CAUGHT IN THE NET - TWO

May 2001

Editor - Jim Bennett

CITN2 is here and I can tell you that sometimes a month can pass very quickly. Thank you for all the kind words which greeted our first issue. Once again we have a collection of quality poems all given freely by their writers. My thanks go to everyone who has submitted work for inclusion in this issue and my apologies to those I could not include. I am swamped with an embarrassment of riches and I want to get as broad a selection as possible. I also follow a policy of publishing several pieces by the same author in order to enable the reader to see the range of the poets writing, but if space does not allow I will publish the same poet in several editions.


Please note that no particular spelling convention has been followed and the spellings used reflect the usage of each contributor.  We are always looking for new poets and poems for CAUGHT IN THE NET and our other, web based, magazine TRANSPARENT WORDS both of which are hosted on the site of PK POETRY LIST   The PK Poetry List is a poetry workshop and discussion list.  Anyone interested in joining the list or in finding out more can do so at the main PK site which is at -

http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Aegean/9952/index.htm  

There are already over 900 subscribers to CITN but please feel free to pass it on to your friends.  


Copyright Notice - All the work produced in this ezine is the copyright of the individual authors and cannot be reproduced without permission. All writers have exerted their moral rights to be identified as the author of their work.}

Submissions - always welcome - please send to - caught_in_the_net@hotmail.com


Contents

John Birkbeck   Ceremony
    Light Sculptor
Janet I. Buck  - (Medford, Oregon, USA)    Shaving Bitter Longing's Legs
Arthur Chappell - (Manchester, UK)   Soft spot for Cell Phones   
Frank Faust - (Melbourne, Australia)   Going Coo Coo 
Larry L. Fontenot - (Sugar Land, Texas, USA)   Grass
Shannah Leah Hogsett  - (Illinois, USA)   Eros
    Dawn
Frances LeMoine - (New Hampshire, USA)   Goodbye Number 318
    Sky 4:45pm
Carol Ann Lindsay - (Carlsbad CA, USA)   I Heard The Coyotes Cry
    One Gift
    Lumberjack
Mick Moss - (Liverpool, U.K.)   Poetry
Tammara Hayimi-Slilat - (Israel)   My Baby 
    Mother
Jim Swift - (Port Alberni, BC, Canada)   A Slant on the News
Calaya J  Williams - (Alaska, USA)   Temporary Lodging
     

CEREMONY
by John Birkbeck
 
She said that men
who make her laugh
also make her hot
but she would marry
only a man who could
stop her hunger
so I sat anonymous
amid the bride's family--
the worst man
at her wedding

See more poems by John at; http://poets2000.com/poemfields and http://www.thepoeticlink.com


 
 
LIGHT SCULPTOR
By John Birkbeck
 
At the summit of his world
he made a grasp at the rational
surrendering to the reality of
simultaneity of aestheticised
and ratonal lines of sight
yet able to avert contrapunt
cluttering his old contricities
painstakingly gleaned from
the Musee d'Art Moderne
and thence a reverse "epiphany"
of subject-objects cannily arrayed
into fussily inavoidables
within place and hour
a hail to and a farewell from
(so to speak) to stride between
place and place a l'une a l'autre
(so to speak again)
a beholding-- a mere solicitude
that he had lived to trample
the grapeyards of euphoria.

 

See more poems by John at; http://poets2000.com/poemfields and http://www.thepoeticlink.com

Shaving Bitter Longing's Legs
by Janet I. Buck
 
"Grab the broom of anger and drive off the beast of fear."
 
    Zora Neale Hurston
 
My anger is sleeping around
and I'm pregnant, wanting
to abort these ghosts,
leave the hut of liquor's mouse,
feeding plump escapist cells.
I'm wedded to these surly weeds
despite their thorns and rooted angst.
In one village, I am a child
clawing at accepting laps.
My words just aren't digestible.
I toy with begging, but I can't.
I pop your beer and pour
your glass of Chardonnay.
 
There will be two patches of earth
I shall need to label "home"
Climates of diversity
are brewing bed sores in my dreams.
One has kegs for centerpieces,
snapping plastic silverware;
the other is a sober scene
of sweet implied serenity.
One makes hamburger of grief;
the other covers it in sauce.
 
One hugs a tear as if it's born of leprosy;
the other owns its snakes and shoots.
It's humid there in late, late spring.
Razors gather rust and sit,
awaiting courage, shaving cream.
It's coming near the time to choose
between the drought
and sticky mist of honesty.
Choking on these vitamins
of "maybe this will free my soul,
stroke it like a homeless cat,"
I pack my sleeveless negligees,
wander to the warmer side.

 

See more of Janet's work at
http://members.aol.com/jbuck22874/whatsnew.html

MY SOFT SPOT FOR CELL PHONES
by Arthur Chappell
 
 The train was delayed but it's a nice day
 So I took a short walk  through Morecambe Bay
 That's how I ended up stuck in quicksand.
 It's lucky I had my phone in my hand.
 I'd just dialled out as my feet disappeared
 I rang  up to ask you if you had heard
 The rumours about John, from Parcel Force
 Him and his wife  are having a divorce.
 Don't cry, Sue. We don't know them all that well.
 The phone's gone all muddy. You'll have to yell
 A bit louder. I'm in up to my waist
 It feels like porridge and wallpaper paste.
 Before the party, I'll have to change clothes.
 Brand new trousers too, shame to ruin those.
 I ordered us our new radiator.
 I'll scream 'Help!' now and call y
                                                       o
                                                              u                      
 
                                                                    B
                                                                         
                                                                          a
 
                                                                          c
 
                                                                          k
 
 
                                                                          L
 
                                                                          a
 
                                                                          t
 
                                                                          e
 
                                                                          r

 

See more of Artur's work at - http://www.arthurchappell.clara.net/contents.htm


Going Coo-Coo
by Frank Faust
 
There are pigeons on my rooflines.
The sun is still low and highlights
a bump where each fat, grey
ball of feathers is coo-cooing away
as though its life depends on it.
Maybe it does.
 
The sun is a threat today.
Still hot from the day just gone
and full of menacing promise
of a sweltering meltdown to come.
I will sauna in my workplace.
There is no relief beyond
the feverish recycling of heated air,
the best my pedestal fan can do.
 
And work is both bane and salvation
for this day, with no place to run
from the heat and nowhere to hide
from tasks accumulated. The hope
is of becoming lost in the intricacies
of policy and procedure, submission
and correction, and change,
for its own sake.
 
The coo-cooing pigeons have moved off.
It is time to start, to seek a cooler place
in my mind and lose myself there.
As though my life depends on it.
And, maybe, it does.

 

See more at - Tales of Faust - http://www.hotkey.net.au/~flp/F_index.htm


Grass
by Larry L. Fontenot
 
A man is known
by the lawn he mows,
so I slip into loose jeans
and grass stained walking shoes,
murderer's clothes left over
summer to summer.
I march out, and the grass succumbs
to arrogant whirling blades.
 
As I walk among the fallen,
I gather strength in the notion
that each stalk will rise,
that each blade is unbowed
though clipped.
It is the duty of grass to survive,
to taunt landowners,
like a growling dog
safe behind fence.
 
I take the smell of St. Augustine
with me through the back door
into the kitchen where you sit
reading the Saturday paper.
There is a curious mix of aromas
when we meet.
You wrinkle your nose,
say I smell bad,
and I say, "Evil?" and you smile
and we each strip a piece of clothing
from the other's body
until we are down to nothing
but the smell itself,
down to skin where no grass grows,
down to where what fits survives,
where I place my tongue
deep into your ripe
summer heat.

More of Larry's work can be seen at http://poetrysuperhighway.com/PoetLinks.html


Eros
by Shannah Hogsett
 
under clear night skies
she would light candles
and wait for his return
all the while recalling his scent
feeling his hands on her
like living tattoos
the touch would over come her
 
at times it would rain
and she would surrender
so slowly
to the memories he left her
visions she would drown in
 
on summer mornings
when walking through the garden
she would stop and kiss the statue
and hear only her heart beating

Email Shannah at - shannah22@hotmail.com


 
Dawn
by Shannah Hogsett
 
Daytime has come
streaming through the window
over your face
along the length of your body
Your breathing is steady
I watch your lips
soft and open
Your lashes stir
I wonder what you are dreaming
maybe things you are not
showing to me
and I imagine that I should leave
Your smell clings to my body
I can still feel your hand striking my thigh
I envision the rhythmic crescendo
that descends upon me in the night

 

Email Shannah at - shannah22@hotmail.com


Goodbye Number 318
by Frances LeMoine
 
Boddhisatva's on the radio,
it's like you're in the room,
in the corner,
with your green monitor eyes,
and crooking a mighty finger.
 
Your eyes, mines.
 
Buzz of a fly's wings,
stiller, then still,
like the winding of a watch.
 
Leaving the words to me,
always,
a silence doesn't move you.
Words are your doors in,
my windows out.
 
I wait for you to land
on this unwedded strip,
15 blue watts dim and dimming still.
 
Every kind of moon has come unnoticed,
is gone,
then mourned.
 
Days like mileage signs
on the longest drive.
Persisting,
snatching joy's imprints,
in bright glimpses,
in low frequencies
 
This is nothing like a romance
 
Words burst,
hang,
 
drift away like a child's summers
or death row nights
 
If I turn on the light,
I'll see the lonely strip,
no finger crooked
 
and if I
STOP
to think,
I'll know what's been severed.
 
And it always smells like winter.

Email Frances at - frances_lemoine@yahoo.com


Sky 4:45pm
by Frances LeMoine
 
Day turns to urine yellow
paints my eyes
seizes focus
Peach and brown of retired teeth
smudged against some
leftover snow
Night's fat brush
smears the cobalt clouds
priestly purple
tar emerges

Email Frances at - frances_lemoine@yahoo.com


I Heard The Coyotes Cry
by Carol Ann Lindsay
 
The thick, soft, tawny coat,
had a muzzle pointed like a wolf's,
aimed northward on the street
next to the canyon. It seemed
a car hit man's best friend
until I saw the black-tipped tail.
Then I felt no grief because long,
loud, whines in the dark
come when cats disappear
and coyotes celebrate lunch.
It's been two weeks since Felix,
my little girl's cat vanished,
so I'm glad one of them is dead.
Maybe tomorrow I'll remember
my house stands on coyote land
and savor sounds of the night again.

Link - www.creative-commerce.com


One Gift
by Carol Ann Lindsay
 
A flower grew from seed,
soft and pungent smelling,
and it's free
for the mother hiding
truth about a shining
dandelion being weed.

 

Link - www.creative-commerce.com


Lumberjack
by Carol Ann Lindsay
 
 
Murdered trees take bows
so man can have newspapers
full of ugly death.

Link - www.creative-commerce.com


Poetry
by Mick Moss
 
Before the general population could read, back then maybe there was a need
for poetry
so that history could be told, by some smart arse bard of old
But now we've got TV what's the friggin point?
I hate poetry
Let me explain
Shakespeare's messy sonnets done up like Easter bonnets
with too much flowery nonsense all the time
with all his catatonic pentameter it really doesn't matter
because he only spun it out to make it rhyme
moving on to Byron, what a self indulgent moron
Shelley, Keats and Coleridge? I have better in my colon
not to mention Wordsworth, well. what are his words worth?
not much when you get right down to it
wandering lonely as a cloud, talks to daffodils out loud
what a dozy ineffectual stupid twit
And Robbie Burns the tax collector, with his smelly tam o shanter
writing gibberish that no one understands
while he glibly tries to cop with every virgin in every croft
in every corner of his bonny highland land
Which brings us onto Brooke and Owen and their bloody boring poems
about the obvious futility of war
if I should die in some foreign field let it finally be revealed
I`m glad! I won't have to read that bullshit anymore
And what of Hughes and Plath? let's face it, they're both naff
with their self pitying airs to love affairs gone wrong
Sorry, did I forget to mention, that cuddly teddy Betjeman
with his choo choos bringing early morning mail
his incessant rambling on, in that monotone sing song
is really quite beyond the pail.
Let's go across the great divide because it cannot be denied
the States have their fair share of poets of aplomb
like that fat bald beatnik Ginsberg going on and on and on and on and Om
and let's not forgetti Ferlinghetti, you need a bleedin dictionary
to understand that man, what is he on?
While back in dear old Blighty we had the ever mighty
Scousers, turning on to what was known as Mersey Beat
Like Henri and McGough, do me a favour mate, sod off
you get better poets begging in the street
Meanwhile over at MI5 that deceitful little hive
of intrigue and of frightening cold war scares
writing her insipid little couplets we find that annoying Mrs Muppet
we know and love as the 'humorous' Pam Ayers
But there is a spark in the dark, up near Trafford Park
is a cheeky Manc called Johnny Cooper Clarke
with an emaciated face and hair all over the place
he married an alien from outer space
(and she's welcome to him)
Then back down in the South, another geezer with a mouth
spouts witty ditties about hedgehogs and sheds
he's John Hegley no less, but when you put him to the test
there's nothing new here being said.
Oops! I nearly missed that Welsh one who was always pissed
Thomas the tanked up Dylan. May I please be forgiven
if I quote him one last word to end this verse
Llareggub. (say it in reverse)
 

See more from Mick Moss at - http://www.geocities.com/emcsquareduk/index.html


My Baby
by Tammara Hayimi-Slilat
My baby is sleeping now. How
irresponsible of him to dump
all his worries on me. O
too heavy a burden.
What, I say, what
if he suddenly stops breathing?
His breath, butterfly like,
frail and fragile, where
shall I hide my eyes
with his tiny corpse on my hands?
If only I could believe in our Father
in Heaven, I would have dumped it onto Him.
It might have been easier then,
to cry, I mean.
But I can't run away. I can only pray
that when the time comes
I'll be strong enough to say:
My child, you own your life.
You don't owe it to anyone,
not to mummy, not to country, not to God.
I'll stay here, on guard,
but only you can draw yourself
a full scale chart of the stars.

Visit Tammara.s web site at: http://go.to/poetryismylife


 
Mother
by Tammara hayimi-Slilat
 
In the bloody battle fought between
us, in the desparate attempt to
murder your image in my soul,
your need to control
my mental evolution, I've almost
gone insane.
 
After a thousand battles, almost
at the end of the third decade of my life,
almost at the end of the war,
I looked into the mirror drunk with victory
and behold: I see you smiling at me there.

Visit Tammara.s web site at: http://go.to/poetryismylife


A Slant on the News
by Jim Swift
 
A slant
 
            on the
 
                        news,
 
                                  you say,
 
how apt,
 
               it
 
                      should
 
                                  appear
 
like  
 
        a flight
 
                          of
 
                                    geese
 
each
 
           one,
 
                        a
 
                               reporter,
 
flying
 
             on the
 
                       disturbed
 
                                         air
 
of one
 
           who has
 
                          gone
 
                                    before.

 

See more of Jim's work at - http://members.home.com/perceptions-exhibit


Temporary Lodging
by Calaya J  Williams
 
Cars sings caustic plastic sounds
keen through forested plots.
We drive panoramic twists,
crooks, in fast inventions-
park, camp; mark intentions.
 
You carve bark for fair baskets.
I wonder why you don't care
for bleeding tree perspectives
or if you've hear plastic sounds
keen through our slow, short story.

 

Read more of Calaya's work at http://www.mosquitonet.com/~calaya/

 
Afterword
 
email Caught in the Net at - caught_in_the_net@hotmail.com  tell us what you think.
email Jim Bennett - jim@bennett11.freeserve.co.uk
An archived version of Caught in The Net is available at
http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Aegean/9952/index.htm  
where you can join the subscribe to mailing list and the PK Poetry List
 
Thank you for taking the time to read Caught in the Net.
Next edition due at the end of May 2001 look out for it in the in-tray

 

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