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Psychedelic 60s Poetry & Poems – Submit Your Poetry!
  • After the Party

    Posted on August 3rd, 2009 Zebravalance No comments

    After the Party 

     

    Blue beads dangle from your neck

    like silent prayers

    and you sit on the floor beside your bed

    murmuring at your folded hands.

    I walk in slowly so as not to move the air

    that carries words

    from your lips to God.

     

    On the porch is the glider. 

    Your grandma spent her last

    years swaying and left her whispers

    to hover by the oak. In those days

    we said “cheers” for good-bye.

     

    A breeze moves in. I love

    your sapphire eyes

    as the mountains

    pour smoke across the valley

    and ashes fall like gray snow

    to bring forth winter

    in the august heat.

     

    We stand in this field,

    staring down at the parched soil.

    I think about September

    when summer will have long since

    withered the sunflowers

     

    and turned their faces toward

    the earth, leaving me alone

    to weed this arid garden.

    I need a potrait of you

    to carry with me always.

    I hold your face between

    the sun and me to catch

     

    the fiery outline of your silhouette

    as it pours into my eyes

    and burns your image forever

    in the dark void

    behind their lids.

     

                                               Robin Reda

  • Driving Home from the Phil

    Posted on July 23rd, 2009 Zebravalance No comments

    Driving Home from the Phil 

     

     

    Prokofiev has turned another song tonight

    and communication lines run high along the road

    carrying the voice in Ohms.  Over tarred poles,

    the hanging line on crossbeams

    like where Jesus’ arms would be. 

     

    We count the churches too.  But mostly watch the 

    oiled trunks.  Through compression

    run the endless voices in the wire,

    darting by each steeple’s likeness.

    I don’t imagine you are thinking that exactly

     

    as the Classical music station saturates our new Bug.

    How the flutes seem to call and beckon 

    through the Field Effect Transistors. 

    But an early recording of Bartok

    is playing.  Up ahead a few blocks we can see

     

    the colored hope of strip malls, stranded amid

    every denomination.  You are circling your lips. 

    I can smell the red pigment. Staring all angles into the

    lit vanity mirror.  You say, “Pull into Hank’s Market.

    I want to get some wine.” In your den, the Gallo jug goes,

     

    and you feel warm. And Charles Ives is telling us about

    star spangled something old Kentucky home.  You unclick

    your compact: ensign of a girl.  Next morning, Aunt Jemima

    on low heat in a pan and stirring eggs in batter.  You’re so cute,

    I mean with your hair all bed-thrown but you feel compelled to cook.

     

                                                                 Robin Reda

  • In Memory of a Chocolate Osprey

    Posted on July 8th, 2009 Zebravalance No comments

    In Memory of a Chocolate Osprey

     

     

    Beneath the cliffs of Santa Barbara, on cold waves

    flooding the starfished pools, we were barefoot.

    Imagine the orange coral losing as reflections of sky

    became the water. Above, a biplane. The stuttering prop

     

    turned my tongue. Pilot strained her engine through the

    air, her trails like raveled bolts of gabardine. The tail

    pulled the stitchery of low mortgage rates: An 800 number. 

    Somewhere, a twitching banker was staying late, hoping

     

    to see lights on all his lines, then lobster being pulled in

    strainers from hot kettles. That was the first real summer.

    Today, we are having foccocia at the café on the pier.

    Upstairs above the restaurant. You are singing and I turn

     

    to say something. “Lemon cake or gorgonzola?” That

    Mexican beer where a sheet of ice slides down the thick

    glass into my mug ring (as if I am Hemmingway.)

    The loan agent, still at that office, sleeps bankrupt

     

    with his suit coat buttoned. The nectar runs and there are

    peaches in your glass of frozen Quervo Gold. It is summer’s

    dusk. Just like when we stayed in the Seaside Motel, in a

    wicker room with wine. Liquor store glimmered on the

     

    street, beer logos like acrylics off the wet steamy

    slurry-seal, barefoot on our way to Melody Beach.

    At the Impulse Check stand we bought a Chocolate Osprey

    and bound stanzas, some by Bukowski. But again, that was

     

    the first real summer. Tonight, Dos Equis Dark evaporates

    in my mug. Fish go by in the arms of waitresses. Little girl

    on the runway turns cartwheels near the band like the radial

    symmetry of starfish in a swell. It is night almost and we are

     

    mediating the wind. August Ending in Lagoon: We have

    bought stuff at the store including the sharp tip of a corkscrew.

    You are singing above the foamy waves. The Osprey,

    I am carving in it a demand to help me find forgiveness: 

     

    At point of corkscrew – Chocolate Bird, you are suited in foil.

    Take my words and fly them off like those bolts of gabardine. 

    Otherwise, I will eat you with all symbols of bread and wine.

    All of this for having said something last time she sang.

     

                                                      Robin Reda

  • To he who has begotten a pollen-fall

    Posted on July 1st, 2009 Zebravalance No comments

    To he who has begotten a pollen-fall

     

     

    I

     

    Your words are sea breeze in jelly jars.

    But at the well, a girl who wants only water. 

    Your grief is that she doesn’t know or care

    about the salty air that moves on poems’ current. 

    You may have seen the sun rising from the

    flooded rocks. And you may prove anything

     

    as the conclusion. But how you kept the

    voice alive!  I could give you paper, ask you

    to draw my worn Flamenco boots. We have

    loitered in so many galleries. You sit on

    the bar as the grainy 8mm runs, breaking

    on a frame like a smashed refractor on

     

    a streetlight. In the Express Checkout Lane,

    you read the titles on paperbacks of

    a thousand pages, wondering what it all means.

    It is here you are about to buy tulips,

    swipe your card and push red for debit.

    Let the celluloid be your fever

     

    who films the iodine of a morning kiss,

    or frames the tense love where a fugitive

    carves the Christmas turkey.  I confess,

    I am one of these men whose Stratocaster

    is blue, with fitful dreams of Eliot and his

    monocle as he argues on and on.

     

     

                            II

     

    Dear Henry Kissinger of Poetry:

    Thank you for finding better things to

    write about. Like the long war dead

    lying in the grasses, the photojournalists

    evacuated in choppers, leaving the rest

    to you.

     

    A soundtrack must be written of the

    salt mounds. On every corner,

    a control box ticks, changing the

    traffic lights to colors of the bluest

    meaning, suggesting we drive on

    seaward under lily-centered moons. 

     

    But as for you who loves the conjecture

    of the sun rising from the well,

    not only do I endorse you,

    but I will let you divide by zero

    to make your case.  And, this is only a

    friendly reminder: As you walk out the

     

    automatic doors of the supermarket,

    holding the wet receipt and the tulips in

    cellophane, their yellow powder ready to

    diffuse, please remember to hand them

    like spring to the clasping fingers of

    your lover.

     

                                        Robin Reda

     

  • To he who has begotten a pollen-fall

    Posted on June 24th, 2009 Zebravalance No comments

    To he who has begotten a pollen-fall

     

    I

     

    Your words are sea breeze in jelly jars.

    But at the well, a girl who wants only water. 

    Your grief is that she doesn’t know or care

    about the salty air that moves on poems’ current. 

    You may have seen the sun rising from the

    flooded rocks. And you may prove anything

     

    as the conclusion. But how you kept the

    voice alive!  I could give you paper, ask you

    to draw my worn Flamenco boots. We have

    loitered in so many galleries. You sit on

    the bar as the grainy 8mm runs, breaking

    on a frame like a smashed refractor on

     

    a streetlight. In the Express Checkout Lane,

    you read the titles on paperbacks of

    a thousand pages, wondering what it all means.

    It is here you are about to buy tulips,

    swipe your card and push red for debit.

    Let the celluloid be your fever

     

    who films the iodine of a morning kiss,

    or frames the tense love where a fugitive

    carves the Christmas turkey.  I confess,

    I am one of these men whose Stratocaster

    is blue, with fitful dreams of Eliot and his

    monocle as he argues on and on.

     

                            II

     

    Dear Henry Kissinger of Poetry:

    Thank you for finding better things to

    write about. Like the long war dead

    lying in the grasses, the photojournalists

    evacuated in choppers, leaving the rest

    to you.

     

    A soundtrack must be written of the

    salt mounds. On every corner,

    a control box ticks, changing the

    traffic lights to colors of the bluest

    meaning, suggesting we drive on

    seaward under lily-centered moons. 

     

    But as for you who loves the conjecture

    of the sun rising from the well,

    not only do I endorse you,

    but I will let you divide by zero

    to make your case.  And, this is only a

    friendly reminder: As you walk out the

     

    automatic doors of the supermarket,

    holding the wet receipt and the tulips in

    cellophane, their yellow powder ready to

    diffuse, please remember to hand them

    like spring to the clasping fingers of

    your lover.

     

                                     Robin Reda

     

  • Ode to a girl of perfume facing stars

    Posted on June 15th, 2009 Zebravalance No comments

     

    Ode to a girl of perfume facing stars                                         

     

     

    Credit the river.  Glide, girl of current’s light. 

    The way you did when honey dammed the Seine.

    The sweeping amber wall that spun like turbine steam.

    With xeroxed money you purchased wine.

    Walked the arcs, small boats under beams,

    beneath, the Paris that could be crossed there.

     

    Girl of planets, insomniac in the parlor with a harp

    playing Debussy to the summer-bluish night

    of a lifted window.  Across hedges, the sweetness

    through the dirt-thick screen. Syrup-flower of

    jasmine’s scent in which I neck with you against the

    golden metal of the harp frame.

     

    Girl of ripples’ glint, who knows the fox who bore his cross,

    whose birds are many, whose swan is on the pond in each ballet,

    whose sugar water keeps the hummingbirds

    glazing over tall and aerial, pollen-smelling shrubs.

    You are an honest girl of water’s shimmer. 

    I loved you in the storefront as you posed for clothes.

     

    And used a rope to hold your most lyrical designer jeans.

    You glazed the hummingbirds with each ballet that bore its fox.

    Heavy sweet of jasmine is your neck whose harp is gold, whose

    screen is black with many blooming nights.  Girl of lifted windows,

    your summer Clair de lune is blueness of the parlor

    where you cannot sleep.  Instead, you’re crossing Paris.

     

                                  

                                              Robin Reda

     

  • To a girl of flowers, strays

    Posted on June 9th, 2009 Zebravalance No comments

     

    To a girl of flowers, strays

      

     

    I come with no pretense except the melted clocks

    of dreams.  I have been thumb-printed

    over and over, and always the result is the same: 

    the iron hand that climbs builds

     

    its undeniable music, its tones rumbling

    that shake the tower. Girl of caravaners,

    the open-endedness of my death how I sing.

    You hear purring inside the cats.

     

    Over the mountain, the adolescents’ dream will rise.

    Out of dirty blankets they feel the boats of Greece. 

    I took you to the ocean. We could smell the salt

    and you made a point to tell me

    how the hero passes under.  

    I loved your featherbed on wooden floors. 

     

    But then, I knew only what the tide had smoothed,

    what abandoned on the pyrite grit of sand. 

    O girl with the fortress of doves, this is my watch chain

    of the opaque sleeper dreaming molten clocks,

    the wooden beam that swings the heavy brass at noon,

     

    your animals’ loneliness ticking in me still,

    who has been thumb-printed over and over and

    the result is always the same:  I am only the pigeons

    flapping away from a passing bicycle, darting mid-flight

    from the frigid resonance of the bell. 

     

                                             

                                                     Robin Reda

     

  • At the Arboretum

    Posted on June 1st, 2009 Zebravalance No comments

     

     

    At the Arboretum 

     

     

    The koi glide in a

    swell, where the

    water is calm beyond

    the veil of falls.

    We hold fingers into

     

    ripples to catch

    the orange and

    white. The smell of

    bottlebrush pollen

    is sweet yet hay-like on

     

    the hanging air.

    The cosmos stand purple

    on their stems,

    an aestivation 

    crowning the powdery

     

    yellow in their centers. 

    I flick an ant off the

    blanket’s fraying edge.

    you said your grandma

    bought it at Gimble’s

     

    during the depression,

    a floral print with a

    black-rimmed hole on my

    side where your grandpa

    had fallen asleep smoking.

     

                                Robin Reda 

     

  • Errant Post

    Posted on May 25th, 2009 Zebravalance No comments

     

    Errant Post

     

     

    Mostly it’s the beautiful accident from

    which the somnolent child is freed, the

    photosensitive wavelength that bombards

    the retinas, even through tortoise Wayfarers. 

    But also, it’s the toothbrush Kathy gave me. 

    It stands on its heel on the red windowsill

    of her kitchen. Its wet vibrations have just

     

    cleansed the consonants from my mouth,

    leaving me this myth of vowels to expel, 

    my mouth hollow or dark like a giant shadow

    on the moon.

    But also, it’s the fact that we are left behind,

    my razor on the sink, the shaving gel lost in the

    pantry with the cans of fruit. I dream a mailbox

     

    with a red flag.  It reads, “Brautigan” in faded

    letters.  It’s huge like a Quonset hut, as if he

    were planning on sending out a long manuscript or

    expecting a big check. We have no mailbox, just

    a rusted slot through which a phantom might slide

    a note. Or like between the clumsy rocks at Stonehenge, 

    something postmarked from the Pleiades. 

     

                                        

                                                 Robin Reda

     

  • Jitters

    Posted on May 19th, 2009 Zebravalance No comments

    Jitters

     

     

    The whistle on the burner will be

    crying in a second.  It threatens

    with little gasps.  I kill the flame,

    leave the bag to steep as I wander through

    the front room.  I don’t know how

     

    to read the leaves.  They will only turn

    the water red.

    Lisa thinks she’s pregnant –has since

    we returned from Vegas.  But

    we attend dance school just the same,

     

    learning to Swing as if we are in Paris

    in the ‘30s.  I look out the linen drape.

    It is unusually gray for late April.

    My lava lamp glows on the mantle,

    promises with pink wax

     

    that Chaos is contained within the glass.

    I suddenly realize I’ve left my cup too long.

    The tea will be dark and bitter.  I will

    pour the honey which always starts out poignant,

    then enters the cup and becomes undefined.

                                                Robin Reda