Friday, November 30, 2018

Thank you to all the editors at Our Poetry Archive (OPA) for publishing my three poems today!

https://ourpoetryarchive.blogspot.com/2018/12/linda-imbler.html







COST

Leaving you
should be so easy.
Your cold ways
border on abuse,
but it isn’t,
quite.
Still,
I've paid with heart and soul,
squandered emotional and spiritual currency
for your benefit.
An investment
yielding little return.
It should be so easy,
but I'll spend some more time trying to decide.







ONCE I KNEW

Once I knew,
no other
could please me.
Except him.

I grew happy.

Knowing
no other would
ever make my
world turn as it should.








TEA AND BUTTER ON TAFT

The two smiling ladies exit the car and walk toward the door.
One clad in lilac and phlox, the eldest of her clan.
The other, the eldest of no one,
dressed in whatever color suits the day.

The small, furry gray haired elder greets them; he stretches,
extends his right leg forward and bows;
a genuflection; his recognition, as if to say I know you,
you are half of the congregation.

Inside, stands the lovely priestess,
wearing the jeweled hands and the glittering smile.
She speaks of art, love, friendship, all spiritual things,
she speaks of the creation of lovely adornments
to match the beauty of the world.
And she has the evidence to prove their worth.

There also stands the bishop.
This is his church and we welcome what is worshipped here.
There are rituals within this sanctuary,
seemingly unexceptional to any observers, but crucial to the group.
It's as if we are performing our own kind of mass
and we do it with tea and butter.

These meetings are meant for the sharing and acceptance
of creeds that lie deep within our souls,
our way of confession.
Who knew that those two Eucharistic elements
could bring forth such intimate conversation?

There's sometimes pizzelles and pickles,
usually pictures and poems,
but always tea and butter
to represent the truest meaning of friendship
within the safe walls that surround this altar.

Thank you very much to Editor Amos Greig of A New Ulster for publishing my two poems.


https://issuu.com/amosgreig/docs/anewulster74


The Size of Your Ride

As you travel atop this great spinning orb,
Never be afraid to adjust the size of your ride:

Life constricts or stretches according to the degree of your courage.
Friendships and families may alter their structures.
Remember, for every recoil the world is made more narrow
And every brave deed grows the scope of your existence.

Friendships and families may alter their structures.
Choking back the extent you may wonder or dream will damage
And every brave deed grows the scope of your existence.
Do not be the one to object to the noise of life.

Choking back the extent you may wonder or dream will damage.
Ride the ride for all it is worth and let go of the handrails.
Do not be the one to object to the noise of life.
Meekness should not be the constant tick of your time.

Ride the ride for all it is worth and let go of the handrails.
Remember, for every recoil the world is made more narrow.
Meekness should not be the constant tick of your time.

Life constricts or stretches according to the degree of your courage.








Buried Treasure

Donating those precious gems
and capturing bodily mementos,
otherwise brought to an end,
will be treasure I will gladly share.

Why should my heart be still?    
Why should my eyes no longer see?

Much of me will be absent,
while sad murmuring music
is played in requiem,
for what is considered the due solemnity
of the occasion.

Meanwhile, someone will be able to continue
much of my physical history
and the wonder of my design will not be wasted.

So, do not bury me with such great riches.
Just as ancestors bequeath that of most value,
so will I pass on my fortunes
and know I have improved another’s life.

Monday, November 26, 2018

A huge thank you to Editor Steven Burton of Beneath the Rainbow for publishing 4 of my poems today.  Here are three of them.

http://beneaththerainbow.com





The Lilies of Gethsemane
And there they were on Easter morn
at the peep of day.
Their petals unfolding,
as they had days before,
when they stood as a herald
from inside the sacred garden
where the final warnings were prelected.
Ivory costumed messengers of hope,
once again on the ground of the garden,
like they had also appeared
when they sprang up
below the teacher’s crow’s nest.
Ambassadors of hope,
grown to remember
that much will bloom
in the springtime of our lives,
to bring renewal to all things,
including those things
we thought forever lost.

Being With the Within
Never be nor create
one who is without the within.
Do as our fathers taught
and feed the wolf within who will
bring the most happiness and peace to the world.
Allow kindness to soak into your soul
like butter melting into bread
and allow goodwill to dwell within.
Permit rivers of truth to flow from the within
over all mountains of lies which exist outside you
and erode those falsehoods and fictions
so that you may hear distinctly.
Grant the light of your soul within
to outshine moonbeams, sunshine, and starlight
which lie externally
so that you may see clearly.
Let even your smallest acts of quiet tenderness
Birthed from inside you
produce effects as monumental
as the most spectacularly public displays
so that others may feel cared for.
Accept the within of others
with subtle grace
and the sort of gratitude
that will allow the world
which lies beyond us all
to continue spinning the whole,
honorably and in the right direction.
  
Buried Treasure
Donating those precious gems
and capturing bodily mementos,
otherwise brought to an end,
will be treasure I will gladly share.
Why should my heart be still?
Why should my eyes no longer see?
Much of me will be absent,
while sad murmuring music
is played in requiem,
for what is considered the due solemnity
of the occasion.
Meanwhile, someone will be able to continue
much of my physical history
and the wonder of my design will not be wasted.
So, do not bury me with such great riches.
Just as ancestors bequeath that of most value,
so will I pass on my fortunes
and know I have improved another’s life.

Sunday, November 25, 2018

Thank you to Editor Glory Sasikala for publishing my poem "Where Chief Once Stood" in the November issue of GloMag.


https://view.joomag.com/glomag-glomagnovember2018/0767864001543066795?short





Where Chief Once Stood


He is Sioux.

He came from an old place
where they taught him
to honor the land.
After his last breath,
he was a ghost and lingered,
having no place to go,
his old burial grounds torn.

And he stayed still
so the winds would come for him. 

Let it blow.
Wait for early sun.

The elders had been delaying 
until it would be light
enough to see his face.
Now he's been found, 
and the ghost tribe will move on 

from where Chief once stood.

Saturday, November 24, 2018

Thank you so much to Editor Ashley Newton for publishing "Summer Vacation Memories '66" in the Seasons Issue of The Free Lit Magazine.


https://www.freelitmagazine.com/magazine





Summer Vacation Memories ‘66

Bicycle card spokes fluttering with ticking thumps,
sunny afternoons under sheets as tents,
the click of go-go boots dancing on pavement

the sound of pop music adding depth and cheer
bleeping from transistor radios

the lilting ice cream truck,
the snap of freshly laundered damp sheets on clotheslines
in the summer breeze

the rumbly engine of the bookmobile
saving us from ennui,
telling tales in books we read,
transporting us to new world 
when we get bored
with the same old street

the doppler of cars passing by 
as we whiz around on roller skates

porch lights now shining, 
telling us the day is done

and the tired trudge home must begin.
Thank you to Joanne Olivieri for publishing my poem in Stanzaic Stylings.

http://stanzaicstylings.blogspot.com


How Goes the World

Remember when actors
moved from the stage to the silver screen?
So now goes the way of wood and ink,
and in its place,
a new marquee of letters.
The world is changing.


Review of "Pairings" e-book published by Soma Publishing
by Robert Feldman
Author of "Hineni"


A hearty and well deserved bouquet of applause for Linda Imbler’s second book, Pairings. This assemblage of short stories and essays, each “paired” with a relevant and reflective poem, translates into a rewarding stroll through Ms. Imbler’s garden of creative literary visions.  Pairings guides the reader through a plethora of commentaries and discourse, ranging from science fiction and futuristic pieces to holy men and phantoms, complete with allegories, fables, and musical themes.
Most notably, the pairing of “Many Alone”/“The Lonely”, a tale of a collection of village people who eventually become “subjugated to their will”, strikes a profound and prophetically foreboding note. In “Tattoo”/”Flags”, the author ponders the seeming paradox of “those who live and strive for peace and freedom” with their imminent devolvement into an image of unwavering “flagpoles now still” as “the future world follows”. 
Another “pairing” of note, “The Old Shepard”/”Grab the Sun”, guides the reader through a man’s journey in his search for truth and his eventual realization that this rigorous path requires “more effort to follow it”, thus illuminating the hidden gift of man’s “strength untapped”. “Digging The Day”/Weather The Night”, my personal favorite, is dedicated to both the great American poet Allen Ginsberg and The Ten Commandments. “Digging” is a poignant sketch of a somewhat solitary “Beat” artist whose “words” are his bonds which he chooses to “unleash at times”, while “Weather” aptly and insightfully concludes: “dreams are the barometer of the weather in my head”.
Last, an accomplished guitarist in her own right, Ms. Imbler offers her audience a delicious homage to music in “My Song for Small Things”/”Heart Strings”. Here, we are treated to her simple yet profound notion of how sweeter life’s significant moments can be when reflected through music: life as an “eternal symphony playing in ether”.

Linda Imbler’s Pairings would make anyone who delights in a few hours of provocative thought and literary appreciation quite pleased and rewarded to have accompanied her along this richly multifarious journey.

Thursday, November 8, 2018

Thank you to Editors Amit Parmessur and Jane Mayflower of The Pangolin Review for publishing my two poems.

https://docs.wixstatic.com/ugd/e869c8_4849e206b6184db29f6cb9b756a2183f.pdf








Healing Your Heart


Shun the false charge you level when you say so and so said.
Once you say words you own them, all those words now yours.
Instead, 
use all words for healing; that’s their best use; keep false witness mute, 
contain it where it will do no harm, in your own head.

Words spoken aloud are like the fine spray of a forceful sneeze.
Once let out and freed, they can’t be reined back inside yourself.
They travel everywhere at great distance, with uncontrolled speed; 
and never forget you have borne this too, so if you must delve

and dig for truth; use your true strength, your ears designed, to hear fact 
only directly from those maligned; keep rumor inside the mind.



The Dying Time

The Elders prayed for defense from the dying time.

They wanted to control God on the mountain,


as Peter did with the tents.

But there is no weapon against fate 


and your sun

will one day


leave its path forever.


So drop your nets


and seek the peace


the world cannot give.


It’s closer than you think.
Thank you to Val Tuck of Tuck Magazine for publishing two of my poems.  Here is one of them:

http://tuckmagazine.com/2018/11/07/poetry-1811/



Image result for frontier tonic sellers with wagon


Choices In Frontier Towns


 Amid tumbleweeds and clapboard buildings,
standing upon dirt roads or a sawn timber dais,
snake oil men, extolling their potions,
their curing wares depleted by end of day.
Risky whiskey,
the magic elixir
of 19th-century self-proclaimed wizards.
Was it truly hope in a bottle
or just sanctioned intoxication?
The Old West version of paper or plastic.

Thank you big, big time to Editor Mark Antony Rossi of Soma Publishing for publishing my new e-book "Pairings."

https://www.somapublishing.com/2018/11/pairings.html




Linda Imbler's second ebook "Pairings," is a collection of wonderful short fiction stories loosely coupled with excellent poetry selections which help intensify the reading experience. The topics address myriad subjects and styles ranging from selective mutism to speculative short fiction to revealing new historical facts. These are vital writings rooted in the values of a valiant civilization.

Friday, November 2, 2018

Thank you to Editor Lanning Russell of Event Horizon Magazine for publishing "Centrifugal Force" "Huh?" "Emma Jean" "Gladrags" and "Mistrust" in Issue #6.


https://eventhorizonmagazinecom.files.wordpress.com/2018/11/issue-6-free-pdf-download.pdf


Thursday, November 1, 2018

Thank you to Editor Nina D'Arcangela of The Sirens Call E-zine for publishing my 2 poems in Issue 41.  A special thank you to Lee Forman for suggesting that one terrific tweak that would really showcase that one word.




Mary Roberts


Mary Roberts, are you alive?
I thought you were twitching.
Living eyes shifting and darting
as you study the room,
but you’re made with skin of plastic,
your traveling cannot be.
You can only stay in one place.
Your eyes in that face cannot see.

Mary Roberts, are you alive?
I’m sure you were twitching.
Showing much more wrist than before,
hands stretched from the gingham,
fingers pulling on the stitching. 
If your arms could rise much further,
just what could those hands do?
What is that lying on the floor?

Mary Roberts, you are alive!
I just watched you twitching.
Feet moving inside pretty shoes,
and those legs, if they moved,
could they possibly be creeping?
Warm liquid now on floorboard seeping.
Now prone, I hear feet being shuffled.
Now prone, I hear breath being muffled.

How did you get from there to here?


Josephine

Kiss Josephine’s cheek
and smooth her hair
so she won’t be afraid.
Yes, Mother.
Now, 
tell her goodbye.
Yes, Mother.
The casket shut.
We drove home.
Josephine, I love you.