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Blacksnake July 10, 2009

Filed under: poem — Neva Bryan @ 5:36 am
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“Blacksnake.” Jimson Weed, vol. XXIV, new series vol. 8, no. 2 (Fall 2005).

Blacksnake

Coiled in my path like an ampersand.

My heart beats an ellipsis . . .
Punctuates the sentence of my original sin.

Serpent conjunction links me to my base nature.

What was beautiful about you before you came between
Adam & Eve?

 

Autumn Sacrifice: a pantoum June 26, 2009

Mara mentioned villanelles at Spoken Word last weekend. Here’s a form I like: the pantoum.

It is a series of quatrains; the second and fourth lines of each stanza are repeated as the first and third lines of the next. This pattern continues until the final stanza, which differs in the repeating pattern.

AUTUMN SACRIFICE

Holy ghost mist
Walks on water
In morning’s sacred hour.
Autumn hovers above,

Walks on water
In reflections of the sky.
Autumn hovers above,
Mild, then meek, in wind.

In reflections of the sky
Leaves deny death.
Mild, then meek, in wind,
Branches scratch testaments.

Leaves deny death,
But frosty breath withers.
Branches scratch testaments.
Sun draws blood,

But frosty breath withers
Holy ghost mist.
Sun draws blood
In morning’s sacred hour.

“Autumn Sacrifice.” Poetry. 2006 Explorations, MECC, Third Place.

 

Cinquains June 17, 2009

Cinquains are five-line poems popularized by Adelaide Crapsey. She did not invent the five-line poem, but instead re-invented it based on the simplicity of the haiku. One of the most common Crapsey cinquains follows this pattern: the first line has 1 word, the second 3, the third 5, the fourth 4, and the fifth 2.

Because it is so restrictive — limiting the poet to few words — the cinquain can be challenging. While the form is not a favorite in American poetry, it is lovely when mastered.

I wrote this cinquain a few years ago. It utilizes the word pattern 1, 3, 5, 4, 2 and the syllable pattern 2, 4, 6, 8, 2.

“Sumac.” Clinch Mountain Review (2006). Author: Neva Bryan. Editor: Warren Harris.

SUMAC

Sumac,
Fuzzy head bent,
Reminds me where I am:
Appalachia, backbone worn down
With grief.

 

Accents Radio Show – a reading of my poem “Anoint Me” May 17, 2009

Filed under: Writing, poem — Neva Bryan @ 10:38 am
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Listen to the recording of Frank X. Walker’s interview on Accents http://www.katerinaklemer.com/audio/accents_051509.mp3. Also listen for my poem, Anoint Me, to be read. It starts at about 1 min 26 seconds into the recording. This is WRFL Lexington.

 

Neva’s Poem to be read on WRFL-FM Lexington May 15 May 11, 2009

Listen to Accents every Friday @ 2pm EST on WRFL 88.1 FM Lexington or stream live from wrfl.fm.

This Friday, May 15, they’ll be reading a poem of mine, “Anoint Me.”

Also, the guest that day will be poet Frank X. Walker.

Katerina Stoykova-Klemer is the host.

Let me know what you think!

 

Dirty Secret May 19, 2008

Filed under: Uncategorized — Neva Bryan @ 12:50 pm
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DIRTY SECRET

 

 

On July days, we played noon till night.

Stayed in the woods.

Climbed the hill behind Granny’s house.

Dug up treasures in the briar patch:

Decapitated dolls, deflated basketballs, rusty cans.

 

One day we missed Sam.

Thought he might be caught in the patch –

A bad match for Brer Rabbit –

But the thicket offered only barbed promises.

 

We finally found him behind the barn,

Shorts and shoes abandoned in the grass,

Naked,

Up to his neck in a mud hole.

 

Sweet dirt filled every pore,

Soothed his sore feet,

Cooled his hot skin.

 

Dismayed at his sin displayed,

He leaped from his bath

And ran home, clay caked

In every nook and cranny.

 

Granny never blinked an eye.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

“Dirty Secret.” Poetry.  2006 Explorations, MECC, Honorable Mention.

 

Old Logging Road May 6, 2008

Filed under: poem — Neva Bryan @ 3:16 pm
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OLD LOGGING ROAD

 

 

Leaving behind lawyers and you,

I go home.

 

An old logging road sidles

around the mountain

behind our desolate house.

I trudge through mud to the top

and eye the rapescape

of amputated limbs,

knotty torsos,

exposed hearts — ringed to count the years.

 

Here scars are deep gashes

in abandoned land.

Poison ivy and wild vines

fill empty spaces.

 

Stumbling, I reach out to steady myself

and clutch a blackberry switch.

Thorns pierce my palm,

draw red beads to the surface.

 

Cursing,

I rub blood across my barren belly

and weep for this wasteland.

 

 

 

 

 

“Old Logging Road.” Bluestone Review (Spring 2008).

 

Blacksnake May 6, 2008

Filed under: poem — Neva Bryan @ 12:12 am
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Blacksnake

 
 
Coiled in my path like an ampersand.
 
My heart beats an ellipsis . . .
Punctuates the sentence of my original sin.
Serpent conjunction links me to my base nature.
 
What was beautiful about you before you came between
Adam & Eve?
 
 
 
“Blacksnake.” Jimson Weed, vol. XXIV, new series vol. 8, no. 2 (Fall 2005).
 

Where I’m From April 27, 2008

Filed under: poem — Neva Bryan @ 3:03 pm
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WHERE I’M FROM

For George Ella Lyon

 

 

I am from porch swings,

Hershey bars and bottles of pop.

 

From a house of many angles,

high ceilings and slanted floors.

 

Outhouse lilies, dishwater dahlias,

wanton weeds and gaudy flowers.

 

I am from greasy suppers and sugar diabetes,

Bryans and Rambos: Romeo and Faye.

 

From big eaters and bad tempers,

so pitch a hissy when nothing fits.

 

I’ll give you something to cry about!

and Don’t play with fire or you’ll pee in the bed!

 

I am from Episcopals and Free Wills,

Presbyterians and Pentecostals,

dinner on the ground and preachers who spit.

 

From Damascus and St. Paul,

Kentucky-born and Virginia-raised.

 

The fireplace where my uncle fell –

scars stretch tight now across his back –

and another uncle child who died

years before I was born.

 

I am from hoarded photos,

shoved in a drawer,

wrinkled young faces

folded against time.

 

 

 

“Where I’m From.”  The Bluestone Review (Spring 2007).

 

Sawmill Burning April 4, 2008

Filed under: Uncategorized — Neva Bryan @ 3:08 pm
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SAWMILL BURNING  

Butterflies burn in the purple night.

Gossamer blisters twist,

Fall on our faces,

But it’s only luminous ash

That clings to our wet skin.

In the dark a single spark brings it all down.

Full fuel tank roars a dragon’s wrath.

Sawdust and sheet metal meld.

Flames incinerate uncut logs:

Futile death of trees.

My husband sees his life’s work

Flit and fly across the sky

In unbearable embers.

Glowing orange . . .

Then grey . . .

Now white.

Will it melt on my tongue, like snowflakes?

Or taste salty, like tears?

His sawmill burned three days.

Richard brought me its fused beauty:

A lump of metal and wood,

Silver, porous as coral, eerie.

It sits on a shelf,

Reminds us of destruction.

And resurrection.

     

“Sawmill Burning.”  Jimson Weed, vol. XXV, new series vol. 9, no. 2 (Fall 2006). 2006   

Appalachian Writers Association James Still Award for Poetry, Third Place.