What he knew when
 
He should have known. He should have known.
When he saw the photo of the near-naked man on the entry table,
He should have demanded. . .something.
Maybe he should have.
Or maybe he should have put together 
the strange smells she brought home on her clothes
with the odd absences
and that steely-reedy tone that she got 
when she told a lie. Shit, maybe he did know.
 
But he didn't.
The place where he would have put that knowledge
was already filled up with stories he used to know
Fat stories, true stories, antibodies, songs.
All he knows now is this:
He doesn’t want to hurt anybody.
He doesn’t want to be the cause of anything.
Ahimsa, he remembers that word: harmlessness.
He would be the guy who reduces the pain in the world,
He'll take a new name, call him:
Professor Hebrewprofen
Doctor More Feen
or Kiss My Ass Perino.
It was his way all along
and that much, at least, he knew.
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Friday, September 21, 2012
Wednesday, September 19, 2012
Three Poems by Jack T. Marlowe
cutting words 
spoken 
spite 
like a 
kitchen 
knife
its blade 
forged
from 
sharpness
of steely 
disdain 
its handle 
formed
from 
wooden 
disregard
words 
aimed 
carefully
she thrusts 
deep, deep 
into my 
abdomen
then 
slashes
upward
lightning
in reverse
it's the 
quickest 
way to 
a man's 
heart
if your 
aim 
isn't to 
keep him 
around 
perdition express
love is a
drunken 
train 
hauling 
a line of 
groaning 
freight  
cars 
a mile 
long 
each one 
filled with 
broken 
promises 
as the 
whole 
lot 
jugger-
nauts 
along 
in 
suicide 
circles 
while 
the grim  
engineer 
looks for 
the first 
oppor-
tunity 
to 
jump 
the 
stinking 
track 
one more broken heart on the boulevard
she intro-
duced me 
to the 
street 
in a way 
that i 
hadn't 
expected 
no choice 
really, but 
to crawl 
away 
amazed 
at how 
well she 
played 
the victim 
when i 
said good-
bye to 
romance
kissing 
the hot 
pavement 
as the 
bitch 
scraped 
me off 
the 
bottom 
of her 
shoes 
Jack T. Marlowe is a gentleman rogue from Dallas, TX.  A writer 
of poetry and fiction and a veteran of the open mic, his work has 
appeared in Handful of Dust, Visceral Uterus, ThunderSandwich, 
Dead  Snakes, The Vein, Underground Voices &  elsewhere. Jack 
is also the mad editor/webmaster of Gutter Eloquence Magazine 
Sunday, September 9, 2012
A Poem by P.R. McDowell
Anguish
Torn,
Voice cracked by emotion of words of love no longer allowed to be spoken.
Broken,
Heart on sleeve,
Unwanted,
And never truly heard.
P.R. McDowell is a writer of poetry, scripts and generally anything which sparks his creativity. Since late 2006 he has begun to be known for his writing. During 2008/2009 he had poems published on the online gallery Sometimes When I Wake At Night, where he was a featured artist.
Ruined,
Heart in a vice grip.
Heart in a vice grip.
Crushed,
Soul broke from longing.
Soul broke from longing.
Torn,
Voice cracked by emotion of words of love no longer allowed to be spoken.
Incomplete,
Laid out cold,
Pained,
With no one to calm tears.
Laid out cold,
Pained,
With no one to calm tears.
Broken,
Heart on sleeve,
Unwanted,
And never truly heard.
P.R. McDowell is a writer of poetry, scripts and generally anything which sparks his creativity. Since late 2006 he has begun to be known for his writing. During 2008/2009 he had poems published on the online gallery Sometimes When I Wake At Night, where he was a featured artist.
He began performing poetry at the Freed Up! poetry night which was done monthly at the now closed Greenroom in Manchester & hosted by Dominic Berry and Steve O'Connor, where along with other long time regular performers there, he became known as a Freed Up! veteran. 
P.R. has also performed at the 2011 Environlution Festival; wrote a collaborated poem titled “Twist the Knife” with the poet Graham Halsey, and has performed at events including Poets Get Mashed, Magical Animals, Stirred, Beatification, Bang Said The Gun: Manchester, Guitar n’ Verse, and Once More With Meaning (which he was a guest compére at).
 
He is currently preparing for the start of production of his first independent film "True Colours" and is also the founder of the arts organisation Light In The Dark (founded by himself, the photographer Damien Hayward, and the poet Nadeem Zafar in August 2011). Light In The Dark is an arts organisation unlike any other, run by artists for artists with the aim to get a venue of its own to run as a community-based hub providing a performance platform for artists; they are also a support development source for aspiring artists by providing them with support & development (advice, guidance & PDP’s).
He is currently preparing for the start of production of his first independent film "True Colours" and is also the founder of the arts organisation Light In The Dark (founded by himself, the photographer Damien Hayward, and the poet Nadeem Zafar in August 2011). Light In The Dark is an arts organisation unlike any other, run by artists for artists with the aim to get a venue of its own to run as a community-based hub providing a performance platform for artists; they are also a support development source for aspiring artists by providing them with support & development (advice, guidance & PDP’s).
Friday, September 7, 2012
A Poem by Seamas Carraher
LETTER TO A BELOVED
Love, i am wasting 
in this hundred years of our exile,
my chest nailed in disease 
with other people's debris.
Listen, the concrete 
is throwing stones here 
in despair.
Nothing can grow and
the killing won't stop.
i have crossed this threshold
between time and our timelessness
on the veins of my wrist.
All the trains are on time, 
this is no extraordinary crisis
in a century of greed.
My knives were sharpened on my mother's milk.
i still cross 
this country of our homecoming, 
a flag burning 
in subversion for the dead.
Love, the time is late, and
spring an unknown season 
half full 
of shooting and bombing,
with fear groaning in all its hollows.
On this point in the unwinding of space
i sit and tease the pain on the point
of your nipples.
i remember your claws that
scratched my old wounds.
i remember when the rage stopped,
your face peaceful like a child.
And then i remembered
a time when the feeding was full 
and it was elsewhere, 
more human in our futuring,
and another time in its truces,
and with that note cracking your 
sleeping forehead
and the day breaking in segments 
between our fingers
i joined your thighs with my maleness,
laughing,
at the unwinding of war,
the permanent nature of losses.
Séamas Carraher was born in Dublin, Ireland in 1956. He lives and writes on the Ballyogan estate, in south County Dublin, at present.
Recent publications include poems in Dead Flowers, Pyrokinection, Dead Snakes, Carcinogenic Poetry, Naphalm & Novacain, The Camel Saloon, ditch, Bone Orchard Poetry, Istanbul Literary Review and Pemmican. Previously his work has been published in Left Curve (No. 13, 14 & 20), Compages, Poetry Ireland Review, the Anthology of Irish Poetry and the Irish Socialist (newspaper). 
Wednesday, September 5, 2012
A Poem by Phil Barnes
This IS a love poem
You can't understand the pyromaniac in me.
The desire to love and then set flame to the feeling
to pour rum on it and watch the light from destruction play in the air and mock your senseless building.
Pursuing flimsy shit
like comfort while cavorting with a beast
I have no pity for you
(you wanted it)
You took the shit
(you wanted it)
Even when the recognition of evil was so blatant you had to hum and whistle to block out the sounds of your bones being crushed
you stayed
(you wanted it)
Even when the carefully crafted look in my eyes changed from friend to foe and the heat from my gaze threatened to leave a mark
you still held out your hands
palms up
And when I finally found the place to cut you
where the pain would be the most exquisite
and I went about carving my real name
even then when you looked up at me and saw there was no room for you
that there never had been
Even when the veil came down and the teeth came out
you still blindly reached for my hand and tried to tell me things about love.
Phil Barnes (who is a she) is a poet and fiction writer currently residing in Uptown, Mpls with her Beta Mayhem.  While this is her first attempt at publication, she has shared her work at multiple events including the 2011 St. Paul Art Crawl, Chronicles from the Wall-a First Friday event and several random gatherings of writers in dark taverns.  She will also be hosting an event for the upcoming 2012 St. Paul Art Crawl.
Monday, September 3, 2012
A Poem by Agholor Leonard Obiaderi
DOUBLE-EDGED SWORD  
It  is called the magic 
of flapping heart-beats,
 the emotion that  drives you
 to kill those whom you love.
 You wait patiently by 
the door while your lover sleeps with
 someone else. 
You crave your mother’s 
bosom, your lover’s
 breasts.
 Tear out your 
 heart and fling it into the streets,
 with its pipes, 
tubes and longing. 
Douse this 
volcano of desire. You may
self-destruct. 
The heart-shaped sword 
 lies between 
the pillow and pink letters piled
 in neat folds. 
It sparks your 
ruin. Cuts your heart to
 pieces.
AGHOLOR LEONARD OBIADERI  holds a Bachelor's degree in the English Language.He teaches in a  secondary school in Delta State, Nigeria but also finds time for his hobbies which include writing poetry and reading crime novels. His poems have been published  in UptheStairCase Quarterly; Barnwood International Magazine; and Shortstory Library.    
 
Saturday, September 1, 2012
A Poem by Susan Dale
IT DIDN’T FEEL LIKE DRIFTING
        
You went away one October day.
I told myself we drifted apart
Though my heart doesn’t remember it that way
Drifting___ is morning mist
burning into full-fledged day
Shadows into sunlight
Winds: wanderers
But you leaving that brisk November day
That was howling gales hurling
sharp objects into helpless creatures
Powerful waves
Crashing the shore in rampages
To carry off
my sad and broken heart
Susan’s poems and fiction are on Eastown Fiction, Tryst 3, Word Salad, Pens On Fire, Ken *Again, Hackwriters, and Penwood Review. In 2007, she won the grand prize for poetry from Oneswan.
You went away one October day.
I told myself we drifted apart
Though my heart doesn’t remember it that way
Drifting___ is morning mist
burning into full-fledged day
Shadows into sunlight
Winds: wanderers
But you leaving that brisk November day
That was howling gales hurling
sharp objects into helpless creatures
Powerful waves
Crashing the shore in rampages
To carry off
my sad and broken heart
Susan’s poems and fiction are on Eastown Fiction, Tryst 3, Word Salad, Pens On Fire, Ken *Again, Hackwriters, and Penwood Review. In 2007, she won the grand prize for poetry from Oneswan.