Vagrant Tercets
by Christopher Munde
Georg Trakl
Above ground, hoarfrosted snow, its uncontrolled Substance, patterned with Pompeian hollows, Where bodies once, in vast discomfort, embraced.
Margaux Hemingway
Soul which is charted: Itself a body with thermography laced Flaunts in her face the burning address of each pressure point Loitering in the throat from generations past like one long swallow.
Veronique Le Guen
Gives birth between each station in an empty subway car To a litter of mole pups, her palms upraised like in tableaux Of saints. The offspring ply commuters with sedative-tipped claws.
R_____
It isn’t quite a haunting, the way it reoccurs each night Outside a Manhattan bar, but more the clockwork of revelry: Throes the second heartbeat of one more delivered unto xenon light.
Ivan Chtcheglov
A city through which light wanders in perpetuum To slither up the Eiffel Tower: Two urbanisms converge Until eyes dry still and homeless in their labyrinth.
Elisa Lam
Dropped classes, doses, clothing; call this passing anything But through. Chewed up in pixelated security tape, loss Now urban legend: Call this drifting anything but story.
Christopher Munde’s first poetry collection, Slippage (Tebot Bach), won the Patricia Bibby Award, and his poems have previously appeared in Blackbird, The Literary Review, Massachusetts Review, Third Coast, West Branch Wired, and elsewhere. He is a graduate of the University of Houston’s MFA program and the recipient of an Academy of American Poets Prize. Presently, he lives and teaches at Jamestown Community College in western New York. Here is a link to his website: christophermunde.com.
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