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April | 2022

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Abby Davick

Frozen and Thawed

Fat Joker

By Charlie Green

Once upon an evening at one party Halloween

I came upon a man whose hair was dyed a shade of green

With white paint upon his face, and lips a fiery red

I decided it would be the joker with whom I broke my bread

He sat upon a leather couch and had sat there for some time

With finger food and drink in hand, he jovially dined

There was room left on the couch, despite the joker’s size

With comfort, I sat ‘tween the armrest and his mammoth thigh

With fascination I watched him talk, (he had painted neath his chins)

As he told me of the democrats’ many trespasses and sins

“At least we have free speech” He cried, with mountain dew in hand

free to speak his mind, I thought, though, too fat to even stand

What had happened to this man, raised here in this town?

Chomping on cheese pizza, whilst clad as a clown

One who’d lost his mother’s faith, and dropped his father’s twang

Yet his grand old party loyalty remained the same

As Michael Jackson from the speakers ‘round the homestead boomed

I felt a tremendous sense of loss as I looked around the room

I thought about the yeoman farmers raising cows and pigs

I thought about the echoes of their ulster scottish jigs

Even older, I saw canoes, fashioned lovingly

After months of careful carving from a giant birchwood tree

All of them spontaneous, genuine and free

Committed to their family and community

Suffering from hunger, chaos and disease

Thanking God for every day, and blessing every sneeze 

As I had this wondrous vision, I then saw myself

Who’s miserable and yet, to them, the pinnacle of wealth

Staring at myself I then was filled with a great dread

As I pondered the endless bureaucracies ahead

Of cubicles and contracts, of slavery and greed

Of dogs worth more than fetuses, and logs worth more than trees

“I don’t know”, I told the joker, “I don't know who to trust”

“Just a dusty old tome, and a feeling in my gut”

“Alright bro, thats cool, just quit listening to their lies

You need free yourself, man, just open your eyes”

I nodded and told him it was time for my departing

And said goodbye to the joker as I left the party

To the Moon and Back

By Isabella Schremp

“I love you to the moon and back,” you say

Before we part

You reminded me how much you loved me

My little mind imaged your words 

Little hearts wrapped around the moon

I smiled with my baby teeth showing 

I wish now

That I held onto those words just a little bit harder

That I tattooed our memories on my mind

Before you slipped from my brain 

Now I sit here with only photos of you

And the few memories I have 

I try to strain out memories of everything you did

I pick my brain to try to remember what your favorite color was

But our memories have faded from my mind

I only remember little pieces of you

And now all I have are stories that have been told to me

I only hope they are telling the truth

But in the nights I wish you were near

I remember what you would say to me

“I love you to the moon and back” 

Upside Down or Right Side Up

By Abby Davick

Bag of Water

By Charlie Green

The world is a bag, and it is bursting at the seams

Like buttons on a glutton, like feasting maggots teem

Some squirm to the top, some crushed underneath

Slaving for their masters, slaving for machines

Filled with filth and poison, poised to reap refuse

Belching evil words, and bulging with untruth 

But never spills the liquid, a glum and clammy gray

Spinning, softly suffering, night by night, day by day

Amidst the mist and fog afoul, stands stacks of golden coins

Towering high above the surface of the nation's noise

Amassed from pasts of fortunes crass, they now grow green with mold

Lilting with the twinge of guilt from ages growing old

Though I criticize, my lies are proof of who I'm for

Any action otherwise has motives ulterior

I'm in the liquid, a floating fleck, eternally unclean

The world is bag, and it is bursting at the seams

Inspired by Mr. Kipling

By Lauren Tyler

Who will carry the white man’s burden

His groanings, moanings, and strain?

Who will bear his labors

Working, hurting, but not for gain?

The answer is this

History’s tragic twist

The white man does not carry his burden

But passes it to the Native man,

Or the African woman

The white man does not toil

His brow does not sweat nor his back strain

But he keeps the fruit and passes the labor

Creating a country built on tears and shame

When his cities become rust

His dreams no more than dust

He’ll give them to you

And tell you to make do

Why should a black man carry the stars and stripes?

Why should a Native American listen to the National Anthem?

The truth of the matter is

They helped build this country

They deserve it’s bounty

They carried the white man’s burden

So now it’s his turn to carry theirs

Hallway Crush

By Sophia Dowling

Flashback

By Janie Monahan

You don’t quite remember how, 

But somehow you’ve found yourself 

Stealing to the ground. 

Held hostage because

Your mind is bound 

To a memory 

A moment

A month 

A year. 

A time 

Where the only thing

You could cling to 

Was fear. 

There you lie, 

Crawling across  

On the floor. 

Crying out for a door

That maybe,

Maybe someone would

Implore--someone could knock! 

But alas,

You’re trapped in a broken clock. 

Mushroom Cup

By Ada Young

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