Literary Orphans

Three Poems
by Martina Reisz Newberry

a_thunderous_mind_by_ineedchemicalx-d57o63y


1.  BEER FLOOD

On October 17, 1814 in the parish of St. Giles, London, England, at the Meux and Company Breweryon Tottenham Court Road, a huge vat containing over 135,000 imperial gallons (610,000 L of beer ruptured, causing other vats in the same building to succumb in a domino effect. As a result, more than 323,000 imperial gallons (1,470,000 L) of beer burst out and gushed into the streets. The wave of beer destroyed two homes and crumbled the wall of the Tavistock Arms Pub…Eight people drowned in the flood or died from injuries.
Courtesy of Wikipedia, 8 September 2012

 

After so many years, you

have to decide what to be

afraid of.  Things, people, change

guises and colors. You will

no longer see them like dust

motes in sunlight.  You can choose,

find what your trepidation

hungers for.  Does it want be-

ginnings?  Rash acts to save the

world?  The torrents of despair?

After so many years, the

nearly-bare branches of Lost

call out for your attention.

So do the wet streets, turned to

obsidian in the dark.

Another choice.  How tender

and sweet the way terror’s road

buckles and ends at the cul de sac

where you queue up your bantam

bottles of life—waiting and waiting.

 

O Typekey Divider

 

2.  RAPUNZEL TALKS TO ANNIE ASKEW

At some point, you must stop your weeping

and learn to love your captors.

 

At some point the complexities are

too overwhelming and you

 

must stop your damned weeping and eat the

bread they give you, stop your mad

 

weeping.  Whatever is going to

happen will happen, you can

 

count on that.  You’re in a high tower

now, nothing to do but look

 

out across some alien landscape.

You can eat, bleed, sweat if you

 

want to, but the weeping is useless.

Your sweet, sexual soul is

 

tied up behind you.  You may speak, but

only in a whisper. Your

 

heart may throb like a wounded thumb, but

it doesn’t matter.  Like it

 

or not, the world is your house and you

live in its highest tower.

 

At night the stars come in to see you

and lay like glass pieces on the floor.

 

You have no words for them, they

have none for you.  The moon brings fever

 

and dreams of wars, dead children

in wars.  There are no words; your bitter

 

weeping must stop.  The plan is

to fold yourself up like a Chinese

 

fan.  Why won’t you just do that?

The idea is to stop trying

 

to kick the underworld in

the teeth.  You are veyniker

 

un veyniker, your fault entirely.

You must turn the other cheek

 

now.  You must face the everlasting

night without tears as if it

 

were no more than a huge animal

lumbering past.  The wind out

 

there will stop and you must stop weeping.

Learn to love your captors.  When

 

this is over, you will be famous,

unrecognizable to all but

 

yourself.  O lucky woman.

Lucky, lucky hightower woman.

 

O Typekey Divider

 

3.  דיסציפלינה  (Discipline)

Lot’s wife recalled the angel’s warning.

For the love of God!  All she should not see…

For love of Men!  She should see nothing.

 

All she did was turn her head just a little to let

the fiery wind pass, to keep hot flying ashes

from singeing her eyebrows and hair.

 

She believed God’s love (and Lot’s) would tether her.

She was wrong.  The ropes did not hold.  They slipped,

came loose, unraveled, flapped useless in the air.

 

And THAT, they said was her fault, was disobedience.

Her evanescent flinch from pain, the involuntary twitch

to avoid hell’s heat, the sun’s descent.

 

She turned her face just a little aside, just enough

to let the spark and ash detour, and, in that instant,

the god of men blinked and she, now salt, was left to die.

 

O Typekey Divider

best author photo

Martina Reisz Newberry’s most recent book is LEARNING BY ROTE.  She is also the author of WHAT WE CAN’T FORGIVE.  LATE NIGHT RADIO, PERHAPS YOU COULD BREATHE FOR ME. HUNGER, AFTER THE EARTHQUAKE:  POEMS 1996-2006, NOT UNTRUE & NOT UNKIND and RUNNING LIKE A WOMAN WITH HER HAIR ON FIRE: Collected Poems.

Ms. Newberry is the winner of i.e. magazine’s Editor’s Choice Poetry Chapbook Prize for 1998: AN APPARENT, APPROACHABLE LIGHT.  

She is the also the author of  LIMA BEANS AND CITY CHICKEN: MEMORIES OF THE OPEN HEARTH—a memoir of her father—published by E.P. Dutton and Co. in 1989.

Newberry has been included in Ascent Aspirations first hard-copy Anthology, Blessed Are These Hands, also in the anthology In The Company Of Women and has been widely published in numerous literary journals in the U.S. and abroad.

Martina lives in Hollywood, California with her husband Brian and their best 4-legged pal, Charlie the Cat.
 
 

O Typekey Divider

–Art by Felicia Simion

affiliate link trace | Nike Foamposite Pro Halloween Clothing , Saluscampusdemadrid