spring 2015
Table of Contents
Return to Home PageSelf-Portrait (Hospital Poem I) Chelsea Eckert
Victoria Summons Hall George Elliott Clarke
October Lately
William Vallieres
Hotel Lincoln Blues, Chicago
Thomas Zimmerman
Idling on the North Saskatchewan
In American English
Curtis LeBlanc
Love and IKEA II
January is terrible so far
Ruth Daniell
Salt
J. Adam Collins
Normal in Our Normal Suburb Kenneth Pobo


Salt
Everything he touched
turned to salt—
the crushing crest of his hair;
crimpled leafing starchy texts;
even the ground,
his fingers plunged down,
turned to salt in time.
Everything he made
turned to salt—
backyard brick barbeque;
children begetting grandchildren.
He could never finish the mortar,
feverish heart pumping
a birdhouse, a cardboard box,
a vow—salt.
Everything he saw
turned to salt.
The dog’s hair—salt;
the lace garter—salt;
the snow bank—salt;
irrigated row after row of corn—salt.
Everything he wrote,
every word he spoke,
turned to salt.
Butchered bright red on the countertop,
the meat would keep all winter.
But when the time came
turned to salt
he would mix with water
and sprinkle ’round the altar.