Matthew Henry photo
By
Alexandre Bartolo Knabah
Logie’s masterpiece
What happens when
we gaze at Logie’s masterpiece?
Do we go suddenly blind,
do our chemical engines
electrolyze?
How beautiful it is
when we stand up
for La Marseillaise,
honoring our partisans.
We, comical marshals,
are plunged into
speedy data-
not so printed paperwork.
Looking in retrospect,
do women still get
stigmatized when
their thighs are cut?
Do janjawid still
ride in their fairy tale mares?
How many seisms must
iranians have to go through
so we can remember:
red, green and white
aren’t exclusive to the boots’ country?
My wisdom teeth
are growing and
I still haven’t found
the answer.
Clapperboard
His eyes stab her guitar body,
he wants to strum her,
delivering to himself the highest note.
However, he wants to go lower, lower, lower.
He wants to investigate how his
great presence emerged in this world.
An innocent touch, maybe?
A high shiver in his neck
tells him to stretch out his
hands, whilst she stands
in nun’s clothes, vibrant.
He crawls lower, lower, lower.
She sees him, showing
how white she may be. He understands
her pattern, her opening.
When he is ready for
the promised land –
CUT, CUT, CUT, CUT, CUT, CUT.
We are all glad
this was just a rehearsal.
Alexandre Bartolo Knabah
Alexandre Bartolo is a brazilian student who graduated from high school in 2015. He began writing poetry after two passings: Leonard Cohen, his hero, and America. He now seeks to be read, and enter medical school so that he can pay the bills.
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