye that truly looked,
I watched
that eye looking, seeing, back at me,
Its acetylene
stare, fearless and knowing,
Auspicious,
tranquil as a living angel with a heavy brow,
Whose gaze
transfixed me like alost lamb.
In one
hovering moment, I felt a free-fall
Before the
sky lightened again and turning away
Its beak with
smoother-back white hair,
This propitious
surfer dropped downward toward the shore
Following the
arc of the bay, doubled by itsown gray ghost
Cast upon the
shingle beach below,
Remaining in
the open air, while I walked on in stumbling gait.
The wind
dropped.
The water now
so calm a kayaker might course crossways
Over the
ultramarine veins of the inlet.
Small birds
bobbed in the shallows.
Cormorants
dove and held their search so long
We lost
track.
Gulls, absent
till now, rained down in shrieks of panicked
Consternation,
fighting for a space
In the
feeding ring around the gamboling seal.
Above
Perego’s Lake, the trail ended and turned
Downward
steeply to the beached whales of driftwood.
It was living
on this edge, and transitions were made
In a moment.
Either we
trace back the way we came or one carefully placed
Foot-fall
down and bridge began to form that way.
She held my
shoulders from behind, and together we made descent
As a centaur
might onecehave ventured down a slope
When Triton’s
horn called the dancers to the laughing waves.
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Koon Woon in Quail Bell Journal: http://www.quailbellmagazine.com/the-unreal-20/poetry-seattle-3-poems-by-koon-woon
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DEPTH GAUGE Standing on the sunlit bank Throw yourself into the stream, shadow and all If you are in substance ready to plumb th...