Sen (A Dream) by Maria Wollenberg-Kluza, oil on canvas
This issue of the Poetry Letter presents prize-winning poems from seven Monthly Contests of 2024, selected by the Monthly Contest Judge, Alice Pero. These poems fill the majority of its pages, complemented with two book reviews by Michael Escoubas including extensive poetry quotations which make the reviews even more enjoyable. I interspersed poetry with illustrations taken from artwork by Polish painter Maria Wollenberg-Kluza (b. 1945) whose paintings feature many literary inspirations and, in turn, have inspired many Polish poets and writers. I attended her exhibit at the Warsaw Library Gallery in September 2024 and found these paintings to be both inspired and inspiring, so I decided to share this souvenir from my travels with the CSPS poets and poetry lovers.
The Poetry Letter's book reviews and poems from my book The Rainy Bread in English and Polish will be published in the next part of the blog.
~ Maja Trochimczyk, CSPS President
Camino by Maria Wollenberg-Kluza, oil on canvas (2013)
Monthly Contest Winners of 2024
Alice Pero, the CSPS Monthly Contest Judge selected the following poems from submissions received each month. The first prize is a minimum of $10. Congratulations to all the winners!
January (Nature, Landscapes):
♦ 1st Prize: 1st Prize Colorado Smith, “SkyFire”
♦ ♦ 2nd Prize: Kathryn Schmeiser “Last One Standing”
♦ ♦ ♦ 3rd Prize: Paula Appling, “Cognitive Dissonance"
February (love):
♦ 1st Prize: Richard T. Ringley, "The Parts of You I Cannot Name"
♦ ♦ 2nd Prize: Jeff Graham, "Nocturne 31"
March (Open, Free Subject):
♦ 1st Prize: Sean McGrath, "hunger for eternity"
April (Dreams, Mythology, Other Universes):
♦ 1st Prize: Lillian Liu, "Sphinx Riddle"
♦ ♦ 2nd Prize: David Anderson, "The Next Eucatastrophe"
♦ ♦ ♦ 3rd Prize: Thomas Feeny, "Icarus"
May (Personification, Characters, Portraits):
♦ 1st Prize: Thomas Feeny, "The Bolder Brother"
♦ ♦ 2nd Prize: Paula Appling, "Still Life"
June (The Supernatural):
♦ 1st Prize: Jane Stuart, “Into the Light”
July (Childhood, Memoirs):
♦ 1st Prize: Carla Schick, "On the way to the library"
♦ ♦ 2nd Prize: Susan Florence, "Where Bach Takes Me"
Ad Infinitum, by Maria Wollenberg-Kluza, oil on canvas, 2018
SKYFIRE
Hard by the willows
over granite sand
slants a gray rain.
Black cumuli part;
sunburst ricochet off a lower cloud
onto the gray underbelly of the upper.
I drop to my knees in the
sagebrush:
that cloud
in the darkness
shimmers—
a thousand
tiny rainbows
pearlesce
twenty minutes
till thunderheads
merge
Hat in hand
I give my face
to the rain.
Colorado Smith, First Prize in January
LAST ONE STANDING
Grass
shoots slumber
among
weed stalks,
their
dried seed
heads
bowed
But
one miracle
Grows
Blooms
Stands
tall
A
daisy, her
white
ray florets
embracing
a
smiling sun-yellow
disk
balanced
atop
a slender stem,
refuses
to
abandon
life
Marguerite ~
She
loves me
Did
no one tell
her
it
is
winter?
Kathryn Schmeiser, Second Prize in January
COGNITIVE
DISSONANCE
The Grand
Canyon
Described as a
"big
hole,"
the overlook
understated
the unimaginable
emptiness that confronted me.
I stumbled
backwards.
Found myself
seated,
crying; its
borders, its walls,
so illimitable,
my mind could only
conjure wallpaper.
Irony twisted my
gut.
Two dimensions
could never capture
this enormous void
or contain
these otherworldly
reds and oranges,
this harsh glare.
Paula Appling, Third Prize in January
Zagubieni (The Lost Ones) by Maria Wollenberg-Kluza, 2018
THE
PARTS OF YOU I CANNOT NAME
I love the parts of you I cannot
name.
I seek to find the means; and
yet poor words,
I ask too much of you; for I
have seen
the unseen light in you that
brightens cold
and often haunted nights. I have no name
for this; it’s you I know, the
non de plume
of soft and certain moments that
will quell
an uncertain heart; it only
beats for you.
Be my sunlit heart; shine from
grace within.
How dark is life when I am not
with you.
How cold, how empty; the light
drains from me
as if I were a ghost lost in a
ghost’s
unwanted dream; a demon dwells
within
a place in Hell for those who
love you not.
Give me your heart, I’ll add my
soul to yours
and thank the gods again for
nameless joy.
We’ll grace the world in
children named from cats.
We’ll grace the world – unnamed
and yet so known.
Richard T. Ringley, First Prize in February
NOCTURNE 31
Patch of red
mums
(which have always
been
your favorite)
that in this
night’s lack of light
are still
white,
still feel white to
the touch.
Of the moon’s slow
steps.
Of my body tossed
along and across Earth’s curve.
Of the
chrysanthemum’s faint murmur.
Of my voice’s tinge
of blushing and blushing.
Jeff Graham, Second Prize in February
Zamki z piasku (Sand Castles) by Maria Wollenberg-Kluza, oil on canvas
HUNGER FOR ETERNITY
you ever miss something
even when you are beholding it
right there in your dumbstruck eyes?
it had been close during
the goldfleeced autumns in Massachusetts,
the sunsets in Redondo,
the winters from a balcony in Palos Verdes
when snow had just started to top the distant Angeles
but never so distilled,
not until this little monster
crash landed on my pumping heart
and looked back at me with my own eyes—
then, as before, every moment felt worth holding onto
forever
then, like never, each moment felt like it was rushing
away
so this is how you fall out of love with the ordinary,
I thought,
this is how the hunger for eternity grows
Sean McGrath, First Prize in March
Published in “Untitled Baby Project” (2023)
Cisza krajobrazu (Silence of a Landscape) by Maria Wollenberg-Kluza, oil on canvas
SPHINX
RIDDLE
Beaming chariot for the sun,
his laugh prods the sphinx awake.
watchtower completes the acropolis,
carved out of living rock,
her sprawling limbs squeeze the marble, Thebes
implausible.
highlighted golden. Tumbling
gravity reversing for the sky to yellow,
gelatinous blond sprays across his canvas
corn fields bake their leaves,
stalks slowly to the gate.
Eye of newt, toe of frog?
Tragic hero, tongue of dog.
wronged sun slinks behind the calamitous clouds
Civilizations for my three epiphanies.
Lilian Liu, First
Prize in April
Tryptyk II. Pokonani - Niepokonani (Triptych II. Defeated - Undefeated)
by Maria Wollenberg-Kluza, oil on canvas
THE NEXT EUCATASTROPHE
Causa latet vis est tomissima [While the cause is hidden, the force is very well known] – Ovid,
Amores IV, 287
Vires acquivirit emodo [It gains strength as it goes] -- Virgil
In a cross-step,
slow-step dance
each galaxy
calls out to choose a partner
and their pas de deux accelerates
through stellar winds and waves of
space.
The dances turn in upon themselves.
Inside each universe, the stars
increase in mass
and inward fly, faster and faster:
the dances widen
draw
to themselves
all outward
mass,
recidivate, and would obliterate—
but none
can cease,
each arises,
renewed from the swallowed energy,
then outward flies — new stars, new
universes, new galaxies ——
the pace
continues in and
outside each dimension
and gyrates as our
stars
rotate: the
ox becomes
an ass,
the Pleiades, new polar stars,
and the southern cross, a moving
mast.
Eucatastrophe. Coined by JRR Tolkien, it refers to the sudden turn of
events at the end of a story which
results in the protagonist's well-being. From the Greek prefix eu- (good) and
catastrophe, traditionally used in classically-inspired literary criticism to
refer to the "unraveling" or conclusion of a drama.
David Anderson, Second Prize in April
ICARUS
I,
a mere boy, yet
so
much to keep in mind.
The
danger of salt spray
upon
my wings. The mist's
obscuring treachery. And above all
the soft kiss of the sun.
Now,
when I recall your warnings,
Father, as we paced the long beach,
I think: Foot I should have spoken.
But who dare talk of fear
to
one whose dreams already draw him
far beyond the stars
And
in the end, can I deny
ecstasy was worth its price?
The rise, the thrill of flight,
my
giant bird-shadow cast
over battered rocks below.
The shrinking coastline, earth's
silvery curve. Then, from
the
corner of my eye
a
glimpse of pink wax
weeping
along my wings.
How
I watched in wonder
as
the tiny plumes fluttered
down, to fall like snow
upon
the out-islands.
Truly,
Father, the sun's breath
felt every bit as sweet as yours
when, lifting me up in
loving
arms, you
dare
thrust me skyward.
Thomas P. Feeny, Third Prize in April
Nokturn (A Nocturne) by Maria Wollenberg-Kluza, oil on canvas
THE BOLDER BROTHER
You stand in night,
the hard
darkness. Taking it all in.
the vast drape of
constellations.
Thomas P. Feeny, First Prize in May
published in “Night Into Day” (Canada, 1992)
STILL LIFE
atop
grey-weathered oak board,
Paula Appling, Second Prize in May
Postacie
z blekitu (Figures from the Azure) by Maria Wollenberg-Kluza, oil on canvas, 2015.
INTO
THE LIGHT
As bold as winter
but restless as spring
perched on a silver
cloud that has no lining
he waves his
wand—and the moon climbs higher
lighting a dark
moaning night that cries
for its
release! The vault of heaven
unlocks to let him
pass, taking old stars
with him down the
turning path that sizzles
at sunrise when
sudden heat
making his way from
cloud to cloud—
the world above a
distant world
floating on into
the light,
Jane Stuart, First Prize in June 2024
Nihil Novi by Maria Wollenberg-Kluza, oil on canvas, 2013
ON THE
WAY TO THE LIBRARY
I
did not collect
dust
laden pennies. I went towards reading
rooms Sealed fate
Lips glued
to
sound storms. Trans-
formations
of body between starched
pages. A NY City block-long hard
pavement
road to song. Scrappy
pencils. A brown paper bag
filled
with poetry, tinged with blue
hues
of bleeding
pens. I loved
Nights
Hidden
beneath blankets with a flashlight
Stalking
sentences
Ignoring
TV gloom
cast
out from the living room. Specks
of
ink.
The first card with my name
typed
out like a warrior. I pierced
dust
clouds with syllables,
robbed
the coffers
of
rhythms reframed syntax
from
street fights. A cat clawed
at
closed fences. Endless interruptions.
Blasts
of sound.
Tongues tripping over
each new idea.
A pile of books
I learned
to etch
my mark in the margins.
Carla Schick, First Prize in July 2024
WHERE BACH TAKES ME: CONCERTO #5
On
the strings of the harpsichord
I
return and settle in
to
the off twang of f minor’s
deliberate
and steady sounds.
The
notes play me back
to
the plain convent room
where
I practiced Skaters’ Waltz
and
found a place for my internal rhythm
and
a certain joy.
It
happened here in my girlhood
of
plain wool uniform, white blouse and beeny
that
I knew I needed more
than
home and school and hopscotch
more
than the Virgin Mary.
It
was not without effort to go the distance
of
the keyboard over the black and white
the
mesh of major and minor,
it
brought an escape
and
a return
like
the music this morning
traveling
me back
forty-five
years.
Susan Florence, Second Prize in July 2024
Maria Wollenberg-Kluza with her paintings, September 2024, Warszawa
ABOUT THE ARTIST - MARIA WOLLENBERG-KLUZA
Maria
Wollenberg-Kluza was born in 1945 in Puławy. From 1967 to 1973 she studied
painting at the Academy of Fine Arts in Warsaw. In 1973, she graduated with
honors in painting and also received a diploma of textile art. In the years
1973-1975 she was an Assistant Professor at Academy of Fine Arts in Warsaw. The
first individual exhibition of her works was organized in 1967. So far, she
organized around 130 individual exhibitions in Poland and abroad: in Spain,
Sweden, Czech Republic, Bulgaria, India, Ukraine, Turkey, Russia, Italy,
Lithuania, and Georgia. She also
participated in over domestic and international group exhibitions as well as in
international presentations of Polish art (e.g., in France, Germany, Holland,
Denmark, Hungary, the Czech Republic and Slovakia, Sweden, USA). She paints
mostly monothematic cycles of 20 - 30 works such as: "People in the
City", "Man and machine", "Cathedrals", "Art
inspired by music", "Impressions of poetry - Images of Norwid",
"Game of imagination" "Impressions from Spain",
"Polish landscapes", "Confessions of mother", "SALIGIA
- seven cardinal Sins", "He and She", "Ver sacrum",
"Images of Turkey", "Notes from Norway", "Meditations
and Prayers", "Chopin in Painting and Musical Motifs", "Old
Polish Music," etc.
More information: www.wollenberg.pl