Saturday, 5 May 2018

2 Poems by Joe Albanese

Sunday’s Songbird

I forget every
mistake
of fortune

to cut man-made disasters
in my flesh

Damned be the Lord of Light
should my eyes
not adjust
come inevitable dark

Move over, humble soldier,
as I trek
the mountain of
my destruction

At summit’s eternal sunrise,
heal each morning’s songbird
with my
predator
of vain delight

Each day is a song
that only a lucky few
may sing

Today is not my day.


Retrace, Repeat, Retrace

Suppose a now when the old
days were new, before paint’s
drip deluged
over that canvas
of tomorrow. Sidesteps and
sidetracks, minus the wanderings.
Before you found out
our hopeful hare’s leaps don’t
compete with the incessant
tortoise’s crawl.
Before see-you-laters became
goodbyes and a nice-to-meet-you’s
passing shackled you there. When
what could be became what never
was. Those steady silent years,
when each rise fell slowly to its
repetition. And now looking back
is a 360 degree turn. We’re
all just treading the waters of
second chance somedays.


Bionote

Joe Albanese is a writer from South Jersey. His poetry can be found in 2017 issues of Calliope, Concho River Review, Glove, Lowestoft Chronicle, Sunset Liminal, and other publications. His first novel, "Caina," will be published in 2018 (Mockingbird Lane Press).


No comments:

Post a Comment