The Seaboard Magic Poems by Sterling Warner

Seaboard Magic

Allure

Beachfront bravado to the left and right
waves curl onto shore shifting sand
wiping hand drawn engravings in grit 
as clean as a dull grey etch-a-sketch,
leaving a damp coastline, pristine
and refreshed while high and low tides
move in sets of seven, bowing to the moon’s
majesty, rising, rolling, and crashing
like a seaside symphony conducted
by Luna and her gravitational forces
like a solar maestro—directing 
heaven sent crescendos exerted 
from the nocturnal orb or diurnal daystar  
rays enchanting Jean and I as we walked
along the brackish strand arm in arm, 
examining remains of kelp forests torn, 
severed, and dislodged by brutal currents
by tropical tempests, and El Niño storms:
Violent
Dynamic
Destructive.

 Charmed       

Cooling tired, bare feet in sudsy surf
Jean and I imagine life on a deserted island
while we search for elusive messages bottled 
by humans, battered by natural elements,
propelled by Poseidon from coral groves 
to dryland with other oceanic treasures washed 
aground, rest shoulder to shoulder next to 
empty shells, horseshoe crab exoskeletons, 
smooth rocks, sand dollars, and starfish 
that frame a familiar yet extraordinary stone
with a halo; gulls circle overhead as we
picked up the quartz gem, kissed it thrice 
impulsively shut our eyes, and conferred
silent wishes upon the castaway tetrahedron
worn by pebbles, time, and space, then tossed
the worn talisman back into the saltwater fray
lowering our heads in reverence, listening,
breathing the Pacific Ocean’s ethereal song: 
rhythmic 
soothing
Enduring.

Nocturnal Expeditions

Each night I go on safari in dreams
hoofing it though savannas, I photograph 
big game, immortalize wildlife, 
honor existence over bagging trophies,
confine my conquests to shutter-release shots.

From grasslands to rainforests, 
I advance through foliage like a tropical ecologist, 
inhale the damp, intoxicating fragrance 
of fresh blossoms and decaying vegetation
listen to croaking frogs buzzing insects, chirping birds.

           Dragons nest trees feature purple petals
               that pop alongside giant jungle roses.

           I wipe forehead sweat with velvet petal plants, 
               absorbing perspiration in striking emerald fibers.

My gloved hands part vine walls, prevent
chill nettles from stinging & numbing
bare skin, avoiding slimy lizards tongue leaves, 
marveling how green fountain bushes 
gush between matted, detritus undergrowth.

Jacksonville feral infant, I imagined a childhood
reared by Seeonee wolves or Mangani great apes
heeding jungle law and administering frontier justice
laid down by Rudyard Kipling and Edgar Rice Burroughs
a code unsustainable during metropolitan daylight hours.


Nadia & I

Nadia Comăneci sought me out in a dream
to tell me she treasured a letter I’d written
in college when she, still just a teen, had 
mystified Montreal Olympic spectators 
in frigid stands, dorms, warm living rooms,
and smoky bars as they watched miss impeccable’s
balance beam heroics & uneven bars magic.

The perfect ten approached me, tossed
a pair of lycra leotards on my mattress, 
then bid me to rise, dress & stretch; 
“Bart Connors, you ain’t,” she winked & grinned,
yet assured me our overdue exercise would
commence unimpeded by my lackluster talent,
present confusion, or enduring admiration.

Throwing a Moldavian folk scarf onto my rug
she slipped a body shawl off her shoulders
displaying arms, legs & chest pectoral muscles
still supple, toned, lean, femininely defined; 
awestruck, her statuesque figure morphed 
from a woman to an adolescent as “Nadia’s Theme”
floated through my enchanted furnace grate.

Tears welled in my eyes recalling how Grandma Leedom
would hum the self-same tune to The Young and the Restless
before piano notes & Nadia’s touch transformed my carpet,
she took both my hands & we fell in sync on a foam mat; 
out-of-body I watched as we hit the floor—gymnastic youths—
doing backsprings, forward rolls, cartwheels & handstands 
till music stooped & I awoke middle-aged, exhausted, alone.


Purdy Creek Choka

Northwest white polars
lean like elderly people
attempting to keep upright
when muddy currents
clutch waterlogged feeble trunks 
pull tired legs alike asunder
like flagpoles planted
in insubstantial soil
both endure flash floods
while otters back float
bouncing off impediments 
like brightly lit pin balls
joyriding the river’s surge
carrying them to the sea.

An award-winning author, poet, and educator, Sterling Warner’s works have appeared in literary magazines, journals, and anthologies including Danse Macabre, Poetry Life and Times, Ekphrastic Review, and Sparks of Calliope. Warner’s collections of poetry include Rags and Feathers, Without Wheels, ShadowCat, Edges, Memento Mori: A Chapbook Redux, Serpent’s Tooth, Flytraps, and Cracks of Light: Pandemic Poetry & Fiction 2019-2022—as well as Masques: Flash Fiction & Short Stories. Currently, Warner writes, participates in “virtual” poetry readings, and enjoys retirement in Washington.

Sterling Warner’s Author Website
https://www.amazon.com/author/amazon.com_sterling.warner

The Gypsy Sea Poems by Sterling Warner

Gypsy Sea

Sunrise: necks stretched out like hungry clams
lurch for the Ibuprofen emperor 
whose numb fingers wave loners to café chairs—
rivet them to sticky alligator seats, bottom sides 
textured with chewing gum madness; daydreams
pull life’s canopy over sand and foam,  
seasick tides lick each empowered undertow
sheer bag luck burlesques diffident efforts, 
tête-à-tête conversations revealing 
epiphany-like promises through opaque glass.

Nightfall: along the coastline, bonfires blaze
bodies gather, mouths breathe desire, minds re-imagine; 
moving between cosmic and material worlds,  
cleaving mustard greens like an armful of roses,  
a gypsy mystic dances like a whirling dervish
toe-ring magic fractures limestone bones   
unbrushed by feet for millennia 
bangle bracelets and silver cymbals rouse
ever vigilant, sleepy-eyed centurions
stand guard over her Technicolor Roma.

Sun-up: astronomical dawn signals nocturnal closure,
dancing legs and burning feet cease
rhythmically rocking shellfish strongholds;
dense auburn moss calmly spreads its way south  
wraps a tranquil riverbed in nature’s sheath
guides an Arabesque estuary toward a
salt water fiord, lateral moraine, where
nourished sediment dwellers burrow home
high tides pull ashes, bathe shorelines 
littered with seaweed, driftwood, memories.

Grace
For G. M.

Grace leaned against parked cars 
at midnight, full crow moon rays bathing 
her body in luminescent grandeur. 
Poised. Seductive. Her touch extended
over an embankment like sprouting 
foxtail seeds resemble ballerinas that float
on the breeze and hook into dog paws 

Fragile. Elastic. Insubstantial. Like bubbles 
blown from hoops that burst unpredictably, 
Grace’s rainbow brow sought barn owl benedictions
waved goodbye to the summer solstice
welcomed the autumnal equinox—a September song
that harvested her deeply planted thoughts 
and sowed them in fields of winter wheat.

Wind passed through cedar branches, eclipsed 
Grace’s mantra of green card foreboding 
added frivolity and enhanced shorter days
and nights both waiting for December
to push back twilight’s rays—scatter them
in the upper atmosphere—brighten evening skies 
warm Dawn’s fingers on the rising sun’s heels.  

Wistful Lulamaes
For Audrey Hepburn

Tiffany windows display silver platters 
reflect morning light like vintage mirrors 
as pedestrians hide behind Oliver Goldsmith sunglasses,
dressed to the nines like Holly Golightly
pose then study its Manhattan showcase framed 
by granite walls on Fifth Avenue & 57th Street.

Disguised as stylish escorts, men and women peer
through double-pane glass, appreciate excess & exotica 
in equal measure, ponder fleeting holographic images 
of John the Baptist’s head etched sterling trays
murmuring silent prophecies, portend gentle greatness 
& Big Apple panache for life beyond Sodom’s avenging angels. 

Truman Capote’s phantom emerges from Central Park shadows 
wears a white suit & hat, moves forward like a garden snail, 
maintains a two-block buffer, his high-pitched voice mingling 
with car horns & cabbies where rainbows end announces 
breakfast availability to Broadway street singers, Soho artists, 
moon river enthusiasts, New York tourists, huckleberry friends.

Magyar Sleeves

“The Colour of my soul is iron-grey and sad bats wheel about the steeple of my dreams.”
 									—Claude Debussy

Grooming themselves 
    like cats, bat pups clutch 
    onto their perch upside down, 
    loosen artistic digits  
    emerge from slumber 
    in hollow trees, cave mouths, 
    attic eves & rocky crevices.
From inverted roosts, 
    they drop into flight mode 
    as membrane covered forelimbs 
    navigate ultrasonic waves 
    & echolocation identify 
    evening canvases to paint 
    with wings like a brush & palette.
Moonlight colonies undercover 
    zig-zag through mist & gnat clouds,
    rising from depths of stone lined wells,
    leave watercolor portraits 
    during witching hours
    as children trick or treat 
    wearing bat capes & cowls.

 
 
 
 
An award-winning author, poet, and educator, Sterling Warner’s works have appeared in literary magazines, journals, and anthologies including Danse Macabre, Poetry Life and Times, Ekphrastic Review, and Sparks of Calliope. Warner’s collections of poetry include Rags and Feathers, Without Wheels, ShadowCat, Edges, Memento Mori: A Chapbook Redux, Serpent’s Tooth, Flytraps, and Cracks of Light: Pandemic Poetry & Fiction 2019-2022—as well as Masques: Flash Fiction & Short Stories. Currently, Warner writes, participates in “virtual” poetry readings, and enjoys retirement in Washington.
 

 
https://www.amazon.com/Cracks of Light: Pandemic Poetry & Fiction

Body Artiste & Studio Vogue 1970. Poems By Sterling Warner

Body Artiste

 
Brandy called herself an empty easel
ready to strip down naked and take on
primary colors, a blank canvass eager
to display artistic genius & mutable
good taste as her flesh took on hues
any rainbow might envy & satisfied
a young boy’s locker room fantasy.

Daybreak till twilight, artists illustrated
Brandy’s skin; she posed for photos,
sent them into cyberspace & reveled
in notoriety that left her wanting, longing
for lustrous fulfillment as someone’s
magnum opus, satisfaction in spirit
only complete when stroked by a brush.

 
Studio Vogue 1970

 
Vinyl record albums stacked facedown

            like semi-glossy square decks of cards

feebly served as trendy apartment bookends

            supporting a motley assortment

of leather bound & paperback texts.

 

A discarded telephone wire spool, my

            hip coffee table, that looked like

a Brobdingnag sewing bobbin, showcased

            artbooks ranging from Frida Kahlo’s symbolism

& Michelangelo’s sculptures to Dali’s surrealism.

 

Lovers and I watched our youthful bodies

            roll with an undulating waterbed tide

through a full-length plastic mirror

            nailed like a crucifix above us

before we sank to the liquid mattress’s center.

.

Days and nights we once seemed to own

            fell victim to infrequency’s impact

on intimate moments: the paucity

            of cheap thrills, my dated studio décor, 

An award-winning author, poet, and educator, Sterling Warner’s works have appeared in literary magazines, journals, and anthologies including Danse Macabre, Poetry Life and Times, Shot Glass Journal, Ekphrastic Review, and Sparks of Calliope. Warner’s collections of poetry include Rags and Feathers, Without Wheels, ShadowCat, Edges, Memento Mori: A Chapbook Redux, Serpent’s Tooth, and Flytraps (2022)—as well as Masques: Flash Fiction & Short Stories. Currently, Warner writes, participates in “virtual” poetry readings, and enjoys retirement in Washington. Author/Sterling-Warner
 
 
 

Robin Ouzman Hislop is Editor of Poetry Life and Times at Artvilla.com ; You may visit Aquillrelle.com/Author Robin Ouzman Hislop about author & https://poetrylifeandtimes.com See Robin performing his work Performance (University of Leeds)

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