![]() | ThePrinceBeMe: Its amazing how music or poetry can have u shed a tear because of how much u can relate to wat da person say. But dis is all me. about 33 minutes ago |
![]() | endywood: No distance or no stall of time shall come between us. You take me into an embrace of warm desperation. #poetry about 51 minutes ago |
| pax_et_agape: RT: @jakerohdingo: Sometimes I don't know if my friends are posting song lyrics as their facebook status, or if they're just writing poetry. about 2 hours ago |
![]() | catherine_sr: @hungryintaipei It's like poetry! A metaphor for what happens to your heart when you are in love... or something. about 3 hours ago |
![]() | Evangelic_Diva: @TooCooL747 That's a deal, thanks! I've dabbled a bit in poetry. You should get your screenplays to Tyler Perry or Oprah, even! about 3 hours ago |
| By OnMilwaukee.com Staff Writers |
| Published Sept. 27, 2002 at 5:59 a.m. |
|
OMC is thrilled with the response to the First Annual Milwaukee Poetry Contest. We received more than 70 submissions, all of which captured a different aspect of life in Milwaukee. The level of talent in this city is phenomenal, and with so many fantastic pieces, it was truly a task to choose the best.
After much deliberating, we finally chose Eva Alice Counsell's poem, "Wait," for First Place, Jessica Zierten's poem, "Rummage Sales," for Second Place, and Erich Ebert's piece, "A Translation for Lisa Mahan," as a strong Runner Up.
Next week, OMC will publish bios of the winning writers.
Thanks to the judges for their time, Harry W. Schwartz Bookshops, The Milwaukee Repertory Theatre and "The Writer" magazine for sponsorship. Special thanks to everyone who submitted, and we look forward to seeing more of your work again next year!
Wait
By Eva Alice Counsell
Do not be distracted
in those early hours
when disheartened dogwalkers
linger at Atwater for some
assurance of sunrise,
their dogs hanging back
to the choking point
from their ice-pawed futures,
or by the thinning joggers
who strap on their reflective vests
and mark the streets
like so many danger signs.
Do not be deceived by the coloring
of fall, by the burrish coneflower
stripped of all its slender lavender
or the unlashed stare of a black-eyed susan.
You may miss those stalwarts,
those final gestures of summer
like the woman who boards
the rainy-day Wisconsin Avenue bus
as though she's arrived at a picnic,
dark sunglasses protecting
her glamour eyes from the brilliant garden
of her gown, or the freshman bombshell
still slinking by in strappy sandals
and her best belly-baring tee,
in defiance of ugly.
Do not overlook the last of the Hogs
and their riders, still revealing skin windows
of tattooed love where the seams
of their leathers kiss, or the last sailboats
uncocooned in their slips,
ready to butterfly onto the lake
as if it were the first cloudless sky
of June. If we are watchful
we can glimpse one more summer
before the darkening hours sleep us
into autumn's slowing,
into the white that awaits.
Milwaukee Rummage Sales
By Jessica Zierten
Bradford Street:
A crumbling cookie of a mansion.
Hot pink Audubon flamingoes
on a Northwest Mutual calendar, 1956.
Comely wigs on hard foam heads,
faces drawn in ball-point pen.
Clandestine staircase
to fourth floor pink painted chambers,
A sick room, from the smell.
I buy so many books, mildewed and alive.
A wall-mounted rapier, telegrams from a war.
In a box behind a three-storied organ,
Dozens of 1950's girl's magazines.
"Doctors Ned Spunk"
"Can a Girl Learn to be Popular?"
"Advice from a Model"
"He'll Like What You Make"
Eighty-first Avenue:
Someone has been smoking a cigarette in the master bathroom.
Oven cleaner, air fresheners, the hottest coffee.
In the cellar, Hebrew textbooks obscure
hoary beautician's tools.
The nail polish has separated,
the lipstick is leather.
Salt shakers, Bundt pans, Jewish cookbooks.
Men's starched shirts, Vegas ashtrays.
I am certain that no one has died, just moving out.
I collect people's guts at yard sales.
Humboldt Boulevard:
A fancy hand-made sign on a busy corner,
well-placed for both ways to see.
A "multi-family", idyllic fund-raisers are they.
This vase contains one penny and a life.
Some kid is selling lemonade.
The father's cup mixed with Stoli.
An occasional treasure unearthed.
A glass washing board
A clean posable mannequin
Old French sheet music
A television is carried to the porch.
It is such a sunny day; the game is on.
Be quiet, the game is on.
Next >>
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