C.
R. TSIAILIS
Humpty Dumpty Innamorato
Squirrels love hidden acorns
the sky yarns for small birds
just like a kid loves stairs
a crocodile craves the monsoons.
Actors love black outfits
houses die for gardens
a laptop needs a church organ
and a cemetery some real estate.
Everybody needs an artificial friend
everybody waits for a black cloud
some rain to wash down things like
sins, regrets, withering yellow leaves
Paintings hate to love their frames
divine inspiration likes fruit on the ground
just like a song recognizes itself
when everybody else just happens
Shoes love wild rose trees
the night can't forget her first lover
it is when biblical thinking wears you
a downhill cheese roll to Dante's lab
Every beach defines one passing
a date of a goat and a rooster in Samara
plates on the hips of timeless eggs
you promised to rescue me, I think you did
Years and years ago before voices echoed
reverse strolls in the forest
the scratching of furry shadows burrowing
was a miracle regretting its conception
You promised to rescue me, I think you did.
Placid feathers longing for a shoulder
I loved you like a black dove next to a swan
You promised to rescue me, you did.
Marsupial
The pouch is heavy
tells me the little one on the tree.
I see them as they flee
and turn my stare as hers
as fire tunes my instinct to a threatening,
reddish roam.
silence for an eternal moment, and there I see.
No creature around really moves anymore.
No jumper jumps.
No devil dances and grunts.
I see their smiles condensed
condemned to eternal pity.
I see their palms firmly closed
and I see tails bending.
Can I hug you?
Asks the little one,
Can I hang on you, be a pouch for a while,
a grandfather to my own little one,
this thing without fur
that breathes the pink mist
from its tiny bloody nostrils?
Can I run?
I ask my self in disturbed tranquillity, can I
jump?
Can I carry something of my own at last?
We are out of the bush fires before I know,
but I rush back inside the smoke
jumping and growling
and I am forever more
-a marsupial-
for as long as my thick nostrils breathe.
My Eye On A Drone
I removed my left eye
attached it to a drone
-Collaboration-
Wi-Fi controller
left down there
in my hands
attached to my robotic body
sitting
at the patio
leaning
on a square pole
a screen on the controller
may the sun my guide be.
“who controls who?”
I was in reverie
gazing at my physical version
“an eye for an I
Or a yew for a you?”
I blinked to the anticipating cloud
-devotion-
[nail presses button
fingers hold stick]
-take off-
Vertigo for a second
Ecstasy for eternity.
Birds fly by,
they see my eye as a friend
I know for they don’t bite
I can tell because they smile
up there they can do.
Some fly away
is it the noise,
is it my haste?
The chase against the winds,
my awkward balance, could it really afflict ?
“Hey, you down there, keep steady,
I wanted a flight of an eagle
not of a hummingbird!”
So I rise higher,
as fingers obey
and press stick to the edge.
But what I see
from up here
shimmying the stratosphere
is that down there
life is not the same
as I’d thought.
People are not seeking,
they are being sought.
I see shadows behind the buildings
I see unhuman creatures in masks
I see the ground swelling
and bursting, alas,
spitting out sub earthen blood
when no one there walks.
It is the dawn and decay
it is the building of invisible walls
-Retribution-
In fear I call my hands to press
the button that spells ‘land’
to reattach my eye to my body
and forget
for my sake
but I hear a digital voice
an order of sorts
“NO YOU CAN’T”
and I look around me again,
I’m flying in a flock of drones
and we are carrying bombs.
who misled me,
how could I’ve been such a fool,
at this point
I’m very much sorry to say
those were no birds
-and-
the cloud that had been waiting
for all the “you’s” and “I’s”
was –indeed- black.
©
C. R. Tsiailis
C. R. TSIAILIS
CHRISTOS R.
TSIAILIS is a Cypriot
Author. He is an English teacher, currently a candidate for Masters’ degree in
the theory of theatre. His passion for writing consumes most of his time, when
he is not out training as a triathlete. He travels a lot, recording memories
from everywhere, which he incarnates in various literature genres. His publications include short stories and
poems in literary magazines and anthologies around the world. He has received
numerous prizes for his short stories, theatrical plays and poetry. His work
has been translated in many languages. He is the author of "Throwing Dice
On A Chessboard", 2010, "The Green Divorce", 2012, the sci-fi
novel “Klotho Surfaces”, 2016 and the short story collection “BREAD”, 2017. He
is occasionally a member of Panhellenic literary contests’ committees. He has
translated poetry collections and individual poems for magazines from English
to Greek. He also serves the theatre at the position of assistant director and
as a dramatist.
No comments :
Post a Comment