November 2008 issue. Propaganda and the media

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Romance and reminiscence PDF Print Email
Past loves remembered (and relived) through four poems.
By Priscilla Ann Campbell / Lake Worth, Florida
Sunday, July 6, 2008

The poet says:
Romantic relationships have played an important role throughout a good part of my life, so they've naturally evolved into fodder for many of my poems. Who doesn't think at some point about that old love never forgotten or wonder why one relationship worked, yet another fell apart. Perhaps one advantage of growing older is that I've sampled “the good, the bad, and the ugly” and survived to write about it. The poems in this selection represent more of the yearning end of the spectrum, but carry content I feel many women (and men) identify with.



City of forgiven whores

 
Image
Nude Maiden on the Cross (Mary Hillier)


In this city
where birds fly upside
down, and sadness is a welt
made by a raindrop, he comes to me.

He speaks of sleep-talking dreamers,
whores dunked by blind preachers,
then kisses me like when we were young.

I tug him inside
and we soar till our wings melt —
two candles, burnt to the nub
of a universe rebuilding.

We fall past old gods
converted to new ways of seeing
into the clear cleansing river of Eros
that finally Huck Finns us away.


Colorless rooms
 
 
Image
Nude with Blue Jay (Mary Hillier)


In the lineup of old lovers,
he never appears,
yet he was the one who peeled back my skin,
slipped fingers beneath breastbone.
Odd, his disappearance, when a decade
of heart thumps had to pass
before flesh closed and healed.

I wonder if his next love remembers.
 
Maybe those men who once slung their arms
’round our necks, painted hieroglyphs with lips
on our breasts, wake now in colorless rooms,
bewildered to find no woman beneath them.
Maybe they remember a dimming face,
a distant laugh ... a sigh,
& dream of those days when their hands
still forged fingerprints into the hollows of time.


Eruptions

 
Image
Nude Pink Blush (Mary Hillier)


Does any woman never imagine
running into that special old lover —
her Olympian God
her angel we have heard on high,
the one who climbed into her heart
so deeply he split it?
 
His touch rocked my seismic meter off scale,
this man who still walks into my dreams
occasionally.
 
He gave me a tart-red sexy hat;
                  nightly earth shakes.
Like Jericho, my walls fell apart. 
 
He lives twenty minutes away.
That many years since I last saw him.
 
I tremble sometimes when I run to the pharmacy
or health food store.
What if he’s there?
Will my heart bleed all over the soy and chick peas?
 
An aging woman, in a splattered tee
making a fool of herself
all over again.

 
Blowing it

 
Image
Woman with Pets (Mary Hillier)


We always say
we were happier ‘back then,’
bum broke, closets bare
as a beggar’s pockets,
making love on the floor,
sprung sofa, that
Salvation mattress,
spooning together all night,
but we still glutton stuff
as salaries go up, buy
fancy dresses, silk ties,
CDs we don’t play,
throw out more food
than those starving
children in China could
eat in a year, sleep
in our expensive four-poster
not touching;
too fat with sate
to want.


 
 

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Yuckelbel's Canon
0
Wow Pris! I loved the breadth of range and the depth of candor in these engrossing poems. And yes, guys remember too; floating forever after being separated from each of those rare moments in which what we felt finally meant something. Reading these was like understanding, for the first time what that lifelong significant spiritual other was feeling.
Russell Ragsdale | July 21, 2008 | url
Lisa Allender Writes
0
Truly moving. I love the "mix"--this site feels multi-textured, like a great painting, or great poetry. It has both!
Lisa Allender | July 21, 2008 | url
Wonderful blending
0
or poetry and art. These pieces all work together in strong fashion. Really nice presentation. Enjoyed these poems.
Sam Rasnake | July 19, 2008 | url
post call musings and midnight ramblings...
0
these are beautifully written pris, and express a whole range of different emotions about love and lovers over the course of a life...

i like the way each piece is coupled with one of mary hillier's paintings as well.
deconstructing pam | July 14, 2008 | url
Wow!
0
Another great set of poems, Pris. The thing I've always loved about your work is the honest emotion you convey without falling into abstraction. Great work! And, yes, great paintings--especially like "Woman with Pets" and "Nude with Blue Jay."
Robert Lee Brewer | July 14, 2008 | url
Arabic poet
0
I always feel the spirit of the poetry in Pris's works. despite my Arabic tongue, she easily reaches my mind and heat with her magic feelings that overrides any cultural barriers, that is the real poet.

the first painting is great, I wish I could be more "painting" intellectual to understand it more

Mosaad, The Nileman
Mosaad, the Nileman | July 12, 2008
...
1440
This collection is well up to Pris' usual high standard; gentler, more reflective than many of her roller-coaster-ride raunchy poems smilies/shocked.gif Whether introspective, nostalgic, funny, or in-your-face, I always enjoy her work. Sometimes she pushes language to the brink, inventing new words and phrases as she goes along - but always giving me new insights into her particular world.

She has always made wise choices among artist collaborators, but Mary Hillier's superb artwork is exceptional - these gems could have been painted for these poems!

Congratulations to both artists on this collaboration.
Geoff Sanderson | July 11, 2008

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