Cormorant upon the Styx
A poem that sold to Forgotten Ground Regained + a poetry prompt FOR YOU.
Originally sold to Forgotten Ground Regained and Alliteration, who have spearheaded the modern revival in alliterative poetry and catalogued all of my alliterative poems in their archive’s index.
Schools of minnows scrape in a whip like blue cookie dough in a Kitchen Aid done up in Darke County. Comes surfacing, the cormorant, black, waits to hunt and dives in a wash. And we wait and watch patient. Too patient for air or a birdheart pulse. A linger longer is what Lucas Roughly's childhood church named chairs and tea after service. See the cormorant? Not yet have ye? It's a Ye Eld Linger Longer. Lapse in the breath, death in the bone. Where is the bird who was diving? Where is the feather that flew on the waves? How long can waiting go, water crow? You will think there's a turn, a truth like a sonnet. The prestige of the trick is we tried forever to watch it surface. See: no bird. No haunt of a bird. Neither here nor there nor... I can only conclude the cormorant shadow disappeared or drew its shade into its surest form: the wereshark.
Poetry prompt:
Write your own poem, long or short, about some mythical bird
Paste it into the comments, click “share as a note,” and share it here.
Chol
a pantoum
Some call me phoenix.
Others call me sand.
It’s all translation,
Not transformation.
Others call me sand,
Birthed in gray, cold soot,
Not transformation.
Uncountable days,
Birthed in gray, cold soot,
Are they different?
Uncountable days?
Dead fire, desert dunes,
Are they different?
Some call me phoenix,
Dead fire, desert dunes.
It’s all translation.