by Brett Rutherford
Poems, work in progress, short reviews and random thoughts from an eccentric neoRomantic.
Monday, October 24, 2022
The Customer
Too Many Arrows
by Brett Rutherford
after Meleager, Greek Anthology, V, 215
Be A Good Sport
by Brett Rutherford
Saturday, October 22, 2022
Fever Dream
by Brett Rutherford
Thursday, October 20, 2022
Book Row
London had its
Duck Lane, where
witch trial tomes
and bound-up
sermons rotted
unread, amid
the novels of the day.
New York once had
"Book Row" which ran
down Bowery way
from Union Square
to Astor, mostly on
Fourth Avenue. Bums
in the doorways, dust
everywhere, piles
of books on carts,
sidewalks clogged
with the unsold —
Three dozen shops
catered to the
improvident collector,
the impoverished scholar.
On a bad day
you came out sneezing,
found nothing,
On a good day
the unexpected treasure
that would change your life
emerged from behind
some other title, tucked
and forgotten, its price
a pittance. Better
than venery and its venison
outcome was biblio
mania and the small cry
of surprise, the fear
that the clerk would recognize
your steal and up-price it,
the moment you came
into the light again,
that volume clasped tight,
as though you had robbed
a bank, or jousted a knight
to win the book of spells.
O, the things we found
and carried off, those
rainy Saturdays
when Book Row called!
A Prague Mystery
by Brett Rutherford
Saturday, October 15, 2022
DO NOT FEED
by Brett Rutherford
Thursday, October 13, 2022
Of A Sudden
by Brett Rutherford
Saturday, October 8, 2022
Bringing Home the Bacon
by Brett Rutherford
You’re late. Is that dinner?
Put your club by the door.
The child is not home yet,
God knows where’s it’s gone.
Maybe for good this time.
Sit. The broth is ready.
Same as yesterday.
What’s in the sack? Looks
like it’s still moving.
Is
that blood on your mouth?
Anthropocene
by Brett Rutherford
When giant beasts roamed forests
sweltering, and boiling seas
brewed monsters ammoniac,
when Titans tread volcano’s edge’
sinkholes appeared in one place,
while in another, peaks
jagged with metallic ores
reared up to pierce the sky.
Ice vanished, replaced by storms
whose displaced waters
roared with rage, and fell
again upon the stunned ground.
It was not a kind earth,
brute with physics,
savage in every season,
sorting the myriad of life
with cancellation, apex
species crushed down
to the fossil record.
Wednesday, October 5, 2022
The Why of It
To see the world
from within it,
above and below,
inhabiting each
and all of its beings,
not self-effaced
but self-expanded,
to sort significance
from noise and boredom,
to put aside all pain
for the sake of a thing
made only of words —
Sunset Rhapsody
by Brett Rutherford
Eye-blinks,
brush-strokes,
things no sooner seen
than forgotten
unless
the words come,
or the brush speeds past
the drying of water
hastily, hastily
before it is gone —
Red light above,
black water below
horizon-sky.
Foreground of forest
some parts still lit,
some parts in silhouette —
Ravens on high,
arrowing about,
while in the hedge
one whippoorwill
stands still —
Gale-swept corn
tilts eastward,
sharp eyes peek red
in shrubbery
and under fallen
oak branches,
trees’ loss
their newfound
mansion —
The high grass moves.
The hare hides.
Snake closes
all-knowing eyes —
In twilit pines,
something is about,
hungry for flesh —
foxes bring down
a limping doe —
Bats swoop to scoop
the almost invisible
midge and gnat,
summer’s last harvest —
The spider laments
the coming snow,
web never big enough
to catch and keep
a full larder —
Moss, lichen,
mushroom, fern,
sleep, or die!
Rock shelter,
south-facing trunk,
warm rills
of water melting:
they will get by —
Maples, if you
could only hear them,
chatter with leaf and root:
“Frost coming!
Oh, what’s the use?”
St. John's Eve
by Brett Rutherford
Gather the spores of ferns
on St. John’s Eve,
when fireflies
and will o’ wisps
are wont to flicker.
Sprinkle the brown dust of them
about your cap and cloak,
and you may dance
with the elves and fairies
invisible, and
unmolested; reach
into the cache
of buried treasure
and bring up gold,
or even, if such
is your desire, stand
at any crossroad
and converse
with suicides.
Last, walk home
slowly and silently,
lest you alarm the hens
or rouse a dog’s
suspicions.
Fern seed shaken
from off your garb,
greet then the dawn
with a secret smile.