Showing posts with label Phillip Marlin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Phillip Marlin. Show all posts

Monday, January 27, 2020

Russian Film

They have dug a fresh grave
Just beyond that group of old headstones
Where a lush green forest begins

She plays her bugle
As her father rows his small craft out to sea
A boy half-naked crawls tiredly onto the rocky shore
In his hand a crab he has carried from the depths
The children are beyond gravity

Their bodies grow upright
I do not see an end to their beauty
They hear the strange echoes made from yelling up the rock cliff
They listen for answers the echoes can not give
Still there are echoes they can not hear

They see faces in the jaded rocks
Too high for climbing
Even their young strong thighs and arms could not get them there
He fixes his hair in a tidepool
Nearly losing the little girl

A seagull flies over the waters
And the children dive in off the jetty without hesitation
A group of the boys seen earlier gather on the shore
They want to see her nude body exposed
She hides nervously in the crevices refusing to show herself
But after all she appears shaming the hysterical boys
The boys’ cruel indifference

She laughs as she plays with the phone booth
Fake conversations none can know

The group of boys yell up at the rocky monoliths
They are searching for the boy who was with the girl earlier
He hides high up in the crags and watches the boys below
He calls for the girl lost somehow

The immovable stones give no answer
But she is back again
With her bugle chasing a man’s footprints in the sun drenched sand

Some Russian song is sung as she boards a train for the city
The boy chases yelling her name
But she is smiling to leave the cliffs and the seas with her uncle
She sticks her head out looking forward
She thinks little of the boy chasing the train

© Philip Marlin, 2020


Image Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons

Wednesday, June 5, 2019

The Queen of the Damned

Shhh
I’m only going to say this once
While the god of doves
Sleeps behind a rusted-out Buick
While it’s rained from dawn till dusk

I pulled the bow back and settled
The arrow in the heart
Of the queen of the damned
Her minions rolled forward and vanished
Her black eyes closed

She left instructions for burial
In a far west mausoleum which followed
The arc of the setting sun
But I thought it best to leave her
For the dogs of the night

It rained from dawn till dusk
And then a crescent moon held Venus 
At the end Bonnie and Clyde were slaughtered
By Texas Rangers and Louisiana police
Twenty thousand attended

I made my way back to Manhattan
I made my way back to the city called home
I removed my boots and my clothing
And laid in a hot bath till the water turned cold
I stood and dried my bruised body

While the god of doves slept
While the queen of the damned attracted vultures
I put on a blue robe and lit a cigarette
Watching the crowded street
Through my sixty-seventh floor window

The phone rang
I let it
It stopped but then rang again
I got into bed and pulled the covers to my chin
And while the phone rang over and over
Fell asleep


© Phillip Marlin, 2019

Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow
Photo 1932 - 1934
Available through the Library of Congress
from Wikimedia Commons



Monday, May 14, 2018

Song of the Wind and the Night

The wind and the night
The wind and the night and warped mirrors
The wind and the night
And abortion on the stairs
The wind and the night and hearts
That can no longer love
The wind and the night and nervous fingers

All we can say of desire and time
All we can say disinherits
And remembers

Song of rain
Song of false moons
Song of emptiness and terror
Song of the wind stirring lashes
Song of the wind and the night and dark lovers

All we can say of the sea and the sky
And stars that burn like thirst
All we can say of gardens and lost pleasures
All we can say distorts and destructs

Song of the wind and the night and lights
From lonely windows
Song of the wind slashing wrists
Song of stone and crumbling faces
Song of the wind and the night and hearts
That can no longer love


© Phillip Marlin, 2018

"Windy Night"
scratchboard by Reene
fromWikimedia Commons