Weekly Feature: Poetry at The Arts Fuse
Welcome to “Poetry at The Arts Fuse.” A new poem every Thursday.
On the Shores of the Mediterranean
Here’s your problem—
you like boats that wash up
on the shores of the Mediterranean
where there you might expect to find
your grandmother who you grew up calling
Nadda because you couldn’t pronounce
Nonna and you learned too late after she died
for you to ask her how she survived the war
by selling dust to the sky while hidden
under the rubble of her favorite tobacco store
where the proprietor ate-up all the misery in town
and rented a boat and rowed far out
on the Mediterranean and spit it out so it mixed
with all the water of the Mediterranean
and the fish of the Mediterranean breathed it in
and were caught by the local fishermen who
brought it back to shores of the Mediterranean
—or would have
if not for the storm whipped-up by the local
priest who developed a grudge against God
and so took to casting spells on the waters
of the Mediterranean
so the boats washed up
on the shores of the Mediterranean
becoming the rib cages of dinosaurs you mistook
for just a plague of boats that washed up
on the shores of the Mediterranean
where you wanted to open an art gallery
the small kind you could show your Nadda
if she ever crawled out from under the past
and made from the bones of bored romantics
syphilitic show stoppers lazy
on the shores of the Mediterranean
who gave themselves to art so you could
live cheaply above your tiny gallery
in a crooked apartment of plaster
mixed with your pulverized breath
and painted brown
with no room inside to swing a baguette
but big enough to have those
tuberculosis parties with all your personally
hand-picked literati friends and wait out
the storm of a short life by monstering on stilts
or trolling under the history that you know
from books books books you can’t return
to the library because the library is burning
adding smoke to the smoldering ruins
of a flayed woman forming something like
a new religion dousing a lighthouse with
emerging numbers to make math
on the shores of the Mediterranean
where you cast-off a house with someone
you love inside—floating alone while
the evolving ghost of you grows more separate
from everything so even a trembling palm
shuts tight before it would take your money
so it seems you made it to the moon after all
without any booster rockets
just a will to unhinge from one shore
to another
Clay Ventre’s 2023 book, It’s Not Love Till Someone Loses an Eye was published by Nixes Mate Press and shortlisted for the Nossrat Yassini poetry prize. He has work published in Souvenir Lit Journal, Jubilat, Lily Poetry Review, Queen Mob’s Teahouse, Soundings East, and others. He lives in New England where he edits the Incessant Pipe poetry journal.
Note: Hey poets! We seek submissions of excellent poetry from across the length and breadth of contemporary poetics. See submission guidelines here. The arbiter of the feature is the magazine’s poetry editor, John Mulrooney.
— Arts Fuse editor Bill Marx