- Michael Robbins
- Paula Bohince
- Tom Pickard
- John Tranter
- Charles Baxter
From this Issue
Poem
You had a woodchuck and an opium ball.
The one ate through the furniture,
the other sat in its cage depressing me.
Now the woodchuck sheds its skin.
I have a cow behind the Dollar Bin.
You shouldn’t drink diarrhea
unless you bring enough for...
The one ate through the furniture,
the other sat in its cage depressing me.
Now the woodchuck sheds its skin.
I have a cow behind the Dollar Bin.
You shouldn’t drink diarrhea
unless you bring enough for...
Poem
First the bad boots
give up their strength, then the toes lift
their anchors. The ankle
bones are broken,
and so on, until the bladder lets go, without
shame, and the genital
organ washes away, the ovum
and her fertile signals. A proxy...
give up their strength, then the toes lift
their anchors. The ankle
bones are broken,
and so on, until the bladder lets go, without
shame, and the genital
organ washes away, the ovum
and her fertile signals. A proxy...
Poem
1
a wren,
perched on a hawthorn
low enough to skip
the scalping winds,
sang a scalpel song
seafrets drift
sheer along shorelines
listening to hail spray glass
and wind
and a waitress laugh
in a cafe without customers
I fell to fell thinking
* * *
a sullen light...
a wren,
perched on a hawthorn
low enough to skip
the scalping winds,
sang a scalpel song
seafrets drift
sheer along shorelines
listening to hail spray glass
and wind
and a waitress laugh
in a cafe without customers
I fell to fell thinking
* * *
a sullen light...
Table of Contents
POEMS
- Michael Robbins
- Paula Bohince
- Tom Pickard
- John Tranter
- Charles Baxter
- Jane Hirshfield
- Clemente Rèbora
- Geoffrey Brock
- Giovanni Pascoli
- Attilio Bertolucci
- David Roderick
- Linda Gregerson
- Vijay Seshadri
- Sina Queyras
LETTER
- Belle Randall
CONTRIBUTORS