Silver Streams Issue 1 | Page 16

Rose

My love our union is a rose,

A planted bulb in frozen soil,

Withstanding winters frigid toil,

Withstood till warmer spring now grows.

Grows up and up it's thin green sprout,

Emergent from it's nurtured bed,

No white flowers or bloody red,

The infant stalk did fine without.

Then swelled the bud still meekly green,

by it's gardeners watchful care,

About the core of radiant flare,

Concealed and eager to be seen.

Seen and beheld the green dismissed,

the petals now are neat and tight,

Aglow by day, curled up by night,

It's sweet appeal when absent missed.

Like all else 'twill wilt with age,

And turn to earth and decompose,

The saddest thing about our rose,

It can't be pressed onto a page.

- Garion Bracken

BREAKUP

sneaks clusters behind paper

eats the substance of a poem

leaves traces of authenticity

filtrates silk lingerie left damp

in drawers spoils photographs

makes holes in ideas of lineage

engulfs documents that might tell

tales leaves opaque blotches, stains

on clothes

- Sarah Strong

demolishes glue making books explode

silverfish

reach with their tentacles,

track after sugar, scrape seams —

Artwork by Tom McElligott