Samples from Volume XXII, Number 2
"I
Owe My Dog Everything" by Peter Harris
"Icarus"
by Brenda J. Cook
by Peter Harris
Four times a day, the
bulge of shag
who's draped across the couch top
under the big window that exposes
the insides of our house to the every dog,
every person street, wakes up,
yips, yanks me, leashed, outside
where it's always winter, or
about to be, or recovering. Much of
the time, darkness reigns. And cold.
Now in the backyard, I
must
attend as, first, she whiffs subtle
bodies in the air, then teases
the news from trace molecules
in the snow or mud or what passes
for grass, then paces a tightening,
self-entrancing oval that
leads her to the Absolute
Exact Spot, so as to express
the day's remains - glacially,
it seems, if she's snarfed a napkin
from the trash - while the cold
closes in around me
like a chuck around a drill bit
reminding me: God is choice:
either I can be at-two with
my shivers, smelting lead minutes
out of gold standard seconds
or I can listen to the wind
rustle sibilance from the six
dead leaves left stranded on the white oak,
listen and watch as my dog hunches,
ripples her peristaltic muscles,
waits, ripples again, succeeds
in providing me intimate,
much-needed, instruction on
how to do the nothing new
as if - no, not as if -
as actually giving birth to
a warm, glistening new world.
by Brenda J. Cook
A dog stands on three
legs
in the middle
of the street,
blocking traffic
while he
scratches behind his ear,
heedless of the little
girl crying
in the yard where she can't find him
and of the
man three cars back
who has just left his wife,
who cannot
comprehend his suffering
or he hers- she sees the
one true union of her life
now broken, and this pain
and shock
blind her to the pathos
of a friend
whose stability falters now and
again.
No one, it seems, takes notice either
of the small
figure high in the sky
whose wings
begin to drop away,
and even he, just now, I'm sure,
couldn't care
less about the pesky flea
behind the
ear of that dog.