Mar 5, 2021

Three poems by Cameron Morse

Stiletto

from stylus

writing utensil

once applied to wax

tablet incises

its blunt end rubs out

an endless erasure

*

Gary Snyder:

the human psyche remains at best a kind of Paleolithic thing

*

Electric fish jam each other’s

signals, mating calls

sing electric

songs

When Dylan goes electric

the guitar vibrates

a frequency

of sex

*

The forensic scientist can’t quite make out

the letter tops of TATTLER

Will Graham’s home address

*

The foot soles of elephants

say hello in another

sensory domain

*

Other vocabs from Brett

Ratner’s Red

Dragon

sundowner, chinwag, gumshoe

Vector

We cross the tracks

reminded of the cross

shale sliding us down

into the understory

of rusty thorns

*

a quantity possessing both

direction and magnitude

represented by an arrow

by a sere vine in sunlight

climbing

the shattered green

pieces of a toy

assault rifle

*

Dog collars tinkle

in the blinding

light paw

prints in the sidewalk

wet cement down

to the toenails

clickety-clack, moveable type

*

Woodsy interstice

train tracks

between the back

yards where

Theo forages a rail

road spike

a strikethrough

transgression

*

Every time we pass,

the same white cotton yellow

grass bird’s nest

Theo collects another plastic shard

of the pellet gun

as if gluing it back at home

resurrecting the original

impulse

Magnetic Moments

The Survivor Tree holds the sheet

on Enforceable Statements

to the refrigerator door

I’ll be glad to discuss this

with you as soon as

the arguing stops

*

Leaky pineapple blood

vessels and hell

I’d settle for a cup

of salami and cheese

cubes from the hospital cafeteria

*

GBM SURVIVORS TO THRIVERS

New growth not

encased runs

too deep for full

removal, 16 yo son

my baby but forceful

adult enough

to make some decisions

*

Surviving a downfall

of volcanic debris

the tree transported

back to 9/11

*

Bad enough

to have to watch

rhinoceros beetles

wrestle for mating rights

from a movie studio

in the Cotswolds

*

The inverted tree stands upside

down in a field

of magnets

This occurs to me too

late to make a

difference

Cameron Morse lives with his wife Lili and two children in Independence, Missouri. His poems have been published in numerous magazines, including New Letters, Bridge Eight, Portland Review and South Dakota Review. His first collection, Fall Risk, won Glass Lyre Press’s 2018 Best Book Award. His latest is Far Other (Woodley Press, 2020). He holds and MFA from the University of Kansas City—Missouri and serves as Senior Reviews editor at Harbor Review and Poetry editor at Harbor Editions. For more information, check out his Facebook page or website.

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