I Am Down With You Crooked River

by Dan Smith

“I am down with you crooked river
scarred used but not used up
your glittering refinement glistens
like too much lipstick on an old whore
as night blessed night softens
pocked marked edges and buoyed by dreams
even worn out hulks can pretend love

I am down with your crooked river
on the float with your illuminated banks
bridges all tarted up for some ghost
of a real river festival
when your beauty unadorned
was enough to make us weep”

–two stanzas from “I Am Down With You Crooked River” from Crooked River: Poetry by Dan Smith, deep cleveland press 2005.

A Cleveland of the Mind: Or, Thirteen Ways of Looking At A City

Below, three of Philip Metres‘ 13 Ways of Looking at Cleveland. Read the rest here

2. The scuffed, the soiled, the scarred.  The scalded arm of the short order cook now wrapped in a white cast, who watches his girlfriend shake her pitching arm in the sixth inning of work for the Carroll Blue Streaks, in University Heights.  She’s tiring.  He’d give his arm for her if he could.

3. The magnolia blooming on Magnolia Drive, and the hordes of wedding parties in black and burgundy tuxes, and ivory and saffron and powder-blue chiffon dresses, all assembling in rows for wedding album photos around Wade Park Lagoon.  They play starring roles in a film about love, and the need to voice it publicly.  Matinees are free, all Saturdays from April to October.

8. One dark night, the twilight of yellow streetlamps echoed by the snow piled on sidewalks and slathering the street, and late for the Cavs game, I barreled through Ohio City, looking for an unfamiliar house, when I saw something glinting in the distance, in the middle of the street.  Swinging his body down the center of the snowy street, a man on aluminum crutches.

 

Hart Crane, and A Park, In Cleveland

A revised version of Anne’s essay for the anthology ran over at the Los Angeles Review of Books, and also on Salon

A bit too tipsy, plastic cup of Great Lakes beer in hand, I walked up to the couples and families and of the young artsy types to find out what they knew about Hart Crane. A typical encounter: “Do you know who Hart Crane is?” “Who?” “Well, we’re at the Hart Crane Memorial Park.” “What the hell does that mean?” “The park is named after him.” “No, I’ve never heard of him.”

. See more pictures of the Hart Crane Memorial Park here

Hart Crane Memorial Park, Rivergate Fest

My contribution to the anthology is about Cleveland’s erstwhile poet and the overlooked park in his honor.

And I spent some time with both recently.

Hart Crane is best known for his epic, “The Bridge.” It is not about this bridge.

Nor are these lines from his poems.

But the sculptures are made of steel.

And the view is nice.

Anne Trubek

Midwestern Cities


 

Midwestern Cities
by Dave Lucas 

 

You Midwestern cities, you threadbare capitals,
lost satellites, will your outskirts never end?
Will your suburbs run each other through
and your accents bleed into a slang of silk and husk?
Dawn is slipping across the chain-smoking factories of Pittsburgh and Cleveland, where the third shift
sleeps off its Yuengling, where pierogi boil and stanch.
Wake, Detroit, the morning molts over 10 Mile.
Rise, parched Indianapolis; rise, great skyscraping
Chicago, the odors of your millions soap the El.
Cincinnati, St. Louis, Milwaukee, Minneapolis,
your waters run on.  Your congregations hymn,
the billboards declare The Second Coming
could come at any second.  From anywhere,
Akron or Grand Rapids.  From Gary, Kenosha, Duluth.

 

 

Dave Lucas is the author of Weather (Georgia, 2011), a book of poems.  A PhD candidate in English at the University of Michigan, he was recently featured on BillMoyers.com as one of Rita Dove’s “young poets to watch.”  He lives in Cleveland, where he was born and raised.

Sometimes The Sun

by Nicole Hennessy

SOMETIMES THE SUN

Jim Lowell lives
in the Cuyahoga River

I swear
I’ve seen him
swimming

on foreign mornings
so situated in the suburbs
monotony is mistaken
as convenience

Sometimes the sun seeps in —

For those who don’t know,
listen:

In attempt
to forgive future
as being beautiful
in your maybe
the morning peels layers of shade
by shade drives shadows to softly slumber

I can’t quite articulate it right
because I sound like me
Autocorrect evening —

In backyard Cleveland
I remember camping
Zoo animals moaned
at night it seemed
as if those howling wolves weren’t locked
but roaming free beneath
the bridge my dad epically recounted
so many times climbing
up from the bottom
still stands
reconstructed
old bones
pass cars rusting

It always comes back
to decay

Nothing’s changed
in the neighborhood I grew up in

Those same animals
moan at night
insisting imagined adventures

come breakfast
lunch
and dinner

The same

mural flaking specks of paint
only noticeable in their absence

The same neighbors
somewhere insist
there was a pigeon man
who in his garage kept flocks
of trained-to-return birds
eventually taken by the city
after which
across the street lived merely a man
unable to look at that empty garage
any longer

I don’t recall
his recurring image in my past
as being after that

but the sound of tiny forests growing
in the cracks between brick road
meeting pavement at each end
Just in time to realize
I had wandered too far from home
in the first place —

My mom used to get to dinkin’
dad told me as I stood
in the kitchen unable
to directly face
and she’d start in on me
I don’t want to do that

Meanwhile, my mom sat in a chair
near earlier
She asked when I would talk to them again
Sometimes silence
conveys comfort and trust
This was not one of those times

Sometimes the sun

By then
I had already forgiven them
as being human
my whole life

I don’t come from one of those polite families
instead
people are people
and spread out across bloodlines
of entire ancestry
spans chaos and dictatorship

A tiny corner
supposedly exsist Ireland
where stood men
I don’t think
I’ve known

They later had beers
and discussed
topics recycle wars
comma
intersect progress

cower ancient calendars
embedded in structures
we still don’t understand

interpret as modern myth
compile science
fast forward future
to end endless
ultimate attainment of the sky

encircles madness
similarly rearranged
whispered the sea
translated into elegies
these same thoughts

Still

breathe vibrations born forever
of slight movement at all

It always comes back
to creation

As poets past
stood in streets drooling graffiti
seeping into sewer systems
crowds of couldn’t careless
passersby deleting dreams
live lives

around each other
seems space
in theory

Suddenly disaster

So you’re after
the stop
exit repeat
so you’re after
you’re after
after
me

I know
it’s been a long time
since I’ve sung a song
not littered

keeps coming
and coming
free far-off
symptoms of lonely
not wholly shivering

smoke another cigarette
suck synonyms
backup
report the exact facts
not lyric mirrored
reflect face
fuck
favorite ever place
so distant
I can’t even say
I love you
tomorrow anymore

And then I guess
I’m suffering
They say consequence

rather rhythm —

90-year-old
bright red roses
scent heavy of another flower

No one ever told me
I was a poet
until much later
they assessed me for it
and failed
that I can’t spell character
no matter
spell-check fixes it

Blur the line of
not enough
people to start music
just me
dreaming

The morning is coming

He is sleeping

 

Nicole Hennessy is a nonfiction and poetry writer living in
Lakewood, Ohio. Currently, she writes features for a newspaper called West Life, but works on longer pieces on the side. Her latest project, Black Rabbit, tells the story of local poet Tom Kryss and the rabbits he creates, as well as his relationship with fellow poet d.a. levy. Within the text are 10 of the rabbit prints. A limited edition of 100 copies, the book can be found at Visible Voice and Mac’s Backs. This poem is a small slice of a much larger and continuously growing whole.

The rust belt poet.

Rust Belter Kenneth Patchen, born in Niles, Ohio, in 1911, is one of America’s greatest, if unknown, poets. Author Henry Miller wrote about him this way:

The silence which emanates from him is black. He puts one on tenterhooks. It breeds hysteria. Of course he is shy. And no matter how long he lives he will never become urbane. He is American through and through, and Americans, despite their talkiness, are fundamentally silent creatures. They talk in order to conceal their innate reticence. It is only in moments of deep intimacy that they break loose. Patchen is typical. Then finally he does open his mouth it is to release a hot flood of words. His emotion tears loose in clots.

Here’s Patchen tearing loose in clots in a poem entitled Let Us Have Madness:

Let us have madness openly.
0 men Of my generation.
Let us follow
The footsteps of this slaughtered age:
See it trail across Time’s dim land
Into the closed house of eternity
With the noise that dying has,
With the face that dead things wear–
nor ever say
We wanted more; we looked to find
An open door, an utter deed of love,
Transforming day’s evil darkness;
but We found extended hell and fog Upon the earth,
and within the head
A rotting bog of lean huge graves.