Trial and Witness

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Trial and Witness

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A brilliance on the brim of chaos,

though not close enough to fracture the mind.

Paths of practicality I travel on to be

wholly integrated on this Earth.

 

Rise up to the wind, release the darts

and heavy hold holding holier than an open nut seed

deep in the ground, reviving, finding its way to the sun.

 

Shining ice, pulse-energy through fingers,

touching strands of the horizon. Long after

the emptiness, the temperature unbearable,

I followed your face into the smoke in front of the flame.

 

I couldn’t carry on or breathe, was bruised and wearied by

the motion of following and by being grateful.

My limbs were choked from the flow of their blood,

on the sofa, in the shower, unable to find a window,

view of the sky or be a witness.

 

Sold out to the weeping chill

close to my inner thighs, both sides

weeping disappointment’s release.

Long ago I was mixed with my

enemy’s soul. That was before

I could articulate my pastlives – the glory

of a bluejay’s high-above silhouette.

 

Before, when my strength saturated the couch

with visible blood-torment, when the glass doors

were always covered and shut and something was emerging

that had substance but not any moons, that

shared a rapport with the isolated prisoner, cut me like I

was an insect wing. I was an insect wing, paper-thin and

flapping, transparent, once capable of carrying a great

load, now cut and useless. I was loathing the

hot summer, hiding from the heat. I am still

dried-up marrow in a porous old bone, deprived for

years of the moisture of blanket-living-flesh. I am still weeping,

waylaid, sold, fishing in a dead zone ocean coral bed,

where not even a minnow can be found,

maneuvering through the still intact

colourful crevices, over

colourful coral mounds.

 

Another ugly broken shack,

in pieces by the dead grass.

Have I grown used to it yet? Dispelling

the raging urge of a spiritual quest? Have

I loosened my hold, caving in to equal amounts

of cynicism and futility, or can I still

see the open door of DNA delight, riding

the infinity spiral as it drives extinction up

and out of the grave?

By the edge is chaos’ court, carrying a fool’s tenderness.

 

I am not worthy of paradise.

I cannot hold out in this jungle (intact) (until) the end.

I cannot be old and on fire, sparkle with deep possibilities.

Living off salted flesh stored away from years of slaughter,

when once consuming a thriving inspiration.

Still in this treehouse of used-up language, I love you most.

In his terrible season while owning someone else’s face,

I perform my duties, collect my pie-tins,

loving you most.

 

Dome the day,

wrap it in a cool cloth significance

the breathing beat surrender

into clear-cutting, weed-tugging

and slippery slime swept-off veranda.

Kiss intensity into my neuron network,

override the sluggish acceptance that

rope-ties a person to a despicable fate,

pathetically hunting coins fallen from the

fat man’s purse.

I sing into a seashell. I meditate nude

on my island, undone by small talk so

not allowing room for small talk, small

thoughts or other means of house building,

or Earth-assuring stagnant aspirations.

To be free is to be ruthless, slicing off the head

of any debilitating predicament. To be free is to know

what Jesus knows – that all must be given up to follow

the way of God, to only keep what can be kept pure,

constantly thundering.

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Copyright © 2015 by Allison Grayhurst

Fire and more cover - Copy

amazon.com/author/allisongrayhurst

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Published in “Random Poem Tree” February 2016

Trial and Witness by Allison Grayhurst

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Click to access Make_the_Wind20160404Allison_Grayhurst.pdf

http://scars.tv/chapbooks/

http://scars.tv/cgi-bin/framesmain.pl?writers

Click to access make_the_wind20160404allison_grayhurst.pdf

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You can listen to the poem by clicking below:

(Part 1)

https://allisongrayhurst.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/trial-and-witness-1.m4a?_=1

(Part 2)

https://allisongrayhurst.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/trail-and-witness-2.m4a?_=2

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“Grayhurst’s poetry is a translucent, ethereal dream in which words push through the fog, always searching, struggling, and reaching for the powerful soul at its heart. Her work is vibrant and shockingly original,” Beach Holme Publishers.

“Allison’s poetic prose is insightful, enwrapping, illuminating and brutally truthful. It probes the nature of the human spirit, relationships, spirituality and God. It is sung as the clearest song is sung within a cathedral by choir. It is whispered as faintly as a heartbroken goodbye. It is alive with the life of a thousand birds in flight within the first glint of morning sun. It is as solemn as the sad-sung ballad of a noble death. Read at your peril. You will never look at this world in quite the same way again. Your eye will instinctively search the sky for eagles and scan the dark earth for the slightest movement of smallest ant, your heart will reach for tall mountains, bathe in the most intimate of passions and in the grain and grit of our earth. Such is Allison Grayhurst. Such is her poetry,”  Eric M. Vogt, poet and author.

“Grayhurst is a great Canadian poet. All of Allison Grayhurst’s poetry is original, sometimes startling, and more often than not, powerful. Anyone who loves modern poetry that does not follow the common path will find Grayhurst complex, insightful, and as good a poet as anyone writing in the world today. Grayhurst’s poetry volumes are highly, highly recommended,” Tom Davis, poet, novelist and educator.

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pure captivity

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pure captivity

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Last day under water with

the dragging weight of toe-the-line.

I taught myself the art of manifesting

a carry-on bag full from the hunt.

Days drifting on the sandbox dunes,

gleaming but never fresh as a horizon,

snatched from my mountain onto

a foreign homeland.

Limbo dives into infertile meeting rooms,

tables as round as King Arthur’s invention, but no knights

are these, only sagging eager pretenders, saying ‘fun!”

when meaning

“O hell, this is a hell-of-a-climb!”

I know my magic, the hand I was dealt and have

learned to never underestimate a leap of faith.

I trust my God – already bright and joyfully burning.

A sword is harmony. I can’t think of a way

but around me is between me, and I am

swept of my burdens and my prisoners, trusting

to be clothed, this sacred baptism

into surf-riding the foaming plateaus of the tenuous

and difficult-breathing realms

unexplained.

 

 

Copyright © 2015 by Allison Grayhurst

amazon.com/author/allisongrayhurst

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Published in “Zaira Journal, Issue 2” April 2016

https://www.createspace.com/6182200

http://www.amazon.com/Zaira-Issue-April-Mae-Berza/dp/1530859980/ref=la_B001KIWQUS_1_49?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1460717128&sr=1-49&refinements=p_82%3AB001KIWQUS

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Published in “The Peregrine Muse” December 2015

https://sites.google.com/site/theperegrinemuseii/home/grayhurst

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First published in “Dog Is Wearing Pants Literary Page” October 2015

http://dogiswearingpants.blogspot.ca/2015/10/pure-captivity-poem-by-allison-grayhurst.html

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Click to access Make_the_Wind20160404Allison_Grayhurst.pdf

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http://scars.tv/cgi-bin/framesmain.pl?writers

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You can listen to the poem by clicking below:

https://allisongrayhurst.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/11/pure-captivity.m4a?_=3

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“Grayhurst’s poetry is a translucent, ethereal dream in which words push through the fog, always searching, struggling, and reaching for the powerful soul at its heart. Her work is vibrant and shockingly original,” Beach Holme Publishers.

“Allison’s poetic prose is insightful, enwrapping, illuminating and brutally truthful. It probes the nature of the human spirit, relationships, spirituality and God. It is sung as the clearest song is sung within a cathedral by choir. It is whispered as faintly as a heartbroken goodbye. It is alive with the life of a thousand birds in flight within the first glint of morning sun. It is as solemn as the sad-sung ballad of a noble death. Read at your peril. You will never look at this world in quite the same way again. Your eye will instinctively search the sky for eagles and scan the dark earth for the slightest movement of smallest ant, your heart will reach for tall mountains, bathe in the most intimate of passions and in the grain and grit of our earth. Such is Allison Grayhurst. Such is her poetry,”  Eric M. Vogt, poet and author.

“Grayhurst is a great Canadian poet. All of Allison Grayhurst’s poetry is original, sometimes startling, and more often than not, powerful. Anyone who loves modern poetry that does not follow the common path will find Grayhurst complex, insightful, and as good a poet as anyone writing in the world today. Grayhurst’s poetry volumes are highly, highly recommended,” Tom Davis, poet, novelist and educator.
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No Stone No God

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No Stone     No God

I sang a stone, a star

retracting, turning charcoal, still

blood-fire aglow. I pulsed in the aftershock

of entropy, but never believed black

holes to be anything less than the pupils of God,

absorbing light, surrounded by swirling iris-galaxies.

Sucked through the mighty hurricane,

living inside the deepest of organ-flesh,

directing a liberating unfolding – a grand outside

poly-shield, infant-squalling. It is celestial traffic and

it is alive, caught in the mower, twitching, having

the edges shaved off to form a more easily

movable body-round – end-of-summer-stone.

I sang a stone, a star

tuned in to what flows out, seems like cement,

but isn’t, is a babbling, bubbling child – wonder

here – wonder at the root.

Limits are the end of all exploring,

the disconnecting, overtaking void, more void,

no food, no stone, no song.

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Copyright © 2015 by Allison Grayhurst

amazon.com/author/allisongrayhurst

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Published in “The Peregrine Muse” December 2015, also as the feature poem June 2, 2016

             

https://sites.google.com/site/theperegrinemuseii/

https://sites.google.com/site/theperegrinemuseii/home/grayhurst

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First published in “Profiles in Poetry Literary Zine” October 2015

Short interview:

What drives you to write?
I write poetry because I have to. It sustains me; it keeps me sane, connects me to God and exposes my own personal truths.
 
 
How did you get started?
I started writing, mostly short stories, at the end of elementary school. In my first year of high school, I began to write poetry – not complete poems, but I started to explore articulating images with language. The real first poet I read in depth was Pablo Neruda, but I had been writing poetry many years before that.
 
Who are the best poets around right now?
Even though they are dead, in my opinion, the best poets that I have read areTheodore Roethke, Sylvia Plath, Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Rainer Marie Rilke, Pablo Neruda,  Edna St. Vincent Millay, and Dylan Thomas.
 
Where are the best places to publish?
A lot of the smaller indie presses – online and in print (or both) are great, as they don’t seem to have an agenda or pre-conceived intellectual ideas or what poetry should or should not be. Most people operating these presses are poets themselves and do it solely out of love of poetry and in establishing a sense of community amongst writers.
 
What are you reading right now?
The Hills Beyond by Thomas Wolfe.
 
What advice would you give to other writers?
I don’t have any advice, but for me, I write a lot. I also throw out 90 per cent or more of what I write. I write only when I feel an inner push, a necessity to write. Also, I have had to learn that there is no one way, one place to write, it happens when it must- making diner, having a shower, before bed, walking the dog or sitting still in the morning when everone else in the household is asleep. Sometimes it doesn’t happen for weeks or months, and that too is part of process.

 

http://profilesinpoetry.blogspot.ca/2015/10/no-stone-no-god-poem-by-allison.html

http://profilesinpoetry.blogspot.ca/2015/10/profile-in-poetry-allison-grayhurst.html

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Click to access Make_the_Wind20160404Allison_Grayhurst.pdf

.

http://scars.tv/cgi-bin/framesmain.pl?writers

 

You can listen to the poem by clicking below:

https://allisongrayhurst.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/11/no-stone-no-god.m4a?_=4

.

“Grayhurst’s poetry is a translucent, ethereal dream in which words push through the fog, always searching, struggling, and reaching for the powerful soul at its heart. Her work is vibrant and shockingly original,” Beach Holme Publishers.

“Allison’s poetic prose is insightful, enwrapping, illuminating and brutally truthful. It probes the nature of the human spirit, relationships, spirituality and God. It is sung as the clearest song is sung within a cathedral by choir. It is whispered as faintly as a heartbroken goodbye. It is alive with the life of a thousand birds in flight within the first glint of morning sun. It is as solemn as the sad-sung ballad of a noble death. Read at your peril. You will never look at this world in quite the same way again. Your eye will instinctively search the sky for eagles and scan the dark earth for the slightest movement of smallest ant, your heart will reach for tall mountains, bathe in the most intimate of passions and in the grain and grit of our earth. Such is Allison Grayhurst. Such is her poetry,”  Eric M. Vogt, poet and author.

“Grayhurst is a great Canadian poet. All of Allison Grayhurst’s poetry is original, sometimes startling, and more often than not, powerful. Anyone who loves modern poetry that does not follow the common path will find Grayhurst complex, insightful, and as good a poet as anyone writing in the world today. Grayhurst’s poetry volumes are highly, highly recommended,” Tom Davis, poet, novelist and educator.
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