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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.
Wednesday, August 12, 2020
John Grey ..................... three poems
ON A MOUNTAIN ROAD, YOU’RE DRIVING, I’M WATCHING
As I immerse myself
in the scenery,
you grip tight
to the steering wheel,
concentrate on winding
with the winding road,
not against it.
What do I care
if there’s a deep ravine
on one side,
a towering cliff on the other.
I’m part of the mountains.
You’re maneuvering
the turns, the twists,
of the one part
of this spectacular landscape
that is indisputably human.
My reverie
takes me to the very top
of the highest peak.
Your close attention
has you where you are
at any given moment.
That last thing you want
is for is to both go over the side.
That’d be a thousand feet drop for you.
Six thousand for me.
GALE
An indifferent waking,
she invokes a comedy,
her thumb-twiddle
taking on great importance,
her twisted mouth
more for balance than effect.
And then out pop her toes
from the end of the sheets,
flaked with red paint,
wiggling like piglets
sucking on the teats of the morning.
Her arms stretch wide
as lungs retrieve some of the oxygen
gone missing in the night,
then knuckles rub eyes
so vision can move forward.
She lifts herself up on her elbows,
swings legs around,
touches the floor gingerly
like dipping feet in cold water.
Seated side-saddle on the bed,
this is her first portrait sitting
for the day.
Sun warms to the task.
Light is eager to begin.
First, a masterpiece.
Then coffee.
TRASH ON THE SIDEWALK
The battered rusty truck stops.
Old furniture left out on a sidewalk
is loaded onto the back.
Maybe a table with one misshapen leg.
Or a television that needs a thump on the side
to get a picture.
Or a bookcase that’s missing a shelf.
Someone inside the house
glimpses a broken chair being lifted
and they may see the hands
but never the face
of the one taking it.
And the guy doing that lifting
can see something move in the window
out of the corner of his eye
but he turns his head away.
It’s enough they know that
their trash is being taken away.
No need for them to see the one
for whom all this is treasure.
The truck drives off.
The sidewalk is clear.
The castoffs will go
to make his apartment more livable.
The family is relieved
that the junk is off their hands.
He’s anonymous
until his truck gets it to its destination.
Monday, August 10, 2020
Friday, May 22, 2020
Lenora Rain-Lee Good ---------------- three poems
This While
--by Lenora
Rain-Lee Good
I lie next to you this night
listen to your soft snores
feel your chest move up
move down, enjoy your
body so close to mine
and fear this is
our last time together.
A thousand miles and more
separate our homes; I fear
you won't return,
and I cannot come to you.
Age holds us both
in its iron grip; only one way
for us to break free.
I so want to share
with you the years we have left
to treasure you,
to hold you close and tell you
I love you—
but your heart belongs
to the Salish Sea.
If you ask, will the Sea call me,
allow me to be with you?
You and she have years
together; a history you and I
can never share.
I swing between happiness
you have her to love
and tears it is not me.
I do not sleep while we are
together; I lie awake
listen to your soft
breaths
feel your chest move up,
move down
keep you
covered so you don't chill
as you dream of that distant sea
and marvel
you chose me
for at least this while.
Without End
--by Lenora
Rain-Lee Good
i
The clock measures time with
the monotony of a well-made quartz
movement. Barely audible, ticks and tocks
count the minutes of my life;
the pendulum no longer swings
with youthful abandon of self-
absorbed lovers walking through
the park swinging entwined hands
with each step into their future--
a pastel colored dream.
With inexorable precision the
metronome keeps perfect time,
measures the beat of heart,
of song, of life, of death.
The sky grays with predawn light
birds chirp and call the sun.
They live, they sing, they eat,
they die. Where do they bury their dead?
ii
I miss you, I tell
my son.
Why? He asks,
somewhat surprised
and maybe a little embarrassed.
Oh, I reply, no reason—
maybe the garbage
needs taking out.
He laughs, and says
he's going to die. Not
soon
I quickly say. No,
he laughs
at least not to my
knowledge—
but I don't control
that.
We all will die. Our bodies
no longer home to our souls.
In his youth, he pictures himself
worldly wise, accepting.
I wonder his reaction when I die
when I can no longer laugh with him
comfort him. How, then will he think
on death's inevitability?
iii
Reiki music softly
repeats on my stereo.
The wind sneaks
a chill into the house.
Birds squabble for
seed and territory.
El Niño disrupts
our weather pattern.
I smile. The
butterfly beats wings
near a mulberry bush
in a land far away.
Kubota-sama Dreams in Silk
--by Lenora
Rain-Lee Good
His hand, steady, gentle
takes narrow bands of silk
places tiny stitches
silk puckers
mini hills, mini canyons
dyes of love.
Vibrant colors emerge
purple blue pink
golden
the four seasons
in kimono to grace a wall
to grace a body.
Dreams of silk
flare when the wearer
turns in unAsian haste
to betray western clothes
beneath
garish loud.
Kimono evoke
samurai
chivalry
gentility of sword
and seppuku.
Poetry interwoven with pain
shimmer together
in narrow
bands of silk
simple
elegant
regal
dreams of Kubota-sama
become kimono.
Inspired by the book Opulence, The Kimonos and Robes of
Itchiku Kubota
Wednesday, May 20, 2020
Three poems ---- John Grey
MAGGIE
She was all about morning light and lost causes.
Had she been born fifty years before,
she’s have taken up arms in the Spanish Civil war.
But her window looked out on discrimination.
And battered wives. And raids on gay bars.
And kids handed rifles and pointed toward the jungle.
She marched more than some armies
but with placards not weaponry.
And she paid for that more than once –
a blackjack across the skull for example,
or a family that just stopped speaking to her.
She was shot at in the South once.
The redneck missed but she figured next time,
she wouldn’t be so lucky.
But she was lucky.
At least, as much as a woman who lived in
a low-rent flea-trap in the Bronx
could be said to live in sight of fortune’s smile.
She volunteered in foodbanks,
found shelter for the homeless,
read poetry to inmates,
some of it her own.
She never saw herself as a saint.
Just someone who rose to that morning light.
no matter where the darkness had taken her.
She never married. Nor did she have children.
Her long hair went silver in her thirties.
And then, when AIDS came for her friends,
she tended the dying, accosted the indifferent.
Maggie died in ’93, unreported by the newspapers.
The news even took its time getting out to the ones who knew
her.
She’d become more of a hermit by then.
Her health was failing. Her spirit was like a purse
down to its last few grubby pennies.
I like to think that, even in the end,
she kept abreast of the light of the new day.
But then I always like to think.
Maggie liked to do.
ISABELLE Page
One
Fourteen guys you dated.
The first at fifteen,
the last at twenty-five.
One reminded you of your father.
He wasn’t the one you married.
You figure ‘dated’ for an odd kind of word.
Did a movie with friends count?
What about an accidental meeting in a coffee shop?
Will was handsome.
The competition got too fierce,
Dan was cheerful.
That got obnoxious after a while.
You were with Paul for over a year
so the details squeeze together
but you do remember how
there was this kind of acceptance
that he was the one
you’d be spending the rest of your life with
but that fizzled.
And there was Frank.
He really had the mean gene.
Fourteen guys it was.
And surely, they all left some kind
of a mark on you.
None a bruise, thankfully.
But a place in the heart –
even for Joshua
who’s now in an institution.
You could see that coming.
His kisses always felt like symptoms.
Jerry is the one you finally said yes to.
He was the second to ask that question.
Strangely, the two of you didn’t date all that much.
You just hung together.
Neither had much money.
That seemed the cheapest way to honor the arrangement.
ISABELLE Page
Two
And marriage was just hanging
at a whole other level.
You ate out from time to time
but only because the two of you were hungry
and neither felt like cooking.
And you went out to the movies together.
But that was before the neighborhood was wired for cable.
Maybe that was the problem
with thirteen of the fourteen.
They had no idea how to just be some place.
You’ve been together twenty years now.
You’ve worked. You’ve traveled.
You’ve had kids. And, of course, your own home.
If it really is a date, then it sure is a long one.
If you’re still just chilling
then you have redefined the word.
THE MOUNTAINEERS
No point in further discussions.
The slopes before us will not hear of it.
And the peak itself points the way,
to inspire, to intimidate, or both.
We are not heroes. Not particularly smart.
But, unlike most dreams, ours take shape.
They rise up before us on the path we’ve taken.
No way we could ever turn around.
Here in the mountains, words know their place.
And so, does normal, from blinding ice glint
to the rumble of distant avalanches
and that stomach-punch of a drop below.
And the rocks’ chilling faces
are out-ogred by the creeping clouds
and a pure-white goat steps lightly up an incline,
grandstanding while we step shakily.
In the village, we were warned of
sudden weather shifts, told of those
who never returned. Even at lower levels,
there is no small talk.
But here we are, having settled our
affairs, triple-kissed our loved ones,
calmed their fears with our excitement,
and have struggled halfway toward the summit.
And in the mountains, there is nothing
we can say to each other. We just go on.
We know what we have set out to do.
Dangerous yes but, as ever, in our best interests.
Monday, May 11, 2020
It was in effect (Elmira sequence) ---- Koon Woon
It
Was in Effect (Elmira Sequence)
It
was in effect
It
was in effect a river of sorts
the
ocean returned its water
across
the vacant hours at the slow crossings of the afternoons
in
low-blood-sugared towns
while
the pale lights of taverns burned.
The
barber sat in his chair listening to the vacuum tube radio
the
cigar vending machine full of Indianhead nickels
the
Emerson Hotel with its dark stairs leading to dens of vacancy
this
was the coastal Highway 101 in 1960.
Tracing
my path, the random trajectory of a
housefly,
I have coursed through the
backroads
of the Pacific Northwest America when
I
was a bit young for the Beats and not quite old enough for
the
Hippies.
Merely
a schoolboy in the logging and fishing town of Aberdeen when
rain
and windshield wiper swings gave me a rhythm to beat words against
one
another in the English creative writing class.
But
Science was still the reigning discipline and Mathematics its Queen,
as
America raced the Soviets to the moon and beyond after
the
Spudnik scare of 1957.
It
was in effect a town of sorts
the
ocean lapped its tongue here
the
mudflats harbored mussels
loggers
shook dice for schooners of beer while
the
sky threatened to rain all day.
The
Chinese cook diced vegetables,
string
beans a mile long, work expands to fill
idle
hours while the Pacific tides contract and expand
across
the pretense of commerce while
small
fishing boats returned with Dungeness crabs three for a dollar.
The
Beatles were all a rage while the Stones were in a rage
however,
I paid no attention as I was trying to penetrate reality in
physics
class and work out chemical valences and balancing
equations,
that inequality was the fundamental state of the
universe
did not enter my mind, nor did I think of going to law school
as
the classmates who took Latin, justice was blindly followed
until
the war in Vietnam erupted.
I
was a loner who helped out at the family Chinese American restaurant
Even
served my classmates and teachers as waiter
wearing
that yellow waiter’s jacket that my forebears had
worn
for three generations. I bring teapot and tea and
egg
drop soup, and set their dinner down before retreating to a
back
corner booth to puzzle out one last algebra equation.
It
was in effect a time of sorts when
high
school graduates still stayed in town
pulp
and paper mills saturated the air that
spelled
jobs and a fair shake for small homeowners.
These
towns were strung along highway 101
the
scenic drive that took you to Pacifica, California
where
surfing was just getting on film newsreels and
soda
was still dispensed in glass bottles.
When
girls dressed to kill in physics class, they say we even
got
Koon’s attention and yet I was accused of cheating in
biology,
physics, and chemistry where Mr. Sieler gave a set of chemistry
handbooks
with my name engraved in gold,
and
MIT had invited me to their conference in Seattle and urged me to apply to
their
school. Later I did and said I wanted to study electrical engineering or
literature.
It
became obvious I knew nothing of their school as they did not at that time have
a
program
in literature. I received a swift rejection.
It
was in effect a life of sorts
when
Vietnam was still some unfamiliar place in the Orient
when
Ricky Nelson was a traveling man with a pretty girl in every port
and
the price was right every night and Groucho hit his marks.
Those
times and places burned like LSD
that
flashed and burned into the next century, but basically
it
was a time before waking up to the enormous world as it stirred while
the
miser still counted his pennies.
Elmira
Sequence
Who
knows any more of time but its direction?
High
school was completed when I read Heraclitus, who said,
“You
can’t step into the same river twice…”
Night
driving to Eugene, Oregon from Seattle
when
I ended up in a greasy spoon next to the rail station
at
3 A.M. with the university catalogue and black coffee on the counter,
I
suddenly veered from mathematics to philosophy,
keen
on learning wisdom from a Professor Wisdom (no joke) of philosophy.
In
the loneliness of the café, I turned to my first love
that
was neither holy nor profane, also neither of blood nor sinew,
it
was simply Platonic.
Around
me those deported the train ate and gulped coffee
as
daylight broke and here was my destination for mind as well as
for
body. I had not a place to stay and I never did, really; however,
blankets
were in the trunk and my pocket had cash.
I
will register to sit next to Professor Wisdom with other pretentious
kids.
Yes, we were kids, pretentious kids, I was one.
Like
three-leaf clover camouflaged in weeds,
a
lucky find, my love for logical parsimony and elegant
arguments
began here, but I was not stellar.
It
merely meant I did not want to be tainted by the world
and
its worldly goods, for nothing impure will I let into
the
Platonic heaven.
College
begins. Here I am in my well-worn groove
trying
to skip across a few bands by whatever means
to
succeed, at whatever price in rubies or steeds.
Yet
a shiver runs through me –
is
this a pristine discovery? Or a nostalgic longing
for
cold water flats and underheated rooms?
We
could barely cover ourselves in the winter in the village in China!
The
days went around and around as current in a super-cooled coil.
The
lyric impulse rides the Greyhound past the mud pastures of
Elmira.
At the sleepy Post House at 5 A.M., the flies under the
florescent
lights over cakes and frosted donuts. Stirring my coffee, I
think
of Brower’s Fixed-Point Theorem – that if you stir smoothly enough,
a
particle of coffee will end up in its original position.
Math
and philosophy, like the right and left palms, when closed together,
is
a prayer to every solution.
But
I was green, and my life was a game of musical chairs.
Sanity
and insanity opened and closed my hands, my brain,
as
materialism and idealism metronome inside my skull.
Forward
a few decades, at the urban sirens my neighbors move about.
The
roomers to the left of me, to the right of me,
change
their faces as I sleep, in angst and anxiety,
and
as I push myself off the mattress at night,
I
feel the heaviness of incompetence and age struggle.
And
now in this high-rise apartment twice last night
The
helicopters whirled by transporting patients to
the trauma center at Harborview Hospital…
My parents had kept saying, “Don’t think too
much!”
But let me return to the pasture at Elmira in
1970,
when a few cows, a few apple trees, and the
night had us as
captive audience, the numeric sleep over
backroads and bumpy
lanes were America not yet hardened and
congealed by the
cold air in the sideroad diner as the gravy on
the
plate of a three-hundred-pound man…
That was Elmira in 1970…
Now the urban landscape is to stack up
density
as the cranes lower the sky
and building peak up to jet space.
Taxis rear end cars trying to accelerate
the lives of passengers.
Brakes are tested at every intersection.
Stop! They are now collapsing new
buildings,
while the construction of mindlessness
goes on.
Here I find myself a “fixed-point,”
knowing that an “experiment” has taken place,
but in as much as my neighbors have changed,
I am unable to characterize my difference…
Koon Woon
Saturday, April 18, 2020
Angel Dust ----------------- poem by David Fewster
ANGEL DUST
was the hip new drug in 1978.
Well, maybe not for the haute couture set,
who had their Fancy Dan “freebase”,
but for us, the lumpen proles.
I remember we (me & my roommates Doug & Brian)
were at a party at Greg Ross’ place,
overlooking the 405 freeway at Sepulveda and
everything was always coated in black soot.
If Charles Manson had a goofy,
possibly less-murderous little brother,
that could have been Greg.
Doug had met him in jail a couple months back,
when he got busted for drinking and being mouthy
on Venice
Boardwalk.
(This is how we ‘social networked’ in our day.)
Greg became our go-to dealer for acid,
but the last shipment never came in,
and Greg owed us front money.
In lieu of the missing LSD, Greg offered to give equivalent
value
in the new Wonder High, Angel Dust.
We figured we’d better take him up on his offer,
it was probably our only hope of reimbursement.
Taking us in the back bedroom,
he laid out lines of a vile-looking brown powder
(although not as vile as smoking it, I discovered,
unless one has an acquired taste for
dust-bunnies dipped in hot asphalt.)
I made a point of snorting the lion’s share,
as most of the money-owed was mine.
After that, I remember two things.
One is sitting in the corner, deprived of the power of
speech,
yet smiling like an idiot, looking around at the mix of
bikers, burnt-out hippies, teen-age runaways & drunks an
realizing if someone
grabbed a ball peen hammer
and started beating me about the temples,
I’d still be wearing this shit-eating grin
as my brains oozed out over the carbon dust-covered
floorboards.
“This is ‘total derangement of the senses’?” I wondered.
The other is standing alone in the kitchen,
because I apparently got the munchies,
but the only foodstuff was a jar of peanut butter
which I was eating with a fork when
Brian walked in, went “Well. Ok!”
and walked right out.
The rest of the night I only know second-hand:
blacking-out, foaming at the mouth, comatose,
to the point that our friend, who was nicknamed
“The Walking Scab with Boots” (not to his face however—
he worked at a chemical plant and was usually covered
with ulcerous lesions) felt impelled to give me
mouth-to-mouth (which made me a tad disgusted when
I found out later, but, to be fair,
he probably wasn’t too thrilled about the whole thing
either)
before depositing my prone form in the back of his pickup
and carrying it back to our apartment
in the neighborhood east of Venice known as “Little Tijuana.”
So, anyhow, there I lay on my ratty sofa bed
in the front room/kitchenette area of
our squalid, motel-style complex
(Brian had the other sofa bed, Doug, being the elder,
got the bedroom--$240 a month,
which broke down to 80 bucks each),
my roomies’ drug-addled brains no doubt
vaguely worried by the thought that
I might up and croak on them,
when finally in the pre-dawn hour I found voice
and moaned “Where am I?”
“Home,” replied Doug.
“HHOOOOOOOOOOOOOOMMMMMMMEEE?!” I cried out,
in such a long drawn-out syllable of relief & joy
given our sordid circumstances that Doug and Brian
burst out in laughter that was some time dissipating.
In fact, my little verbal ejaculation became something
of a private catch-phrase for a bit,
a joke both mocking and acknowledging
a deep existential longing for us & our ilk—
strangers, hundred or thousands of miles
from our points of origin,
randomly thrown together, united
in our burning desire to wander
the streets of the City of Dreams .
I believe it took the better part of a month
for my brain to feel normal after this adventure.
Also, in case there is some perceived ambivalence,
these are what are fondly recalled as
‘the good times’—
We were 19, 20, & 21.
--David Fewster
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