Friday, October 31, 2025

Friday, October 31, 2025: Sarah Maclay's "What the Trees Said"

 What the Trees Said


(Melisande, Before He Sees Her, Weeping, by the Stream)


Sometimes speaking is not the right answer.

Too many deaths, big ones. And everyone rushing to claim

some scrap, to pull the dead over themselves to wear like a jacket

or sweater or robe—to claim them. How can they talk so fast?

Like people expect it.

How can they talk so soon?

Why not just feel it? For a long time. How can they talk?


No, sometimes speaking is not the right answer.

Still, there’s music. Crawling, curling, out of its iron crisscross cage

in the cocktail evening, crossing the open veranda and spilling

into the verdance of the late-light lawn and the swollen land-locked lakes

and the rush of trees at the base of the hill.

And that sound you hear is not a piano, no, but a sequence of diamonds—

hitting water, returning

from solid to original form

so quickly the notes

in runnels and spray

dissolve into longing and wavering

traces of shadow and reflected boughs—all reverberation

and swaying fingers and torsos


solemnly waltzing, immense

in needle-fetished, loosely armored


and gigantic limbs, this band of gathered

spruce grown rainward into spiraling,


many-handed tower-

beings changing the hand of time and the shape


of the air they move in, above the viridian pool

and the fountain spraying its jewels and the lily


surface of the statuary, weirdly still and dwarfed

below the choir of swaying trees


nodding and bowing and reaching as if this necessary wind

were only the long-expected accomplice—


the long-awaited accompanist—

heaven principle arriving to reveal form


as verb, which is their message:

Listen to the bruised heart

of your mother, whimpering in the distance.

Listen to your own.


Put down the crown. If there ever was a crown.

Place it in the water. Let the tiara turn back into tear


and let the glass re-liquefy, the rhinestones river themselves

into wavery mirror; the held and fastened facets of cut glass


spew into the air like the laughter of a chandelier

turned upside down, in circling arcs of wet light.


Let it all disappear.

Learn this word: Relinquish.


Your hair will feel like water. You’ll feel water

on your cheek.


Your waterhair a waterfall, anything you try to crystallize

will liquefy and fall just as these notes


coming through the windows of the music room, in the distance,

not that far from here, winding through the air beyond the Tudor harlequin patterns


of the panes that might have caged them, growing cool as day gives in to night

and as the ice windows melt into twilight


melting in twilight

and trees with blue leaves—


and as the tourmaline of evening deepens into a liquid obsidian

reflecting night, the nearly still surface will finally ripple


and the reflected arms and faces of the stone and stationary naiads

waking to the dark

will undulate

and move—


and as a cool allure of lunar pallor shivers over the pale pools

reflecting night:

If water can ripple,

gravity can ripple;

time can ripple

and rush.


She wanted to love.

She wanted to die.

She wanted to not remember.

She wanted to dip her hand in the holy fever.


© Sarah Maclay






Sarah Maclay’s newest releases are a chapbook, The H.D. Sequence—A Concordance ( Walton Well Press, 2024) and Nightfall Marginalia (What Books Press), a 2023 Foreword INDIES Finalist for Poetry, her fifth full-length collection. Her writing, supported by a Yaddo residency and a City of Los Angeles Individual Artist Fellowship, awarded the Tampa Review Prize for Poetry and a Pushcart Special Mention, has appeared in APR, FIELD, Ploughshares, The Writer’s Chronicle, The Best American Erotic Poems, Poetry International, where she was Book Review Editor for a decade, and elsewhere. She’s the producer/host of Poetry.LA’s “The Poetry of Night.” Website: https://www.sarahmaclay.com/




Friday, October 10, 2025

Friday, October 10, 2025: Terry Wolverton's " The moon showed up at my house this afternoon"

 The moon showed up at my house this afternoon


Isn’t it a little early, I asked when

I answered her knock. I didn’t want to wait,

she shrugged. She was so beautiful standing

there on the porch I could only invite her

in. I knew the neighbors would gossip, the news

would get back to my spouse, but she also loves

the moon and her main upset would be that she

wasn’t home to greet her too. My spouse works hard,

but devotedly follows the moon at night.

The moon squeezed her orb into my living room—

she’s bigger than she looks from far away—sat

next to a window so the afternoon light

could filter over her. She glowed. She faced half-

way away, so she appeared as a waxing

crescent. I offered her a cup of oolong

tea. She returned a musical laugh as if

my suggestion was charming but absurd:

After all, what do I have to offer the moon?

I longed to unburden my predicaments.

It felt like we were old friends, just catching up,

but of course, I’d never been this close to her,

inhaling the scent of night sky. And what could

my disconsolations mean to her, whose view

is so vast? Shy then, I stayed quiet, chiding

How stupid! The moon is sitting right beside

you, and your tongue is mush? As if she heard me,

she offered a kind wink, then began to hum.


© Terry Wolverton





Terry Wolverton is author of thirteen books of poetry, fiction and creative nonfiction,

including Embers, a novel in poems, and Insurgent Muse: art and life at the Woman’s

Building, a memoir. She has also edited sixteen literary compilations. Terry has received

a COLA Fellowship from the City of Los Angeles, a Publishing Triangle award for

nonfiction, and a Fellowship in Poetry from the California Arts Council, among other

honors. She is the founder of Writers At Work, a creative writing studio in Los Angeles,

and Affiliate Faculty in the MFA Writing Program at Antioch University Los Angeles.

http://terrywolverton.net