God save thee, ancient Mariner! From the fiends that plague thee thus! Why lookst thou so? With my crossbow I shot the albatross.

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albatross #26

God save thee, ancient Mariner! From the fiends that plague thee thus! Why lookst thou so? With my crossbow I shot the albatross.

albatross CoNtENts Don russ Jared Pearce Julie Finch lenny Dellarocca richard brobst Erin redfern Carol Hamilton David Iasevoli simon Perchik Gary Hanna Donelle Dreese alan birkelbach susan richardson sandra Noel Kit Zak adam Penna Matthew J. spireng abbie Kurtz Martin Conte 3 4 5 6 7 10 11 12 13 15 16 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 26 Contributor s Notes 27

albatross #26 Editor: richard smyth Cover art: Wildflowers by abbe Wertz. Digital interventions by roy Parkhurst subscription rates one issue: $5.00 two issues: $8.00 Checks payable to albatross. Copyright 2015 the anabiosis Press IssN 0887 4239 albatross accepts submissions of original poetry and black-ink drawings. Please mail all correspondence to albatross, 2 south New street, bradford, Ma 01835. We do not appreciate receiving simultaneous submissions and later finding out that poems submitted to us were accepted elsewhere, so please do not do this. be sure to include a sase (self-addressed stamped envelope) with all correspondence. http://www.anabiosispress.org http://albatrosspoetryjournal.wordpress.com

Don russ Logos Who hears not me but the word will say all is one. Heraclitus a cold ecstasy this night sky, star-strung milky wet and aching to be: let love and lovers here the metaphor complete. Ineffable fire spill down in me, heaven s presence poem of everything be now. 3

Jared Pearce Revelation For three days Iowa s been snuffed by fog and the newsreaders smack of limited visibility and slick surfaces. this morning every bulb Was a halo, and every beam caught the atmosphere s heavy rest: Fog shows light and air, those weird sisters we hope for When they ve struck out, and how the world, that can feel Hollow, is so brimming we re more like the fish than we can see, and that even light, with its blessing and blazing speed, has its end. 4

Julie Finch Anointing travel the slow moving streets of the spanish town alive with the songs of the ages, the cobblestone pathways leading to small cafes, where you will eat, and drink café con leche with a loved one. Where these roads reach, no one can say. Possibly to history s doorway, a humble entrance to cathedrals under whose stones lay saints and men walked upon now by the faithful, as they once walked with the glow of a thousand candles lighted inside a small enclave, to lay flowers at the Virgin s feet. Having been here, having tasted her wine, your way back will never be the same, storied as it is with the lilting tune of a foreign tongue, and the wisdom found in old men s offerings, in the humble gifts of the poor, and the small wooden rosaries sold by the side of the road. let the journey quell the ache in you of a hunger only the traveler knows, may the kindness of strangers whose words you cannot fully grasp fill the spaces inside you when at last you arrive home, wordless at the grace of miles and poverty and riches, and landscapes that will shape your dreams. Everyone you meet is calling out for welcome, for a prayer to anoint them along their way, in the bus station in old salamanca, in the modern airport as you board the plane to america. Everyone beside you is saying, however silently, share with me the peace of what you have seen: It s difficult here, and beautiful, and lonely as a language you cannot understand, yet one that comforts in its gestures for you to sit, and listen to its cadence just the same, for a connection, for a blessing, for some small token of this broken world. 5

lenny Dellarocca The Spell for Willow the magical boy who believed he could fly because there was a voice only he could hear in the wind is singing. singing because he hears her voice in the trees again, and after spending years on the sun s black wheel, he dances in her light, pours the water of his disbelief from his soul. she is the place he goes all night to watch summer end. at the end of the world he paints the long tomorrow of her eyes. Off the Blue Ridge Parkway I touch the ground of fire-roads where sky and mountain talk a rumbling acre of hemlock, shake trees for leaves the color of wild days while a thousand birds of evening sing. light in fifty feet of water fills me like an empty church and the breath in me finds a long way out into the world. 6

richard brobst The World And All That s In It there must be a million things in this world over which to converse, at least a million thoughts. I contemplate cat food If I have enough to feed the strays that I have adopted tonight and tomorrow. I realize that my thoughts are no longer complicated. I accept that. still it seems a priority Much like poetry once was. something almost biblical in proportion, these feedings. something almost within my grasp 7

richard brobst Reunion It ends with a group photograph, putting on a face that you have practiced for so many years. Fifty-seven for the birthday boy holding up a grandson who is focused on a group of rabbits playing chase. someone mentions the weather, the grey weight of rain dragging back from the gulf, the fisted clouds, the sun that promises nothing. that is the weather in Florida in april. and there is weather in California, in Idaho, those distances that have called us, for one reason or another, away from what we once called home. the distances overcome to return one more time to this time, this place, this photograph. someone praises God. We count thirteen and uncover enough food for twice that many boxes of fried chicken, salad, root beer and red wine. talk of cancer treatments and colored hair: so much to say, so much to make up for, so much that will never be said in the two hours before what remains of the light disappears. Not in two hours, not in this lifetime. and then that is it. 8

We speak of doing this again, sooner next time, sooner than it has never happened before or ever will happen again, and we all know that. so we smile at the camera, arms interlocked, clasp hands, wave and wave goodbye, one car at a time giving back the park to the rabbits. 9

Erin redfern Any Less Mortal remember the roadside sparkle that meant a cassette had finally given out, its blown innards glinting from the tips of dead brambles and milk thistle trash that winked like tinkerbell, like some magic reluctant to leave us? Plastic bottle caps, cellophane wrappers snag on the storm drain s pile of dead leaves. Freeway medians gather commute-scum and dirt in their cement seams, and somehow from this something grows, like a child, for no reason but itself, grows because the heart beneath this concrete skin still beats. Exhausted pines shoulder the road, host black crows and fox squirrels. through the driver s side window I think I can hear them scrabbling among the branches branches that could move to encircle, soothe me did they want me to be any less mortal than I am. From the windows of half-empty buildings a thousand setting suns cast gold into our eyes on the drive home. torn snack bags roam the intersection, and someone s got the bass turned up, someone s cracking the window and blowing smoke into the air we all breathe. above our heads streetlights bow their stacked eyes from the weight of pigeons landing, taking flight, or are they moved by the stopped traffic s hot sighs rising like incense, like prayers we emit in spite of ourselves, while we sit, so many supplicants at the wheel, waiting? 10

Carol Hamilton Easter Island s Last Best Hope I, like she, think of them often, they, like us, having overused resources. History tells they did not look within but, desperate, sought help from great gods beyond the seas. she learned they used up the last of their trees rolling the great stone offerings to stand and call out for help. the byzantines in Constantinople, too, as the ottoman turks drew near, haloed the dome of Hagia sophia, prayed, awaited deliverance. I lived on the Cuyahoga river when it caught fire. lake Erie was being wheeled to the morgue. Years later, Mike took me to dinner as darkness fell and Cleveland s skyline twinkled on across the living, darkening waters. I am flea-hopping around the timeline, here, and the now, as always, offers more of the same. same menu of options, same array of voices. Desperate action. Panic. Despair. Do something. anything. take a first step. Make a modest plan. only then am I allowed to pray. before my surgery my experienced friend told me she began to improve when she cut back taking the pain pills. I, too, found this true. 11

David Iasevoli Harvest already dead when I got to the hospital late, found mother and sister and nephew in the waiting room outside the room where he lay, still on a gurney, still in his suppertime clothes, pajama top and trousers, belt, feet bare the veins always so sick so dark. How do you say farewell forever? but it wasn t long before I took a call from the ghouls, the agency that harvested marrow. I said, His legs are a mess, he s crippled from arthritis and gout, phlebitis! there s nothing you can do with these legs, but the voice kept going, Just a few more questions, and I finally donated the legs of my father, the gristle and tallow, to someone who could use them anew. the night before, I phoned and listened to his insistence that he would not last for long. I smiled and thought him small, a little old lady, and when I stood by the pallet I recalled you, my child, your limbs, like the first day I held you and in so many ways you said behold, you must try to turn these legs into words, thigh and calf, swell, patella, instep, hip, and you shall fail, you must fail, but keep trying, oh, keep going. 12

simon Perchik * It takes stone though your breath heats by waiting for something to change the way sunlight inhales, unnoticed is floating alongside these graves in riverbeds and kisses stone can save her now that the ground has more time to count each mourner coming by empty handed looking for someone else stone! without the rush, left in the open in a pillow filled with mountains, not yet the one day more as a ready-made hole melting your lips for their brightness every afternoon is blinded by a stone made from wood as if smoke could start over and you hear a long ago name rising from the light and emptiness. 13

simon Perchik * You fold your arms the way this pasture gnaws on the wooden fence left standing in water make a raft though it s these rotting staves side by side that set the Earth on fire with smoke rising from the ponds as emptiness and ice you dead are winter now, need more wood to breathe and from a single finger point, warmed with ashes and lips no longer brittle under you a gate is opened for the cold and though there s no sea you drink from your hands where all tears blacken you can see yourself in the flames. 14

Gary Hanna Saffron saffron on its silk white stalk will bloom for just one day and wilt the next even in the sun, but still the flower will open on the ground, it tries so hard, and each year I will find a dried magnolia leaf to prop it up, raise it to the air, in time to love the sky. 15

Donelle Dreese Rachel Carson s White Hyacinth Letter to Dorothy Freeman You know the parable about the man with only two pennies to his name. one penny buys the bread the other, the white hyacinths because their loveliness is beyond rescue. You are my white hyacinth. You are the marginal world where the moon-drawn tides spin a million sweet riddles. Kneeling on a carpet of sea moss I confess the reflected images in the melodious pool are of you. Water flashing with minnow eyes swirling the spark and waste of the universe birthing the stone and biology of love. I need you to know how much I cradle this flower, how the winter white petals cool my serious science. 16

Donelle Dreese Rachel Carson Responds to Her Critics Gentlemen, I ve spotted you in my gaslight, held the burning match for too long. Pity, that you deem it a heresy to care more about birds than business. but I do remember that you too were once a pure blue egg warm and opening beneath a belly of fur. I understand that you too were once a desperate cry from the crib when your mother was numb and spent. still, I ve wondered how many miles from mercy is the buried beggar inside of you who can be touched by kindness on a cold highway. When you stand before me I see an allergy even the drenched earth can t cure. My mouth, sour with bad medicine, sweetens when I say, no more. 17

alan birkelbach A toast to the rogue pit bull who terrorizes my neighborhood at night How easily it all comes, the insecurity like a thin blanket, the agreement in the brain in the daylight in the supermarket by the day old baked goods to buy the cheaper wine because after a while all things are the same and there is no measure; it s the rationalization that city glow will mask any far-off defining speck that tycho ever saw with his naked eye. this is how it comes, then, the giving in to things, the gentle erosion of courage, the sloughing off of the markers of time, how we learn to depend on the radio, the phone, the ice cream truck. at night I see the shadows of my neighbors in their living rooms. they have given in. Chaos is outside in the darkness. order is inside, and it s soothing. and the sheets are clean and warm. but tonight I am raising a glass to you, dread pit bull, all speed and fiery bark. You who run through these streets at night like an uncharted comet. the full moon is rising, tonight, just to the left, at the end of the street, over the railroad tracks. I am not so dull yet I have forgotten to look. 18

susan richardson Zoomorphic In the cage between her legs, there lives a frigatebird. Prevented from flexing its three-foot wings. Pecking at the fingers that poke it through the bars. Yoked to its pubic roost. Feathers caked in dark. and, despite the lack of space, its bright red gular sac perpetually inflated. she tight-squeezes her thighs. tugs her skirt hem past her knees. shifts from cheek to cheek on the two-seater settee. though she really should feed it pieces of marine iguana, she wills herself to believe it isn t there. sit still. You re such a fidget, her mother sighs, eyes never migrating from the tv. Yet the frigatebird s eyes keep brimming with sky if the frigatebird were permitted to fly, it would glide without pause for weeks, tweaking fish from shearwaters beaks, seeking uplifts to ride, thrilling never to reach the sides of either air or sea. 19

sandra Noel Unraveling the Endless Knot sulawesi flying foxes are returning to the forest in a river of night sky following the scent of eucalyptus and banksias on the warm winds blowing seaward towards their island reclaimed at least for the time being because a man is paid to put away his cruel snares but next year may be different. this year Coho salmon are returning to a small restored stream near seattle renewing their natal journey broken for a hundred years yet somehow they return again following a genetic map of scent to source from a thousand miles of ocean and home again, at least this year because a company is paid to leave its land undeveloped but next year, or the next a parking lot. 20

Kit Zak Before Leaving a hummingbird of a screen fascinates me lured by each new twerk in technology, my virtual universe keeps expanding, while drought / storms / river-rise threaten us: omens, perhaps, like the extinct dodo / the Mexican grizzly the quagga / the passenger pigeon. some expert claims we lose ten to one hundred thousand species a year, but what can one individual do? I ve heard the Caribbean north seal, the golden toad of Costa rica have joined the list. some say the bees and butterflies are becoming as scarce as hen s teeth. We can t be saving every living thing we have to have a life too. 21

adam Penna False Spring Easy winter. No snow to speak of. Maybe six inches total that melted faster than it fell. Daffodils spring up early and skunk cabbage starts its slow unfurling in February. shotgun shells litter the trail s margin, colorful as party favors. Hunting season s not yet over. the ducks are skittish. since there are no islands of ice and snow left to shrink back and reveal how winter ravages vegetable matter, the field s dun-colored body stands naked everywhere. Each season bears its share of joy and sorrow, but these ducks circling the shallows startle whether the footsteps bring a hunter or a watcher come to see. How do they know which spot to return to and why? Except they know, even in this false spring, that nature wants nothing from her creatures but each to do exactly as it should. the note of sadness added to the wooddove s cooing is exaggeration. the happiness the sparrow sings nobody knows. 22

Matthew J. spireng Out of Season First bumblebee here. Dandelions bloomed early. bees should still be sleeping. Magnolia blossoms burst open, then froze. Petals turned brown overnight. Kestrels are nesting already. If they lay eggs now, chicks may see snow. the dog had a tick on him. blood is warmer than the warmest spring day. little snow, and now hardly any rain. Warnings abound about fire. Grass is growing fast. I may wait, but still it will be too soon to mow. the geese seem confused. some that flew south were passed by others flying north. 23

abbie Kurtz Suffer Them suffer the insects the small and meek of the sidewalk cracks the ants suffer them for their homes are below and they gather In good fellowship the hornets suffer them In your yard for they will teach you humility the black flies suffer them, for they will teach you to forbear the bees suffer them Nesting in the garage as they make honey and would share it with you if you Give them succor Dim the porch light should you injure the Wayward moths In their greed Mistaking light for riches on the monarch Have compassion as it lights upon you, in its hunger Mistaking you for sustenance and the mosquito Who puts herself in Mortal danger so her offspring shall live, kill her With a prayer the roach on the counter, spare it as it lusts for food, share with it a morsel revere all beetles In their shining multitude For they have prospered suffer the centipede Much reviled, wash its Many legs in your Mercy the spiders In the corners 24

suffer them, as they bring the Joy of creation into Your home Mend your screens lest the insects are tempted to enter and go astray suffer them bless them For they shall inherit the earth 25

Martin Conte Letter to My Unborn Daughter #2: The Last Glacier He will be the last of them of his kind. He will come in, heaving and panting for breath. Icicles will have formed on the tip of his beard and his coat, which had lasted him many hundreds of years, will be in tatters. Fetch hot water! she will shout, and you will wait, acid fear on your tongue, while the flow from the sink warms on your fingertips. but when you return, she and I will be bent over his naked form, shaking our heads. It will be too late. You will let the glass fall and shatter on the floor, but the rest of the city won t hear it. You will feel guilty, but it wasn t your fault. 26

Contributor s Notes Alan Birkelbach has appeared in journal and anthologies such as Grasslands Review, Borderlands, and Concho River Review. He has nine collections of poetry Richard Brobst was born, raised and resides in sarasota County, Fl. He has published in a wide variety of journals, reviews, and anthologies, including The California Quarterly, The Kentucky Poetry Review, Pembroke Magazine, and Florida in Verse: An Anthology. richard also has published three chapbooks and is former co-editor of albatross. Martin Conte was raised on the Downeast Coast of Maine and has been awarded the barbara Mandigo Kelly Poetry award and the Dos Cosas award from Word & Images. Lenny DellaRocca lives in Delray beach, Fl, and has published poems in many journals since 1980, including Albatross. He has two poems in the new Mauve issue of Fairy Tale Review and was recently guest editor of Poetrybay. Donelle Dreese is an English professor at Northern Kentucky University and has authored three poetry collections: Sophrosyne (aldrich Press), A Wild Turn (Finishing line) and Looking for a Sunday Afternoon (Pudding House) in addition to publishing poetry and fiction in many journals. Julia Finch has published poetry and short stories in BlazeVox, The Kitchen Poet, and Beatdom Books, among others. she currently resides in Houston, tx, where she works in the staffing industry. Carol Hamilton is former poet laureate of oklahoma and has published 17 books of children s novels, legends and poetry, the most recent being Such Deaths. recent publications include Louisiana Review, Boston Literary Review, Tar River Review, Cold Mountain Review, and others. Gary Hanna lives in southern Delaware and has received two fellowships in poetry and five individual artist awards. He is the author of two chap-books from broadkill Press: The Homestead Poems and Sediment and Other Poems. David Iasevoli lives and teaches in the adirondack Mountains in upstate NY. He received his Ed.D. from Columbia University and has published both poetry and non-fiction. 27

Abbie Kurtz lives in Madison, WI, and has been writing since she was a teenager. she has a b.a. in English from barnard College and published her first poem in Verse Wisconsin. Sandra Noel lives on Vashon Island, Wa, and works as an illustrator creating art for environmental orgs. she is the author of a chapbook, The Gypsy in My Kitchen (Finishing line Press, 2015), and has poetry in Haunted Waters Press, Buddhist Poetry Review and others. Jared Pearce teaches writing and literature at William Penn University. He has poems recently pub d or forthcoming in Derronda Review, Four-teen Hills, and BYU Studies, where he won the 2014 poetry competition. Adam Penna has authored two books of poetry: Little Songs & Lyrics to Genji and The Love of a Sleeper. His work has appeared in Nimrod, Cimarron Review and Albatross. He teaches at suffolk County Community College and lives in East Moriches, NY. Simon Perchik is an attorney whose poems have appeared in Partisan Review, The Nation, Poetry, The New Yorker and previously in Albatross. His most recent collection is Almost Rain (river otter Press, 2013). Erin Redfern serves on the board of the Poetry Center san Jose and as an editor for the 2015 issue of Caesura, its print publication. Her poems have appeared in Zyzzyva, Red Wheelbarrow, and The Hamilton Stone Review. Susan Richardson is a poet, performer and educator based in Wales whose third collection of poetry, skindancing, was published by Cinnamon Press in 2015. Don Russ is author of Dream Driving (Kennesaw state UP, 2007) and the chapbooks Adam s Nap (billy Goat Press, 2005) and World s One Heart (the Next review, 2015) and has a poem in Best American Poetry 2012. Matthew J. Spireng has previously pub d in Albatross and has two poetry books, What Focus Is (Word Press, 2011) and Out of Body (bluestem Press, 2006) as well as five chapbooks. He has poems in Southern Poetry Review, Connecticut Review, and others. Kit Zak regularly publishes in Newversenews and Avocet and has published in California Quarterly, The Blue Collar Review, The Broadkill Review, and several anthologies. 28

and I had done a hellish thing and it would work em woe: For all averred, I had killed the bird that made the breeze to blow. ah wretch! said they, the bird to slay, that made the breeze to blow! samuel taylor Coleridge

the anabiosis Press 2 south New street bradford, Ma 01835 www.anabiosispress.org