Poetry
Recommended
Acoustic
Gerrit van DykPodcast version of this piece. My devotion never translates to my fingers.There is something lost.The scaly chaff of my heart opens my lungs.I pinch my pic like a quillwhat can I scrawl in the dusk?…
Hymn to a Maple
Gerrit van DykPodcast version of this piece. Your inverted slant is an acute notewest to east in the shaded sunrisesurrounded as you are by that moatof rocks and weeds, dry as a chalk line. One Goliath’s push…
Salt Lake City, 1957
Judy Darke DeloguPodcast version of this piece. Sunday morning in Salt Lake City, whenfaithful Mormons flock to worshipat neighborhood wards, my father’ssecret psychiatric patients slip insidethe back door of 508 East South Temple,for fifty-five-minute appointments.A nurse impersonator,…
Color
David K. IsomPodcast version of this piece. Morning at homelistening to silenceand a solo cello,caressing old books,fog outside,fire inside. Treesin crystal veils,fog-doused sun,Earth’s palette replacedby soot and chalk. No color.Only grays,darker or lighter.No real black.No clean white.…
Book of Mormon Poetry James Goldberg, A Book of Lamentations
Edward WhitleyA few years ago I was researching poems written about the Book of Mormon. I had read Eliza R. Snow’s “The Lamanite” (adapted from a poem she wrote before becoming a Latter-day Saint titled “The…
Young Gods
Blaire OstlerSlipping off a Sunday dress—hoping you’ll join me and undress.No more dark slacks and white shirts,corruption of innocence tends to hurt.It’s worship too irreverent for pews,forgive my transgression against a holy muse,but, trust me, crisis…
Casual Violence in Sunday School
Gregory BrooksJohn the Baptist was a hairy scorpionwho skittered out from the wildernessand began stinging folksuntil they saw the Holy Ghost. He molted like all prophets do,lived in caves, under rocks,until the predators found him—took his…
The Leper
Gregory BrooksAn armadillo dug up the grassin my parents’ yard last year— the kind that bounce buckshotoff their back and carry leprosy. If only I could do the same:materialize armor, lumber along. I could curl up…
Bi-Bestiary
Gregory BrooksI suppose only the animals that paired offand shuffled up the rampsurvived the flood. So this Bishop, pointing outthat we would rather flirtthan marry—well, he built an Ark out of the treeslining the church property.He…
Daffodils
Alixa BrobbeyYour lips are melting petals,Wilting into my mouth.My tears not clearEnough to revive them. When you learn to fly,Will they forget to dance?Lose their maypole eyelashesAnd languish, lonely, withWings cut. And yet,I pray, make me…
flicker
James Deweywith gratitude to Adam S. Miller and Ryan W. Quinn in the beginning, Godgave grace awayfast and free to all this is what we call creationwhich was actually continuationand still continues every day, every hour,…
Noted in the Dark
Dixie Lee PartridgeSome nights here there’ve been singings the children out into twilight . . . their countings,their hidings, their ally ally oxen frees.And sometimes the crickets were not sounding bereft but offered impressions you needed to hear. Now in…
These Are the Hours
Dixie Lee Partridgewhen birds disappear taking strips of light folded in feathersnight insects ready themselves for meals from leaves of rose and raspberrythe hollow by the lane pools with evening like waterno moonrise cool radiance but night…
Vantage: Hoback Rim to Wind River
Dixie Lee PartridgeClosed to drift most of the year,trails descend through short lives of wildflowersbright in colonies, August air verging on frost,its thin metallic edge:snow squalls visible aheadwhere a continent divides.Life stays steep. Nothing in the view…
The Days Between—After Leaving Our YoungestAt College
Dixie Lee PartridgeIt’s turning fall in this long alley of young trees,poplar leaves still and golding in deep shade.You see no one and hear not even birds. But the pale trunks together seem to humlike choir rows,…
Lithium Shuffle
Reed RichardsDown the streettrusties from the state hospitalfollowing the horizon of their noon shadows,their feet scooping up the sidewalk,the fastest as slow as the slowest.The sun is on them and pitiless.If we, shaded neighborson the other…
heavy seeds
James Dewey. . . they buried the weapons of war, for peace. Alma 24:19 bury seeds these with covenant gritshrill songs on our lips as we circle the pit clank seeds clanging as we cry-file bybeg,…
Homemade Medicine
Emily UpdegraffGrandpa filled gelcaps with his own mixof dried herbs. Before clean food,before expensive organics, beforewellness became photogenic,he was a health nut. I asked himwhy did he grind dried leavesthe color of new hay,why did he…
Heart Sutra (In the guest bedroom at dawn, after the pandemic)
Charles Shiro Inouye1Today we scorn Russians,But we were invaders, too.Our lifestyle at stake in Iraq.Searching but not finding.Blood and bones and dirt.Infection and tears.Fighting to prove . . . what?Truth? America? God on our side? Twenty years ago, I heard…
No Man Can Serve Two Masters
Gregory BrooksEnjoy this poem in audio version here. But my diagnosis says otherwise. Depression oozes under my door: the destroying angel visits:until I can’t get out of bed. One week later I’m waving bloody hyssop like glow sticks at a ravenudging sushi…
Throwing Up in the DC Temple
Gregory BrooksEnjoy this poem in audio version here. Maybe it was envy that churned inside meas I looked around the room. Wonderingwhat healthy Mormons felt instead of fear. My body forced everyone to consider what it meant to be sick in…
Passion
Alixa Brobbey“And he said unto me: Knowest thou the condescension of God?”—1 Nephi 11:16 A body so light, it floatedacross wind-whipped wavesand did not sink. So full of life,it survived empty forty days,no wheat for forty…
Fierce Passage
Darlene YoungEnjoy this poem in audio version here. Today while researching ancestors, sifting through nested petalsof records for names that belong to me, peoplewho’ve left their bloody signatures in my genes, I found Melissa, some sixth…
A Good Sick Girl Never Gives Up
Darlene YoungEnjoy this poem in audio version here. A good sick girl would never give up.She pushes on in search of a cure,working as if all depended on her.“Not knowing beforehand” what she should do,she moves…
Hippocrates
Darlene YoungEnjoy this poem in audio version here. The doctor calls her sweetheart when she criesat hearing there is nothing he can find.He pats her back but will not meet her eyes. He doesn’t really mean…
Migraine Suite
Darlene YoungEnjoy this poem in audio version here. Prelude Something is not right. A haunting quaver to the world. Your mind feels viscous, your body watery. The lights have dimmed. The sense of the smell of ozone. AllemandeA greasy fingerprint on…
Thanksgiving in Kindergarten: Salt Lake City, Utah, 1996
Hilary BrownWe grew up in a city named for water we could not drink.Our ancestors walked for miles to finda home that would not burn so easily,then stumbled on salt, which meant preservation. In 1996 we…
Mormon Tea
Emily UpdegraffI.They leftDenmark’s ripening wheat fields,crossed moss-covered pathsof England and Wales, forsookthe saturated airof Tennessee to build homeson ground glazed in the open-air kilnof the western sun.Called by God,they did not think to askfirst peoples for…
Collect for a Family Friend Killed in a Sabbath Morning House Fire
Tyler ChadwickListen the Out Loud version of this poem here. O, preening angels, voyeursof bright and burning things, of underbuilding flare-ups andflaming caved-in tinder, whose breathing—plumed, infernal,unforgiving—sweltered her last daybreak with unholy invocation—Please, if mercy be,…
Earthen Lavers Tyler Chadwick, Litany with WingsScott Hales, Hemingway in Paradiseand Other Mormon PoemsElizabeth Pinborough, The Brain’s Lectionary:Psalms and Observations
J.S. AbsherA few years ago, William Logan wrote, “Poetry has long been a major art with a minor audience.”[1] We could more accurately call it a major art with many minor audiences grouped, like the poets,…
My Body in the Temple
Darlene YoungListen the Out Loud version of this poem here. Halfway through the session, I become awareof a full bladder and nothing else.All that is holy is eclipsedby flesh. I pant in claustrophobiabetween the lady who…
Like a Prayer—Phormium tenax
Tyler ChadwickListen the Out Loud version of this poem here. How that late sabbath afternoon you sat cross-legged on their lawn, Elder S at your side, the couple just across, their backs to her late summer…
anamnesis: confronting God in the flesh
Anita TannerListen the Out Loud version of this poem here. 1. a patient’s accountof medical history,a reiteration of conditionscontracted by mortality,a form of proud flesh’sgranulation over a wound,a raised tissue massdelineating impact to sayhere is pain,…
Osmond Ward Chapel, Now Demolished
Anita TannerSometimes from the thresholdof these doorswe are greeted by another self,another worldwe wish to worship, incarnationthe tithe we offerfor such a crossing: we, seeking the divine,the divine leaning toward us,fading coal of memory igniting into…
Portrait of Agnes
Sarah EmmettListen the Out Loud version of this poem here. Stern little lady,ancestor in an oval frame,I like the way your shoulders slopeand your fingers dangleover the book and the carpetbag skirt.I like the way your…
Cemetery Walk
Sarah EmmettListen the Out Loud version of this poem here. It was somewhere around here, I think.Where they buried that baby,yeah, the one I told you about.No, not by the pioneer obelisksa wife for each sidefresh…
The Garden I Know
Sarah EmmettListen the Out Loud version of this poem here. In his artistic agony,diamond drops of bloodcovered Christ’s chiseled body,sacred sweat shimmeredin the light of the Passover moon.The Son of God, an altarpiece,in serene pain and…
Third Place: Penitent Magdalene, Donatello
Anita TannerShock of agingin a wooden sculpture—more than yearsdisplayed here,her gauntand weathered faceportraying time had its way—sunken eyes,broken teeth,parched and haggard lips. The cathedralof her handsforms a gothic archbelow her chinsuggesting prayer,her frail body embracedby heavy…
First Place: His Own Hand
J.S. AbsherI desire to be to the Eternal Goodness what his own hand is to a man.—Theologica Germanica i. What the Right Hand Is Take my right hand—the index finger crookedfrom a long-forgotten break; the dintwhere…
Second Place: Our Lady of Innumerable Appellatives
Dayna PattersonListen to the Out Loud version of the poem here. Enter into Her gates with thanksgivingand into Her courts with praise.—Psalm 100:4 1.Swirl of gold gleaming in our daughters’ eyes.Amen. Whorl of cirrostratus haloingthe moon.…
Saint George, Utah
Millie TullisListen to the audio version here. Not named for the Saintwho met the princess bythe lake and with her girdleleashed the dragon. Who killed it for the people’s conversion.Whose chapel in Windsorholds a part of…
Bear One Another’s Burdens
Lorren LemmonsGetting there
Millie TullisPaper Route
Scott StensonPodcast version of this piece. Sabbath afternoon in summer sometimes feelslike those February mornings I’d wedge thedamp butt of each newspaper in friend’s saddlepack clouded gray with his indistinguishablefingerprints. Their buckling mouths a smudgedbouquet of…
From the Angels’ Perch at Mount Moriah
Elizabeth PinboroughPodcast version of this piece. Scene: Thicket for a Slaughter We have seenbets, contests— only the greatones sent tospar with God: father, son,sacrifice. Scene: An Examination Question:the brain, a tangledbramble—the fire and the knife,a fearsomebinding.…
Recreating Abraham’s Star Charts
Elizabeth PinboroughPodcast version of this piece. I pause on the path, drop my sticks,and bend to read them like runes.Tell the stars, They said. So I do daily— I chart their breathless turning asI gather berries…
Addendum to Jacob Sorensen’s Patriarchal Blessing
Hugo N. OlaizPodcast version of this piece. I don’t know, Jake,why Dad asked me to drive you there,but I did hear every word Brother Allen said,and here’s a few he skipped: Our Heavenly Fatheris pleased with your…
Ministry of angles
Lisa Ottesen FillerupPodcast version of this piece. You who more than oncespelled angle when meaning angel,are now one—maybe both.A sharp line on white paperdriving hardand fastin another spacewhose numbersI do not know. YetIn the arithmeticof our individual…
Morning Light
Estee Arts CrenshawPodcast version of this piece. That dark matter that fashioned us, days laterMade light by command, what voice, I wonderCould shake atoms into place and stir invisibleWaves through the air, as something we cannot seeAllows…
Tender Rills
Elizabeth PinboroughPodcast version of this piece. If Gods are poeming Kolob,if I am poeming God, if we arepoems to each other, A word is more than a destinationthan a path, than a map. A word is…
Prism
Robert A. ReesPodcast version of this piece. They had agreedthat if she were seenthe boy wouldn’t be believedin seeing them.Nevertheless, she was there,her iridescent spherea coronaover their column of sun,reflecting,refractingthe morning.The flowers turned to her,the green of…
God the Mother Speaks of Salt
Dayna PattersonPodcast version of this piece. I baptized you before you were born. After, rubbed you clean.I’ll cleanse all your wounds in season. You’ve forgottenhow to savor my holy. If you seek,you’ll find these veins run…
God the Mother Speaks of Xenia
Dayna PattersonPodcast version of this piece. I AM the children sleeping under mylar in a Texas warehouse.I AM the fathers lifting toddlers to their shoulders on our journeyto safety and rest. I’m safety and rest. But…
Benediction
Neal ChandlerPodcast version of this piece. Here’s the truth: My faith remainstepid. Lukewarm as summer rain. Spew-worthy. A compass in fragments, I saved pieces: base plate, arrow, needle.Reassembly is beyond me. Millennia ago, I stood on…
Book of Life, for Timothy Liu
Dayna PattersonPodcast version of this piece. If there is a literal bookon a plinth of filigreed gold, and an angelstanding as sentinel at heaven’s needle-eye entrance, who’s not to sayour names appear etchedon its pages, un-erasable.…
God the Mother Speaks of Hearts
Dayna PattersonPodcast version of this piece. won’t you agree with me the heart’s a glorious organ moon jelly a ghost heart throbbing in oceanlily bulb an earth heart humming undergroundbear a furred heart curled up in cave’s dark I’m…
Mothersong
Bonnie Shiffler-OlsenPodcast version of this piece. Let us amass our wandering kicks, wondering in awe at thesecostumes her womb hath made. O Motherof the sacred hearts, sing your peasant lullabies before our every sleep. Ring like…
creation story
Maren LovelandPodcast version of this piece. He makes the light and the primeval oceans and the rapturous Word, but I have the dirt the ground the chthonic underbelly and sustenance of all. I have the jewel-toned…
Big Bang, with Sternutation and Seer Stones
Tyler ChadwickPodcast version of this piece. i. In the beginning, Mother worked yleminto a loose sphere. A swirl of stray particles, stirred by the breeze blown through herstudio window, circled her workbench, tickled her nose. She…
Ascension, after John Donne
Kathryn SonntagPodcast version of this piece. Embrace the first and forever night,Heartening as this Moon journeys from crestingTo full-figured, and in this ecstasy begins to fallEarthward, pulling me down to orchards heavyAnd underground, into mysteries of…
Acoustic
Gerrit van DykPodcast version of this piece. My devotion never translates to my fingers.There is something lost.The scaly chaff of my heart opens my lungs.I pinch my pic like a quillwhat can I scrawl in the dusk?…
Hymn to a Maple
Gerrit van DykPodcast version of this piece. Your inverted slant is an acute notewest to east in the shaded sunrisesurrounded as you are by that moatof rocks and weeds, dry as a chalk line. One Goliath’s push…
Salt Lake City, 1957
Judy Darke DeloguPodcast version of this piece. Sunday morning in Salt Lake City, whenfaithful Mormons flock to worshipat neighborhood wards, my father’ssecret psychiatric patients slip insidethe back door of 508 East South Temple,for fifty-five-minute appointments.A nurse impersonator,…
Color
David K. IsomPodcast version of this piece. Morning at homelistening to silenceand a solo cello,caressing old books,fog outside,fire inside. Treesin crystal veils,fog-doused sun,Earth’s palette replacedby soot and chalk. No color.Only grays,darker or lighter.No real black.No clean white.…
Book of Mormon Poetry James Goldberg, A Book of Lamentations
Edward WhitleyA few years ago I was researching poems written about the Book of Mormon. I had read Eliza R. Snow’s “The Lamanite” (adapted from a poem she wrote before becoming a Latter-day Saint titled “The…
Young Gods
Blaire OstlerSlipping off a Sunday dress—hoping you’ll join me and undress.No more dark slacks and white shirts,corruption of innocence tends to hurt.It’s worship too irreverent for pews,forgive my transgression against a holy muse,but, trust me, crisis…
Casual Violence in Sunday School
Gregory BrooksJohn the Baptist was a hairy scorpionwho skittered out from the wildernessand began stinging folksuntil they saw the Holy Ghost. He molted like all prophets do,lived in caves, under rocks,until the predators found him—took his…
The Leper
Gregory BrooksAn armadillo dug up the grassin my parents’ yard last year— the kind that bounce buckshotoff their back and carry leprosy. If only I could do the same:materialize armor, lumber along. I could curl up…
Bi-Bestiary
Gregory BrooksI suppose only the animals that paired offand shuffled up the rampsurvived the flood. So this Bishop, pointing outthat we would rather flirtthan marry—well, he built an Ark out of the treeslining the church property.He…
Daffodils
Alixa BrobbeyYour lips are melting petals,Wilting into my mouth.My tears not clearEnough to revive them. When you learn to fly,Will they forget to dance?Lose their maypole eyelashesAnd languish, lonely, withWings cut. And yet,I pray, make me…
Created in His Image
Alixa BrobbeyI.The first lie they told me wasBlonde Jesus. Thick Belinda locks,And blue ocean eyes.He hangs on the cross, whiteLike a tender lamb, orWhite like a lily flower,Or like white snowSmothering brown ground. II.The second lie…
“I Cannot Describe Salt”: Elizabeth Willis, Poets in Exile, and the Church Invisible in the Age of Pandemic
Jacob BenderEver since Socrates banished poetry in Book X of Plato’s Republic with a flippant “if . . . poetry can show any reason for her existence in a well-governed state, we would gladly admit her,”[1] Western poets…
Review: Poetry as Ceremony Tacey M. Atsitty, Rain Scald
Michael P. TaylorO Holy People, show me how I am human,how I am soon to sliver. Stay please, for womanor man’s sake. Succor me from a telestial state,where I long to be self-luminous in a slateof granite.…
Candy Dish Sonnet
Tacey M. AtsittyAlready the heart-shaped dish on my end tablelies combed bare: long strips dug out============== a cleaning out============== a scratch in grain, table scraps lain out so comely, meaning to loveor hold cacao or almonds—those striaeof…
Lacing
Tacey M. AtsittyVII. Sometimes I kneel down to play a gamefrom my childhood. Only then can I feelgrains of gravel, each pebble digs in so real.Sometimes I act as though I am the same,a young girl, rope…
Review: Dayna Patterson, If Mother Braids a Waterfall
Theric JepsonReview: Dayna Patterson, Titania in Yellow
Theric JepsonReview: Sunni Brown Wilkinson, The Marriage of the Moon and the Field
Theric JepsonReview: Michael Lavers, After Earth
Theric JepsonReview: Kate Piersanti, Life in Poetry
Theric JepsonReview: Jan G. Otterstrom F., Move On
Theric JepsonReview: Colin B. Douglas, Into the Sun: Poems Revised, Rearranged, and New
Theric JepsonReview: R. A. Christmas, Leaves of Sass
Theric JepsonParousia
A. I. ChristensenShe says she was eating or opening a window or just walkingdully along, and always had been, but tonight there might befew angels. These things. Our dogwagging across the foreground, the porchthat still needs fixing…
Matriarchal Blessing
Kyle BondYour hands were on my head first. No formal ceremony. I was an infantand shouting clouds trundled and thundered,atmospheric pressure strangled my stubborn ears refusing airflow.The blue chair in the living room rocked,my cries received…
Grasshoppers in the Jar of the World
J.S. AbsherThe jar is silent because it is full of praise.The grasshoppers are loud because they, too,are full of praise, clicking as they fly. The grasshoppers jump, but the jar is too high.They try to climb,…
Praying on Gravel
J.S. AbsherNot yet March, already weedsbring me to my kneeswith trowel and bare fingers. Under the loblollythe hellebore are in bloom,a periwinkle or two. The weeds are in the white gravelof the walk. My son has…
Until You Come
J.S. AbsherTaipei, ’97. I walk past side-streetvendors selling lychee nuts and blackrice cakes, to an acre of bare dirt,concrete pylons lifting a cloverleaf.A grizzled man by a beat-up Buickthrows gobbets of meat from the trunkto a…
James Goldberg and Ardis Parshall, Song of Names: A Mormon Mosaic
(author)His Twelve Points of the Scout Law (Grandpa Fesses Up)
R. A. ChristmasSunni Brown Wilkinson. The Marriage of the Moon and the Field
Elizabeth Garcia“To speak to Moses, God / put a stone in his mouth, put on / a sackcloth of verbs (want, need), / cleared his throat. Cried out” (3). Sunni Brown Wilkinson this way begins her collection The…
Karen Anderson’s Excavation of Ghosts Karin Anderson. Before Us Like a Land of Dreams
Lauren MatthewsMark 5:9—“My name is Legion: for we are many”—opens Karin Anderson’s masterwork Before Us Like a Land of Dreams. Anderson lyrically pools her ancestral narrative in sweeping loops, eddying history, religion, and landscape. Ghosts speak elusive,…
Becky, Not God
Henry Landon Milesset the hour for their reunion.She’s under the greencanopy in the closed coffin. She signed away her body,except for her skin,so her hip bones might be recycled into screws to repair broken anklesor wedges to…
The Stars Saw God
Chris A. PeckI found God huddled in my father’s insanity.There beneath the layersof confusion—as to why none of us saw thespinning ball or the parade outside—I saw his vacant expression shine out likeGod-rays through the clouds.Clarity in…
Daryl Prays, The Snake River, and Insomnia
Tamara Pace ThomsonDaryl Prays How is the gold become dim! how is the most fine gold changed! Lamentations 4:1 At fourteen, Daryl cut across an empty lotbehind a brick pharmacywhere he had picked up his mom’s pills(linden…
Genesis Chiasmus
Luisa PerkinsIn the Big Ending,My son used to sayWhen I read him the Genesis board book.Which was perfect, I thought.Such a start must surely have followedAn ending that was big.What brought that ending on? And whatGave…
Born Again
Christopher BissettBecause I did not fit a second timein the womb of my mother,I was born of my father instead. He held my arm to haul me from the waterand with the other, squared it to…
Women’s Blessing
(author)Issue of Blood
Twila NeweyExplaining God the Mother to My Father
Terresa WellbornSelf Portrait in Which I Fail to Hide My Daddy Issues From Google
Allie SpikesWilling the Storm
Holly WelkerOn Women and Priesthood Power
(author)Mother’s Blessing
Mette Ivie HarrisonReason Stares
Emily Harris AdamsA Found Poem
Marilyn Bushman-CarltonThe “Blackblue Heartguts” of Trees Brooke Larson. Pleasing Tree.
Amy TakaboriThird Watch
Jonathon EganVernal
Jonathon EganDry Tree
Dennis ClarkTrue Religion
Michael HicksThe Agreement
Michael HicksThe Four Stanzas of the Apocalypse
Michael HicksAdvent: Moose in Moonlight
Anita TannerCreek Skating
Anita TannerBridegroom
Dennis ClarkJesus Christ
Tyler ClarkNew & Everlasting
Theric JepsonSweater
Theric JepsonThe Moldau in a Utah Living Room
Simon Peter EggertsenThe Mormon Peace Gathering
Dennis ClarkSunday School
Marilyn Bushman-CarltonJudas
Marilyn Bushman-CarltonDevotion
Terresa WellbornProdigal Daughter
Rachel Hunt SteenblikWhat Ashmae Taught Me
Rachel Hunt SteenblikCircles and Lines
Dalene RowleyJanuary 21, 2019
Elizabeth PinboroughOur Lady of the Temple
Dayna PattersonPrayers for the Altars
Linda Hoffman KimballFriday Morning Shift
Linda Hoffman KimballSkin of Garments
Melodie JacksonMy New Temples
Mette Ivie HarrisonThen and Now
Cheryl L. BrunoLimen
Emily BrownRitual
Emily BrownPlacenta
William DeFordDream Psalm
William DeFordWalking Back to the ‘70s
R. A. ChristmasTalitha koum
Tyler ChadwickOn Cherubim and a Flaming Sword by J. Kirk Richards
Tyler ChadwickReview: It’s Lonely at the Top Ryan Shoemaker. Beyond the Lights.
Alison BrimleyReview: Mother, May We? Dove Song: Heavenly Mother in Mormon Poetry. Edited by Tyler Chadwick, Dayna Patterson, and Martin Pulido.
Gail Turley HoustonThe Older Covenant
Kathryn SonntagThe Tree at the Center
Kathryn SonntagOne Thousand Two Hundred Sixty Days
Kathryn SonntagThe Pioneer Woman, St. George
Kevin KleinSelf-Portrait of Mormon Middle Child as Isabella
Dayna PattersonAfter the Curtain Falls, Isabella Speaks in Achromatics
Dayna PattersonReview: “Twisted Apples”: Lance Larsen Takes on Prose Poetry Lance Larsen. What the Body Knows
Darlene YoungRaking
Melissa Youngthe fog
Elisabeth RichardsonSoft
Kevin KleinA Better Country
Kevin KleinPoema de Halloween, 2001
Hugo N. OlaizAlpha
Douglas Summers StaySonnet—For Solstice
Theric JepsonAgency of all that matters
Robert J. FredericksonChoose Your Own Belief: Of Sharks, Art, & God
Sherilyn OlsenForgotten Birds
Robert A. ReesDomestiku
Theric JepsonThe Goodness of Created Things
Susan Elizabeth HoweIf Joseph Smith Had Been Born in California
Theric JepsonAs If Nothing Matters
Chris A. PeckFaith
Natalie Shaw EvjenAt Least
C. Dylan BassettTrevor at the Fountain
Simon Peter EggertsenGrand Canyon, North Rim
Terresa WellbornAjalon Moon
Sarah E. PageThe Holy Ghost in Polyhymnia’s Closet
Elizabeth GarciaThe Holy Ghost in Melpomene’s Closet
Elizabeth GarciaEcho of Boy
Darlene YoungNosebleed (A Mormon Pilgrimage)
Tyler ClarkChristus
Laura Hilton CranerThe Grammar of Quench
Ronald WilcoxNot the Truman Show
R. A. ChristmasSolomon the Wise
Riley BassettAverted Vision
Joanna EllsworthElegy / Prayer
C. Dylan BassettTrue Ideas
C. Dylan BassettMy Sadness
Susan Elizabeth HoweThe Skin of the Story
Susan Elizabeth HoweThe Flock
Les BlakeWords
Jamie NaylorEight Visions of the First
Bonnie Shiffler-OlsenDialogue 49.3 (Fall 2016): 151–155
Shiffler-Olsen turns Joseph Smtih’s first-person First Vision accounts into poetry.
Temple
Mark BrownKeeping Faith
Warren HatchOctober Above Trial Lake
Warren HatchStony Places
Sarah E. PageMy Sister Once Died
Jenny WebbGrief
Mark BrownThe Trail
Stephen CarterThe world was divided into three. Three shards of sagebrush and sky. That’s how it looked to Emma as she blinked through the thick wooden wagon spokes next to her head. She winced at the…
Baptism
Christinah CrossOrdinary and Profane Poems
Ronald WilcoxTropical Butterfly House
Dayna PattersonKill the Poets
Emma Lou ThayneProphet by the Sea
Phyllis BarberOne late afternoon just before sunset, the Prophet with white hair like the mane of a lion was walking by the sea with his friend, Fernando. They walked and talked about many things as the…
Mormon Conversions
Laura HamblinThe songs mutate
like a virus in my blood:
“I Am a Child of
God,” “Firm As the Mountains
From Utah Poems: To Elias
Stan AndersenI brought my daughters to your grave
There in the river’s bend
Not far from where, their age,
I watched you dedicate the monument
To Jim Bridger: trapper, river-searcher.
You lay deep in Utah’s summer
So still they couldn’t imagine
This was their grandfather,
Yourself a monument now
To probing dry country.
Boy Diving Through Moss
Dennis SmithA boy with joy and fear inside
stood on the plank
above the pond.
He sensed the cold, dark water
underneath,
and, daring,
Mental Gas
Eliza R. SnowCharles to his teacher—Sir, you say
That nature’s laws admit decay—
That changes never cease ;
And yet you say, no void or space ;
‘Tis only change of shape or place—
No loss, and no increase.
New Acts of Poetry | Emma Lou Thayne, Spaces in the Sage, and Dennis Drake, What You Feel, I Share, and Christie Lund Coles, Speak to Me, and Gale Tampico Boyd, the lost, the found
Mary Lythgoe BradfordMore and more acts of poetry are being committed by Mormons these days. Before me are four volumes attesting to a variety of interests and a variety in printing and format. I am happy to…
On the Precipice: Three Mormon Poets | John Sterling Harris, Barbed Wire: Poetry and Photographs of the West, Clinton F. Larson, Counterpoint: A Book of Poems, and Emma Lou Thayne, Until Another Day for Butterflies
Edward A. GearyAll three of these poets claim, explicitly or implicitly, to be “western,” and it is unlikely that anyone will challenge the claim. Their poems reflect the western landscape, or, more specifically, the Great Basin landscape…
Sacrament of Terror: Violence in the Poetry of Clinton F. Larsen
Thomas D. SchwartzDr. Clinton F. Larson has been acclaimed as a Mormon poet, even as the first Mormon poet. In his review of The Lord of Experience Professor John B. Harris seems to have represented many of…
The Poetic Mystique | Marily McMeen Miller Brown, The Grandmother Tree, and Vernice Wineera Pere, Mahanga: Pacific Poems
Veneta Leatham NielsenBeyond the sentience and the craft, under the sound and shape and color of the poem, one seeks the mystique that synthesizes and sets forth a poet’s real reality. Marilyn McMeen Miller Brown’s book of…
New Voices, New Songs: Contemporary Poems by Mormon Women
Linda SillitoeThe sensibility described by Amy Lowell—that there is something odd about women who write serious poetry—is still given substance today by the endangered state of the species. Even I will not waste time counting the few woman poets anthologized before Lowell’s time; contemporary statistics suffice.
Persephone
Jeanette CloughThe trees are making white
buds. Shrunken heads,
last year’s berries, hang
on leafing branches. I do not
Hold
Emma Lou ThayneGray day with a brown leaf refusing
at the end of a wind to drop,
why is the crabbed clinging
so intricate a part of the dance?
Repapering the Kitchen
Randall L. HallWe probe and scrape and peel away the faded
Multicolored layers of a lifetime,
Like Schliemann
(Who ? Grandmother asks)
Gratitude
Dianne Dibb ForbisAs I kneel to
needlepoint nice words
in quiet
careful
Memory’s Duty
Ronald WilcoxLike an irresistible green vegetation
easing over everything in time,
a sense of comfort crept over my mother,
weaving into her slowly tendrils of death.
Bronzed Cadences
LaBerta BoboI hear faded trumpet sounds of summer
and fill my arms with sleepy wildflowers,
hold them close, feel the damp,
smell the last fragrance.
The Golden Chain
Michael R. CollingsParadise pendant from a golden chain
opal pendant paradise
swirling blue and green
through white cloud streaks:
golden chain gleaming on the breast of God.
“Moonbeams From a Larger Lunacy”: Poetry in the Reorganization
Paul EdwardsDialogue 16.4 (Winter 1983): 22–31
This study addresses poetry within the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, and defines an RLDS poet as someone who belongs to the RLDS church and who has published poetry in some form or other.
The New Mormon Poetry | Lewis Home, The seventh day
Dennis ClarkA new Mormon poetry is beginning to emerge from the shadow of traditional, more bardic Mormon verse. Peeping about in the bright sun, blinking a bit and rubbing its eyes, it shows itself in poems…
Still Sounds of Winter
Dawn Baker BrimleyWaking from my loud dream
I hear only what is here:
the cornered stars rattling in glass
and the slow roll of a drumhead moon.
Charm for a Sick Child
Linda Sillitoewe will dream now of a cave
with a figure at the entrance,
see the magic seeds she holds
Another Birth
Linda SillitoeThey dream of going hack.
The bars on their beds
are fingers before a face.
Their knees rise up toward chins
Fishers
Robert A. ReesIn the last days of summer
we walk through tall grass
to the river
long before the sun spills
Expatriate
Jim WalkerThe Hawaiians are surprised that we also had beaches.
In their minds we represent one vast igloo
Filled with people anxious to escape
To winter in Hawaii.
Born Again
Mary Lythgoe BradfordAs you enter the water unsinning,
I shall repent eight years
Of watching in the dark and loving
Without turning on the light.
Oil upon Oil
Brooke Elizabeth SmithLike the sound of laying the warp, whispered names
resonate within the grained, muraled, marble
and curtain walls of this holy place, and veil
the light and air with your form, hands
How Much for the Earth? A Suite of Poems: About Time for Considering
Emma Lou ThayneThe peril of extinction brings us up against this reality, this simple basic fact: Before there can be good or evil, service or harm, lamenting or rejoicing, there must be life.[1] About Considering Consider is…
Unfinished Sestina for the Secretary of Defense
Kathy EvansWe were inside the world.
The children were sleeping.
Light fell through the window.
One of us wore red.
The High Price of Poetry
Glenn Willett ClarkAdolph Hitler was barely one month old when my father, Walter ‘Edward Clark, now still living, was born on 31 May 1889. When he was fifteen, in 1904, Father started to farm on his own in Idaho. Hitler was then a choirboy in Austria, avidly aspiring to become a priest. Only six years earlier, the United States had been engaged in a “splendid little war” on the largest Carribean island — at the enthusiastic urging of William Randolph Hearst and Teddy Roosevelt.
Returning
Kathy EvansMouth over the reed,
you empty your feelings
into the hollow heart.
These are the pieces left:
Diaries
Joyce Ellen DavisI keep diaries in my head
At night I write on sealed pages
In dream codes a sort
Of dot-dot-dash Morse himself
David and Bathsheba
Michael R. CollingsWhen I slid the damask
from its plastic sleeve
to spread it on the table,
the stain throbbed against crisp white.
Fathering
Jim WalkerWhen I first hold our children,
Lately having labored alongside you,
I promised many things — too many —
Like the alcoholic too late repentant,
The Interview
John BennionTom looked at the sweat shining in the palms of his hands. Wiping them on his slacks, he opened the door into the stake president’s office and sat in a chair against the wall. A…
Benediction
Neal ChandlerArdmoore told Carmen Stavely, who’d been away in Idaho visiting family, that what happened that Sunday morning was absolutely confidential. The bishop had instructed all who’d been present to keep the matter strictly to themselves;…
Lightning Barbs
Marden J. ClarkI’d ridden this way a hundred times,
Up Monday Town along the fence
Dividing wheat from perennial sage
Herding cattle to summer grazing
One Year
Margaret R. MunkThe scene was written
In advance,
Rehearsed as often
As the days of waiting
Would allow.
As Winter Comes On
Helen Walker JonesBeyond my chrysanthemums and barbed fence,
aproned sisters, some in hair nets like cafeteria cooks,
whisk their casseroles to the kitchen of the old wardhouse.
This Is My Body
Marden J. ClarkA deacon offers the broken bread.
Aware of awkward wait as bishop
Receives the bread of ritual first,
I take it up, thoughtless of blessing,
All My Silent Midnight Hours
Lisa Bolin HawkinsThings just get worse.
Which heavenly linoleum stripe
Leads to universal Emergency?
The resident angel could scour my soul.
Grains of Life: Fragments of a Sonnet Cycle
Helen Candland StarkIf I could give to you a dew-wrapped day,
You have no need to tell me — I should know
That you would use it all to make things grow.
The furling bud, the fruiting branch are pay
Sonnet for Spring
Linda Sillitoethere’s honeysuckle in the exhaust, a fine green
beard between walks, spring softens us
again, now we confess the earth is a drum
encased in living skin, not concrete,
For the Bishop’s Wife
Kathy EvansSome of us stood together
on your star-gray lawn,
sang you Christmas carols
in the warm California air.
Grandmother Envisions Her Own Death
Helen Walker JonesA white pillar will glow from the sand as I die.
Those backyard trees will shake their empty pods
against the sky. My moldy body will sink
into its bed, smothered by sinners.
Winter Burial
Carol Clark OttesenGrey clouds, March-heavy hung over
an old and mottled snow that day
we brought him there to you.
Seasoning
C. Thomas AsplundThat fine white burst of bush blossom
Has come again. Blast
ing through the winter crust
And scattering the afterbirth of spring,
Nativity
Kathy EvansThe eyes of the beasts shine into my own.
The archangel’s hair is on fire. I stumble
through the mudprints of cows and ewes
toward the damp side of the cave
They Have Closed the Church My Father Helped Build
Anita Tannerwhere he sawed through his finger
now perpetually stiff,
paid three assessments
Evenings: His Church Calling
Anita TannerThe sound burrs in my head
like a racket of angry birds
swirling from the sky.
He’s gone again;
Christmas in Utah
Leslie NorrisIn barns turned from the wind
The quarter-horses
Twitch their laundered blankets.
Three Steller’s jays,
Cancun Beach, Mexico
Carol Clark OttesenWhat kind of God has made this sapphire tide
stroking the white sand mouth of Yucatan,
outrageously extravagant, a place
fit for the baptism of God or kings
Sons
Connie Hendrickson JorgensenNew grain, you are comely;
Long, straight, supremely vernal.
Standing in Earth’s sun
Unashamed green,
You sway.
Recollections from an Ex
Karen Marguerite Moloneymused in several voices
to the tune of tinkling cymbals
It wasn’t like she didn’t blend right in.
In fact, based on the type of clothes she wore,
People always figured she was from Salt Lake.
Her skirts were long enough, that’s for sure.
For Brother de Mik
Dian SaderupCupped in your papery palm the rose
was like a wound, flowering.
Your wife nodded when we brought it.
Yes, Papa, yes is pretty. Then
she put it in a bowl to float
and wilt on water.
Lulu: On the Death of a Sister
Frederick G. WilliamsGone
from the pampas.
The only brunette;
her first airplane flight at six months.
Discouragement
Frederick G. Williams Discouragement,
is the adversary’s vision of the work
revealed to and
Stones; The Salutation; The Problem; Grandmother, Grandmother, Grandmother; Bishop
Loretta Randall SharpFeliz Navidad
C. L. ChristensenNo room at the inn,
For them, anyway.
It didn’t take ESP to read the situation.
Just avoiding unpleasantness later.
He had enough on his mind just then.
Our Way
Paris Andersonwe were young
and war was our way
we’d fight in class
or after school
Luggage
Dixie Lee PartridgeYou are required to keep the poundage low:
two large cases and a carry-on:
what you take for months overseas.
In a year of famine, you have volunteered
Pruned
Kathie Rampton RockwoodI have always been a flowering vine,
Seeking new trellises to trail on,
Climbing ladders to the sky,
Lusting over neighbor fences
To Watch a Daughter Die
Kathie Rampton RockwoodTo watch a daughter die —
One could practice a lifetime
And never do it well.
The labored hell
Prayer of a Novice Rebel
Kathie Rampton RockwoodDon’t try to drop little nuggets.
Please, Sir, I mean.
Or give me too much of a sign.
I don’t want a sign now—
Bodies
Michael R. CollingsWeight —
heavy weighting down
of airier stuff
in birth
A Life Well-Shared | Margaret Rampton Munk, So Far: Poems
Mary Lythgoe BradfordIn the Fall of 1985 DIALOGUE published Meg Munk’s suite of poems entitled, “One Year.” In a mature voice and through particular images, she dramatized her battle with cancer. In the spring of 1986, this…
Winton Night Walks
Steven L. PeckAt night along the canals
Dad was best.
Beside narrow dusty tractor roads
Slow dark waters,
August 6
Marden J. Clark“Go get dressed. You’re no man for this army!”
I went, thanking for the first time the crook
In my spine that stopped me buck naked
From buck privacy, and took me back to you
To a Modern Isaac
C. L. ChristensenI’m no Abraham.
I’ve bowed to a few idols in my day —
Just somewhat unintentioned.
Sacrificing children to idols
Navel
Anita TannerI drive by a red farmhouse
in the setting sun. Orange morning
darts through rippled glass.
High-glossed linoleum
The Oldest Son Leaves for Nagoya
Jim WalkerSurprisingly tall, he looks down toward
His six-inch shorter father
And shifts his feet, anxious
For the moment of departure, awkward in uncertainty
Burial Service
Jim WalkerThe place they put him seemed extravagant —
Sprawling flowers, hovering crowd, artificial grass
To cover up plain dirt.
The coffin shone, wood lustrous as the new organ
For Bonnie
Randal AllredEver since the homestead days, when you,
The eldest, baked the bread for barefoot boys
Flushed from the corn for lunch, the care we knew
Was testimony of your oaken poise.
Here’s the Church
Kathy EvansWhile the organist pumped
“Let Us All Press on in the Work of the Lord,”
and the chorister napped her arms
like a whooping crane, and some sat there
Failed Friendship
E. Victoria Grover-SwankSisters nod and smile,
inclining intimately toward her in the crowded room.
Years of testimonies shared and friendships deified
linger in the worn cushions and heavy curtains.
She brushes jostling shoulders, turns and feels
Lesser Voices
Sherwin W. HowardSun-circled history
Paints famous fools
But leaves plain brown men
Unremarked
sonnet on life’s dangers
Linda Sillitoecop and father, he cautioned us of more
than boogeymen and fire, in case of snakes,
freeze where you are, same for skunks and por-
cupines, brave enough to tromp on cracks,
The Lord’s Table
Timothy LiuThe banquet table was spread,
But I could no longer smell
Satisfaction in the room.
Two Fishermen in Hong Kong
Timothy LiuWe couldn’t find anyone
in that inner-city maze.
Between thick buildings
Three Poems for My Mother
Philip WhiteFor Your Birthday: Planting in the Rain
Fall Canker
A Place for Roses
Early Through Winter
Jill HemmingSomeone went shooting rabbits last night
blasting any flesh too slow to dodge.
I track the powdered ground until I toe
a scarlet gash melted to concrete.
Pure Thin Bones
Lisa Madsen De RubilarJosé Luís was sick. That was why Michelle and Renata stopped by to see him on their way home from missionary zone meeting. They walked with Nielsen, his companion, who had gone to the meeting…
Three Generations of Mormon Poetry | A zipper of haze; Tinder; Christmas Voices
R. A. ChristmasDennis Clark loves poetry and poets, and he also loves to write poetry. I don’t think this can be said of everybody in the poetry business. These three chapbooks are evidence of Dennis’s development as…
Inadvertent Disclosure: Autobiography in the Poetry of Eliza R. Snow
Maureen Ursenbach BeecherThree turning points mark the early life of Eliza R. Snow: the 1826 publication of her first newspaper verse, her 1835 baptism as a convert to Mormonism, and her 1842 sealing as a plural wife…
Grandpa
Jill Hemmingyou talk of breakaway stallions
with hooves poised to strike teeth,
years on long lean roads past Las Vegas
selling church pews down the valley.
Passion Poems | Emma Lou Thayne, How Much for the Earth?
Linda SillitoeOne might suspect that a book of poems published by Utahns United Against the Nuclear Arms Race might possess as interesting a history as the poems that comprise it. How Much for the Earth? by…
A Lot to Like | Eugene England and Dennis Clark, eds., Harvest: Contemporary Mormon Poems
Miriam B. MurphyHarvest is a good title for this collection of twentieth-century Mormon poetry with its bounty, variety, and degrees of ripeness and appeal. One feels a generosity of spirit emanating from this aggregate, a poetic vision…
One of the Women
Dixie Lee PartridgeOne of the women inside me
cannot rejoice with anyone.
She stays in the shadows
bowing her head.
Her long hair has never been cut.
The Slow Way Home
Loretta Randall SharpShe leaves the women in her husband’s house
and makes a slow way home
to her own mother, to friends singing
as they bring sweet butter
for the first month, molasses
Deity
Anita TannerWho is he from the Sunday pulpit
acquiring the air of sins
with his lecture,
hell’s woes never hidden
Daddy Hung Me Out
A. R. MitchellHe hung me next to the load of dripping clothes.
I was just a child! Couldn’t walk! Couldn’t talk!
Too frozen stiff to cry! But strong enough
to clench my monkey fists around the line.
I still can see the pomegranate bush.
The Blood in My Veins
Dorothy K. WheelerTonight while combing my long dark hair,
Sprinkled with strands of white,
I am grateful for my legacy
And wish others would not look down
If I Had Children
May SwensonIf I had children, I might name
them astrometeorological names:
Meridian, a girl. Zenith, a boy.
Eclipse, a pretty name for either one.
I Can Wait For
Holly WelkerI purposely forget what you look like
so each time I see you I am surprised
again by your beauty. Your name is the
charm I offer nervous cats instead of
Heartbreak Hill
R. A. ChristmasI go to Brenda’s wedding wearing
her ex-husband’s cast-off temple garments.
The Next Weird Sister Builds a Dog Run
Laura HamblinWith fortune’s damned
quarreling smile,
the neighbors complain
Transformation
Jerrilyn BlackI had wanted your wife
to be born to the graces,
elegantly muted
in dove-gray and gloves,
to take tea from fine china,
walk perfumed in silk.
A Call Before the Obituary
Jill HemmingHis name, distant to me,
opened your mouth to blackness.
It seemed you laughed before
the half-crow caw fell out.
Island Spring
Philip WhiteAlways she is there on that far island
in my mind, where it is always night,
and the moon tears into a world of leaves,
and is torn. A child, she steps
Innocence
Holly WelkerI confess I have invented a word
for the thing I am and the thing I have done.
It is a pleasant word and may be spoken
to young children or written in their books.
I Consider Jonah’s Whale
Paris AndersonYou must have been lonely,
slowly swimming
in that vast darkness,
waiting
Burn Ward
Ellen KartchnerLate at night, the kids in their rooms come
drifting towards me, thinking of home, perhaps,
wrestling a kiss fire of pain.
And the ward is yellow with breathing,
Sisters
Jerrilyn BlackMy sister and I had no whispered secrets
between us, shared no hollyhock days.
Being Baptized for the Dead, 1974
Lance LarsenIt throbbed a little, the gash in my left palm.
I pressed the gauze, something to finger
while we waited —boys here, girls over there,
all of us wearing jump suits heavy enough
In the Back Lot at Hillview Manor
Mary Ann LoseeOn any given Thursday,
Papa adjusts the strap
And plucks out a phrase or two
Baptism: As Light as Snow
Michael R. CollingsCool, waist-high,
shallowerthanremembered;
eight years ago, it seemed
that I would float.
One Sunday’s Rain (After Word of My Father’s Illness)
Dixie Lee PartridgeAll morning: rainwater
off the roof onto pebbles
washed smooth of pale soil
in the garden.
The Dark Gray Morning
Tom RileyThe dark gray morning has its eye on you
Forget about the stormy
you have more pressing worries. What to do?
The dark gray morning has its eye on you
Cure
Michael GrayThe white man is loud,
he is also blind.
His dreams are bad
and teach him nothing.
The Virgin Mary Confronts Mary of Magdala
Richard ShortenDon’t say that.
I never called you whore.
It’s a dream word I never knew.
How Could We Have Known
Laura Hamblinthat loneliness is like
the whole of the moon
rising in a sky so lucent,
the clouds cast shadows
The Perseids
Philip WhiteNerved sparks, the Perseids
tonight, wincing out over Loafer
Father, you taught me to name
these — each streak of fire
Mechanics
Mary Ann LoseeThey tell us now
That the darkness of space
Is what’s left over,
The Hero Woman
Karla BennionWhen the days drag on like TV reruns,
The Hero Woman conies.
She walks in with long strides from the hips.
She keeps her eyes on the horizon.
Patchwork
Michael R. CollingsThe fields south of Salt Lake
Must be old.
From the air, in October,
They lie barren, empty,
Losing Lucy
Karla BennionJust as we were meeting, she
Slid quick away—too far—
And I, surprised at sudden loss,
Ran leaping after her.
Nickel Girls
Holly WelkerSometimes boys would stand
on the high school stairs
and throw nickels at girls
in low-cut blouses, hoping
Over Coffee, 600 B.C.
Melanie D. ShumwayA friend of mine told me —
so I know it’s true —
she saw someone in the road
behind her house
Song of the Old/Oldsongs | Leatrice Lifshitz, Only Morning in Her Shoes: Poems about Old Women
Karen Marguerite MoloneyAs Leatrice Lifshitz explains in her introduction, this unusual collection of verse represents “an attempt to return old women to the circle, to the continuum of women and of life” (p. viii), and its rich…
Ovum
Susan Elizabeth HoweThe egg insists on its own reality,
So I go along, easy, not one
To counter what I don’t know.
The Good Life
Edward L. HartWhy do I strain for a freedom found outside,
Where worlds in time and space lie wide and full?
My room is closed and airless while the tide
Slaps up the pier and churns me in its pull.
And yet old times of weary venturing pall.
Jackrabbits
William PowleyGrandma teased us
for the time it took
to kill one jackrabbit
on our backyard picnic table.
Waiting
Mark Koltko-RiveraThe absence of a signal
is itself information,
a zero giving meaning to binary ones.
The call that doesn’t ring,
A Vision of Judas
Timothy LiuThe light was too harsh
in the South. All day
I sat beneath that tree
growing darker and darker
until I was all shade.
Two Sisters Visit Dieppe
Mary Ann LoseeWe leave the town at noon
For a beach of white pebbles
And small, clean bones. The wind
Whips our sensible skirts, and sun glints
Celebrations | Emma Lou Thayne, Things Happen: Poems of Survival
Susan Elizabeth HoweThe publication of a new book of poetry is an occasion for celebration, particularly when the poetry is by such a generous and great-hearted soul as Emma Lou Thayne. But the title of this volume,…
When I Swam for the Utah Valley Dolphins
William PowleyMy mom could sleep each night
without waking except
when my ear ached so much
I became a nightmare
The Mistake of the Psycholinguists
Karla BennionThey say people nominalize too much.
We tell ourselves, “I am in pain,”
instead of simply, “I hurt.”
“Pain is not a prison you’re locked in,” they say.
“You hurt because you choose to hurt,
and you can choose to not hurt.”
Art and Half a Cake
M. Shayne BellOn Saturday mornings, mother baked good bread.
She always called my two sisters,
My two brothers, and me
To come and eat the crusts hot,
Spread with butter and strawberry jam
Made from strawberries she had picked and washed.
My Mormon Grandmother
Kit G. Linford“Another girl.”
Unheralded birth
Beginning nothing.
Coney Island Hymn: Shore
Glen NelsonThey clap their hands together
and shout out
and sing the same song
The 20/20 Leap
William PasseraI approach God—
the distance is immense.
My vision is clear,
I am not.
Ecclesiastical Check
Richard WimanWhite pawn moves
forward two steps
onto an open square.
A black knight in grace
Woman Bathing | Authority
Marilyn Bushman-CarltonShe performs the persistent ritual of cleansing,
the splashing of water
upon her scarlet apple flesh
sullied with blood
Hands
Philip WhiteIn the chapel,
In the straightbacked
Ache of the pew,
We held them—lap toys
Missionary Court
Lance LarsenHunched over and rocking a little,
he answered the president in stutters,
and I wrote it all down in the ledger—
the girl’s name, how many times, my pen touching
Late
Jerrilyn BlackI mourn my father.
I am afraid to relive him
lest my heart break.
Relativity
Ronald WilcoxWhile a hummingbird scans it for wires
the red rosebud explodes in slow motion,
the two velocities firing simultaneously.
Riddled with inconsistencies, the rose is
Return (for my father)
Anita TannerOver the terra cotta earth
your truck like a cleft-foot goat
grazes homeward.
The down of trees in the hills
Manna in the Desert
Tom Riley“The satisfaction brought by morning dew
is more than human stomachs can endure,”
the men insist, hoping that they will die.
“The satisfaction brought by morning dew
Variation on a Love Letter
Holly WelkerI have written this letter to you before
and I will write this letter to you again.
In it I tell you that the days are starkly blue
and unbearably warm, that the cooling storms
The Book Handed Her
Anita TannerWanting to be one of twelve princesses
to disappear down a trap door
underneath her bed each night
and dance to weariness in a haunted place
Winter Fast Offerings
Lance LarsenWhen no one was faking sick, we were nine —
just enough to cover the routes if someone
doubled up. We argued over the packets,
weighing thickness against distance,
Entire Unto Himself
Michael R. CollingsAlready cold and stiff by the time I arrived,
It was a shallow shadow, gray against black;
A collar of blood fringed its matted coat.
The Pulpit
Marilyn Bushman-CarltonIt is a last bastion,
The pulpit. Prominent
Among muscular box shapes;
Fenced off and jutting skyward
Yellow Hair
Michael GrayI have got a blond, it’s true.
The others comment,
laugh behind their hands:
where did that one come from?
Sestina for the Coming Fall
Anneliese WarnickIn fall, I try to understand the dying
of so many innocent leaves. The changes
happen imperceptibly, till the once-verdant is carmine
or golden, but such pulsing color is only
prelude to their silent fall to the dark flesh
of life that decayed before them. A nectarine
Saint Theresa and the Lepress
Kathryn KimballFew teeth remain in her mouth,
And the mouth exhales rottenness.
I turn my back, my nose.
Still she presses in.
What El Salvador Meant to a Three-year-old
B. J. Foggan iguana in our empty pool
his eyes jumping wild
a metal fence around the yard
where naked boys waited outside for food
Beth-lehem
Richard TiceJacob and Rachel
But a little way to come to Beth-lehem,
and the pains came hard upon her. She heard,
“Fear not; thou shalt have this son also.”
Night Myths
Dixie Lee PartridgeSleepless with fever,
under one small lamp you stared
at a cherry wood cabinet, dark whorls
spiraled like galaxies and polished
Notes for a Son, 19, Living Abroad
Dixie Lee PartridgeOften when entering sleep
I start awake, your form having drifted
into vision, your name embedded
in the thickness of my tongue.
Snowy Night
Lisa Bolin HawkinsWhose poem this is, I think I know—
New England bard of spring and snow,
But eighth-grade teachers don’t explain
The depths to which the poets go.
Becoming a Writer
Derk KoldewynEarly on, in class, the smooth new pencils,
the ice-white paper, copper-bladed rulers,
all spoke order, a progression of lines.
Breadcrumbs
Dixie Lee PartridgeThe fairytales were wrong:
to identify big feet
with wicked stepsisters, ugly with unloved,
princes and frogs with anything
Exercising the Priesthood
Derk KoldewynA Wednesday evening
down in the back
of the chapel, we played
King of the Mountain on the
Postcard
Holly WelkerI debated hours, whether to send you a kiss
by the river or the overabundant lips
of a Rosetti madonna. You get both: See
the pansies the madonna holds? That’s how I know
Litany
Philip WhiteAll night, all day, angels
watching over me, my Lord.
And him slipping off,
letting the door close
Household of Faith
Dana Haight CattaniFrom where we sat on the fourth pew
the three square windows looked like cubes
of shimmery gold
vertically stacked
God With Us
Philip WhiteAt the baptismal Erma sings “Que grande es El,”
her voice breaking,
and the woman she has brought to Jesus,
clothed in white on the front row, weeps.
A Body That Expands
Holly WelkerMy sister sings Puccini in the shower.
A fever ripped the muscle of her heart
when she was five but now she is almost
twenty-one and lovely. She leaves music
Double Exposure
Lewis HorneThe picture gathers from a host of things—
From giggles of remembering, not play
By play but one word lifting from another
Into a rearview record, a happy weather
Sacrament Prayer
Lance LarsenIt’s the simplicity I like, no pulpit thunder,
no fiery “Thou shalt nots” rattling the soul.
A set prayer, phrases you can roll around
your mouth all week, then string together
Brando
Holly WelkerMarlon Brando’s such a babe in Guys and Dolls,
it’s an ideal, makes you feel
positively reverent, same as orange blossoms,
the way they delicately ask to seduce
Warren Travels With His Father
Michael R. Collingsin the
dense Montana heat, the BLM vehicle musty
and smelling of oil, sweat, and age.
Decoration Day
Jillyn CarpenterNo funeral today, but the town
has business at its cemetery.
Dust leads the procession;
handles of rakes and hoes protrude
Day Dreams
Karen Marguerite MoloneyMan of her house, her rooms
Are haunted by dreams.
Leavened by cool morning light,
Loft become sanctum, he lolls
Sole Makers
Russell MooreheadI wonder if I can still heal myself?
I’ve done it once before,
back when I cut my palm open
trying to be your blood brother.
The Man Without Sin
H. L. MilesThere’s this house where
four retarded men live who
go to church on Sundays.
Lancashire Saint Dies
Rita BowlesHe wanders the back alleys of his childhood
Mossed and decaying bricks
Tower skyward to imprison him
Cobbles rise to thwart his escape
Leave of Absence
Dixie Lee Partridgewalk out and arrive
near the lake—
any route taken
leads eventually
to this
Resurrection
Derk KoldewynOne gunmetal day, late fall,
a fat shabby robin tired
of flying in her natural world,
desired to swoop across our couch,
Our Fecundity
David PaxmanWhat have we done?
This wrinkled child
did not ask for entry;
it answered our call
For My Father, 1934-1990
Marni Asplund-CampbellHave you noticed, then, that sound moves
differently in fall—such falling
of leaves, a fall
from warmth and
Mama and Daddy Standin’ By
Paul SwensonBest thing that ever happened
In church was when Martha
Got Nancy to sing “Summertime”
On Mother’s Day—
In Passing To Her Fathers
Warren HatchIn Saint George, Lena McCain had cancer.
She set her house in order.
In Las Vegas, the doctors went after the cancer with a knife,
got it, watched her closely.
Bean Counting
Michael J. NobleShe adds up all the names
people have given her over the years:
‘Vain, difficult, cold.”
Someone once told her that
I Have Learned 5 Things
Elaine Christensen1. The sulfurous flame
sunbeams in corners
lightning like cracked glass
the bulb of an idea
your dark eyes
Aspens
Don W. JenkinsParchmental stand aspens,
Paper atrmeble accepts scars,
Words healing standing parchmental
Magi
Pamela Porter HamblinThrough Perean hills and Arabian desert,
pacing our journey by the pulsing star,
we come here, finally, to this quiet shelter
that houses the holy—to Bayt al-Lahm.
Commentary
Donna BernhiselWedged into the same chair,
my husband and son station
themselves, duplicates
of each other.
Too tired to talk,
my son listens.
Ireland
Brent PaceWhen did I find the music
of another open-window autumn?
I’ve left more vodka empties near
the wardhouse dumpster.
To Joseph of Nazareth: Patron Saint of Fathers Dispossessed
Harlow Soderborg ClarkJoseph, I too have known that sad angelic word
Visitation
Which renders a father not-father.
Your children
Hobby Horses
Lance LarsenWhat holds us together is our discourse—
hints and asides, a whisper in the cloakroom,
School of the Prophets held across the backyard hedge.
Stealth gives Adam-God a reviving breath,
let Gog and Magog flex their muscle in the U.N.
Movements Giving Off Light
Dixie Lee PartridgeDrops of water stretch and hold
in the sunlight: the small icicle
sways from the eaves in the thaw.
I see it fall
because I have come to the window
at this moment.
Mummy Pendulum
David PaxmanA man’s last wish
should be sacred.
I want to be wrapped
like a ball of roots
Sariah
Marni Asplund-CampbellShe’s not Abraham’s Sara,
who laughs and talks
to angels
as if the state of her womb
Jesus is Coming
Brent PaceThe tapping of the shower is
the insistent brush of reeds
along the Charles and the slap
of oars I’ve just left.
Marcus
Brent PaceIt is not that I miss you now
but I miss it—when I
swallowed your finger the first night
and restrained myself in deference to
Secrets under the Surface | Linda Sillitoe, Crazy for Living: Poems
Emma Lou ThayneJust under the surface of the obvious lie the secrets. Linda Sillitoe sees, hears, tastes them, feels where they lead, trusts them, takes us along. It is never a perilous journey. Rather, it resounds with…
The Invisible Woman
Holly WelkerThe invisible woman is angry.
Boy is she mad.
She took her books to the library last night
and last night she burned the library down.
Going Dark
Anita Tanner To escape from pursuers
I flee to the car,
gun the gas down the highway.
They’re on my tail.
Serving the Papers
Lance LarsenThey sit in stiff unmatched recliners,
a faint halo of grease smearing
the head rests. The Bishop asks again,
Do you want your names removed?
His Sermon
Anita TannerHe says there’s very little truth
in the world
and he can’t wait to go out,
preach, and spread his own—
like he has the corner on it.
Nestling
Michael R. CollingsThey hatched today. Last night
when I peeked among the apples
they were eggs, four, end to end
among twigs and scraps and a twitch
For the Girl Who Saw Her Mother Cold
Marni Asplund-CampbellJuly twenty-third in the canyon is
almost like hell-fire—sulfurous hot
waves off the powdery earth while
the children play in the trees,
A Courtship
Joseph FisherI remember the great bear
circling the blue night,
the black juniper and no motion.
On X-ing
Marden J. Clarkcrossed out—an inexact word in typescript
but not erased
left unused—an unread book
but not unneeded
My mama’s hands
Donna Bernhiselcan hold eight eggs
when she walks from the
refrigerator to the stove,
bacon fat popping out
Storytime
Philip WhiteEven now in the stony
courtyard under withered
vines the characters
Early Winter
Anita TannerHome from the dance in a howling blizzard.
The kitchen door blown open.
A heap of snow swirled onto linoleum.
I’m entranced at the violence,
Clean
Donna BernhiselCreekbottom
pushes up between our toes
like mushrooms.
Summer water
In a Far Land
M. Shayne BellSo many women on their knees
that if I knew how to tell them
they could find hope here,
or that there the men
Pilgrimage
Joanna BrooksAfter ten hours of driving, out of the old station wagon.
My mother, roadworn, care poor,
steps over the fallen gate.
Basilica
Jerry JohnstonFrank’s photos—
are like his fiction—
show clean, hard lines.
Bathing a Child
Marilyn Bushman-Carlton Elbow-deep in shallow water
with porcelain pressed against my breast
I dragged the sudsy washcloth
over your squirming body
The Violent Woman
Joseph FisherSarah your clarinet
body squeaks at the valves, moans
off key, and lying still
and flat as a paper doll
Naked
Lance LarsenI was expecting ripened avocadoes, Michael,
or half-used spices—the usual throwaways before
a move. Not a grocery bag of garments, unopened,
each slippery package a skin you never tied on.
Cap Meets the Prophet Brigham
Derk KoldewynOn the third day he stopped for a deserved rest,
though not intentionally. The bishop, she explained,
was hunting pheasants and wouldn’t be back
for hours. So he collapsed into a straw bed
1844
Philip WhiteSigns in the heavens. Great arcs of light
at midday. Drew it. Intend
to ask Joseph what it means …
Snows
Marden J. ClarkThat snow falling out there, not in flakes
But in clusters of flake, little snow balls
Loosened by November’s sun still barely struggling
Through the harvest haze, snow falling
The Time Traveler Comes to Cana
M. Shayne BellSo I went to Cana and spent Sabbath
in that house, their guest, before the wedding.
The daughter spoke with joy of her marriage;
the mother sat impatient—Sabbath’s end
March Children
Nancy Hanks BairdHer head nestled in the palm of my hand
not so long ago,
little lips tugged my breast,
fingers pink as birthday candles
Negative Space
Paul SwensonIt’s hard being Mormon Mormon mind regards nipples
Razor Sharp
Marden J. ClarkYou, my father,
Too damned independent at seventy-five
To admit you could no longer handle
A simple double-edge Gillette,
1948
Elaine ChristensenShe was learning German that year,
a war bride, living in Darmstadt,
trying to say ich in the back of her throat,
the guttural r of Herr and Frau, to introduce
The Three Boats
Brian EvensonAnd God came to me and shewed me
a boat on troubled waters.
“Shall you stretch forth your hand
to steady the vessel before it founders?”
“I shall,” I said, and took the boat
in my hand and removed it from danger.
Weight
R. A. ChristmasHe was folding garments in the back bedroom
when he heard one of his kids telling
his wife that his ex had “lost a lot of weight”—
hospital healing
Linda Sillitoeof course a two-inch badger
carved from liver-colored stone
with arrows bound to his back,
could not make the difference.
Sleeping on Wood
Nancy Hanks BairdThe blue ice is melting
off the high ridge,
draining down through the trees.
The blade of rock darkens in the sun.
RELEASE: A Moment
Dixie Lee PartridgeI did not plan survival or otherwise
craving absence for so long
so when awakened that snowless night
The Freeway
Lee Robisonis two currents of light on the hill.
One drains into the western sky,
the other, into the maw of rock behind me.
I am a dazzled part of light that opens
How Things Look from the Other Side of the Lake
R. A. ChristmasPut water between the highway and yourself;
put a fence too, and some cows to graze.
For as long as you sit on this rock,
you are not driving north or south,
Cereal Polygamy
R. A. ChristmasOne of his had just spilled
some Cheerios, and one of hers
was griping over the Grapenuts.
He was about to holler
Brides of the Afternoon
Paul SwensonWhite brides, dark grooms
lustrous silks on
an orange afternoon,
scuffing through dry leaves
Slant Sonnet for Melissa
Linda SillitoeThis visit you talk of Merlin in both poem and prose,
and how he transformed Arthur to insect or mole,
teaching him how to become.
Ghost Month
Holly WelkerIn China, in August, ghosts are released
from hell for a month of fun. Late July
behind the gates, ghosts start queuing up,
raising their hands and swearing to the guards
Reply to: “You Are a Spiritual Person”
Carol Clark OttesenSomething wants spiritual
yet hesitates, not wanting to show a lack
of substance intellect
to not win at tennis or good looks
Toni’s Song
Paul SwensonShe prays in the shower, lifts
her face to the streaming water
god, to the shining metallic head
Because Last Night Was Friday Night
Holly WelkerBecause last night was Friday night
I had to search to find a quiet place
and when I found it I wanted to leave it
though I wasn’t even working off a mean gin drunk.
Saturday: One Version (Fourth Week of an Unidentified Illness)
Dixie Lee PartridgeTired of enclosure, I sit near what view
of trees and sky my house will give.
Across the back fence, my neighbor
who can hardly walk
The Prophet’s Dream
Brian EvensonAn angel came to me and said, O Pitiable Fools!
O Foolish Mortals! O Everlasting Damnation!
I said, Perhaps you will be willing to shew me
their eternal lot, and my own. He said, Come.
What Remains
Anita TannerDay rolls over,
pulling at the covers of dusk.
Lights come on in sequence
and before they go off
Aristocrats
Robert L. JonesTwo black snakes
Made it down the hill
Through the high grass
Among the wild apple trees
His Faith-Promoting Story
R. A. ChristmasThirty-six years after his baptism,
nobody was converted.
His grown kids were apostates, and his exes
were either nudists or inactives
Bread: A Returning
Dixie Lee PartridgeIn the hayfields are loaves
to be lined along barns.
Like monuments to a lost art
they have browned in the summer heat,
The Statue of Brigham Young at South Temple and Main, Salt Lake City
Michael HicksThe cupping hand cradles the winds
that whir like crickets
beneath the swoop of traffic lamps.
The legs like stumps of pillars
I Will
Allen W. BurchBitter herbs and tears
Mulch, water the spiritual
Roots of human neuroses
Surely God sees through
Hemmed In
Michael J. NobleAbove, the divorcee
with the baggy eyes and bleached hair
draws an evening bath.
The dull pat of bare feet
A Killing Frost
Timothy LiuWhen the cold front came, all the leaves went limp.
That was that—no more white flies on the patio,
one bloom still curled tightly in its calyx,
its promise of color fading. Yet there’s nothing
George
Lee RobisonHe speaks in a poetry of mumbles, not quite rambling
under the breaking sky about what happened
half his life ago and the end of a promise
that makes him angry. Shows the confusion
Descending Order
Dixie Lee PartridgeSnow falling into the pond
leaves you weak with its metaphor
of sadness, as though all that makes you
could be instantly broken down,
Untitled
Peter Bloch-HansenSing a song of sixth sense,
a pocket full of Why;
four and twenty Reasons,
beams in your eye.
Fall Weekend at Rehoboth Beach
Peter RichardsonOut along the shore the sky is wide.
Ducks fly, drafting like cyclists in Central Park
but unfettered, their path dictated only by season, instinct,
and windshifts. Below with me
In a Far Land
M. Shayne BellSo many women on their knees
that if I knew how to tell them
they could find hope here,
or that there the men
They Eat Dogs in China
Timothy Liu Or so my father said—
the clock on the mantle silenced,
that family Bible
in his hands a weight in the pans
Gaining Darkness
Anita TannerGoing down to the cellar
a child awakens to tendrils
of winter vegetables
that elongate like white worms.
American Christians Visit Mt. Nebo
Lee RobisonWe had only cameras
and yearning, but the wind rasped
stone like a hot tongue
and cameras and yearning
The Miró Exhibit at MoMA*: Dec. 21, 1993
Peter RichardsonThese bodies
look like they were pancake mix
that, when poured on the skillet,
turned out to look sort of human.
Pieta
Nancy Hanks BairdLying on my mother’s bed
listening to tropical rain skitter
across a mottled screen,
I hold my daughter, sprawled in sleep,
She’iiná Yázhí*
Kimberly Hamblin HartAs earth began to shed the snowy clouds of
death and slumber,
as darkness ebbed within the solstice,
you slept in my dark womb,
“I Do Remember How It Smelled Heavenly”: Mormon Aspects of May Swenson’s Poetry
Susan Elizabeth HoweAny discussion of Mormon culture or doctrine in the work of nationally prominent American poet May Swenson must begin with the caveat that Swenson, for virtually all of her adult life, was not a believing…
By Extension
Michael J. NobleHe blisters his hand on the iron she forgot to unplug,
investigates every outlet, detects exactly three more
potential fire hazards, bandages himself
in the prescribed method. She is not a cautious woman.
August
Philip WhiteAhumming stillness. In the orchards up and down the valley
the pith of summer turns slowly to juices. Ripeness:
what my grandmother knows, hunched in her silence.
The Greening
Emma Lou ThaynePluck them out one by one
Melancholy, dearth, unableness
Squeeze out the poisons
Scratch away the sting
Origami Birds
David RockI release my pretty doves
and they ascend like sparks
to disappear. And look
how restless I am,
Properties of Water
Nancy Hanks BairdIn the dark,
a cat will fly on rain-slicked blacktop
like a bat,
hydroplaning, flicking malevolence sideways
out of fluorescent eyes.
Seconds Coming
Casualene MeyerEntering St. John
Population 1440
Leaving St. John
Visit Us Again!
Awake to the Ineffable: Some Would Call It Kundalini
Emma Lou ThayneOut of sleep
Levitation
Stirrups of light
Palms aglow
To Sleep with the Ineffable: Inviting My Sweet Informants
Emma Lou ThayneCheek to pillow I slide my scalp up
away from my ear the way I lifted the mother of pearl stem on the
silver lid
that closed and opened to disappear under itself
The Soon-to-hibernate Bear Addresses His Public
Karl C. SandbergSlow way down.
Get off the freeway.
Park the car.
Stop racing the engine.
“White” of “Pure”: Five Vignettes
Douglas CampbellDialogue 29.4 (Winter 1996): 119–135
The Book of Mormon variously uses “white” and “pure” in the same verse in different editions. This article traces the history of those changes, who was behind them, and why.
Leaving
Stanton Harris HallLeaving you
leaves me wishing that I could hold you
like a small stone in my pocket
Black Moroni
Paul SwensonPainted on the wall behind the seats where choir sings
See the shining figure in a steep green wood
Angel wears a shirtwaist robe, fabric wing as thin as filament
He looks downslope where Joseph kneels, treasure spread in dirt
Life-line
Megan Thayne HeathTonight I wear your dress
like a shell to my most graceless springing.
The brown velvet shimmers with the folds
and the tucks hang like loosely gathered wind,
Silver Footprints
Emma Lou ThayneNeither masculine nor feminine a powerful
androgyny like wind surrounding shoulders
of a crowd, drawing in, along, persuasive as scent.
Alaska Girlhood
R. F. BartholomewEden was a winter
when gods skated the earth.
They’d warm themselves by the fires
that lit the man-high snowbanks
We Dress for Armageddon
Elizabeth Visickfor Shelley Turley
When trouble—an earthquake, a heart—
Comes to town, breaking dams,
Leveling shops, clubs
Kick and Muff
David SeiterI hear the fist-sized heart
cannon in the fog of rhythm
death and future.
From it I take the few things
Shorn
Michael J. NobleLocking the door to the bath,
opens the collar of the shirt,
raises chin, fingers buttons
from their holes, lengthens torso,
molts like a snake.
Passing On, Holiday
David SeiterIt’s Christmas
and our mothers, weary in their memories,
in their good for others (those holiday chores)
keep their feet under them like birds.
Fire in the Water
Stanton Harris HallBarely a man
he stands trembling
water lapping at thighs in cotton white
right arm to the square
Oasis
Linda SillitoeAt dusk, the pool waits in silence,
found by your feet after you rip up
the map. Suddenly in the tangled grasses
and twilight the birds stop calling,
and the trees finger your face.
Desert Bloom
Megan Thayne HeathThere are no maybes in the desert;
you have to be lizard-quick or shrivel and die.
The Rio Grande is muddy from its occasional pause,
here where survival is yes or no.
Stake Mission
R. A. ChristmasTheir place was a junkyard with Joshuas,
and they’d play Mom and Pop
to any delinquent on the desert.
We’d be forever having
Kayenta
Bryan WatermanSummers we paint relocation houses
on the res, beige and grey,
“Navajo white/’ our brushes dripping
Dutch Boy on red Arizona earth.
Moon Phases: Childhood
Dixie Lee Partridgewhen it topped the mountains
the shell of moon laid down
such plenty
all over the fields
Mountain Turn-out: Week After My Father’s Funeral
Dixie Lee PartridgeIn the ghost-smoke of eight thousand feet,
the road back looks deserted.
Below me, a hawk rises,
wings throbbing stillness, and I watch
Father Sky/Mother Earth
Cathy A. Gileadi-SweetI am turning the irrigation water
Into my garden
It’s two in the afternoon
The reddening tomatoes jerk up, widen their eyes
How She Comes
MaryJan MungerLike a storm rowing in. All around tree limbs stagger,
weeds lie flat. Wind and sun like familiars,
canyons nesting in the shadows. Bright feet
never touching down, while the air boils behind her
Fall Is the Wrong Analogy
Lee Robisonthis hesitant collapsing
of a canopy that will billow
in windy spring—
Martyrs
Timothy LiuA brigade of ants marching over torsos
cast in bronze. The mouths that cannot speak
On the Death by Cancer of Someone Too Young
Emma Lou Thaynefor Jeffrey Montague
Your wondering is over.
A radiance has taken you.
Now part of the council of all beings
Woodwork
Ken RainesHe squints and turns the beam around,
swapping it end for end. He runs
his eye down the length of the crown
and sees an overall design
Take These Depositions
Casualene MeyerLet’s talk of griefs,
of wombs,
of epithets.
Straw
Cathy A. Gileadi-SweetThe straw of the cut grain
Gold mounding the hill
On the way down from my house
On the mountain
Birthday Dreaming
Megan Thayne Heath“Watercress Grows Best in Running Water”
Dixie Lee PartridgeDays after his death, I felt him
newly jovial alongside me. And weeks later,
when I again dreamed him young,
handing me a pail of watercress,
Lily Foot
Anita TannerDid I hold the tiny Chinese shoe
or simply gaze at it
encased in museum glass
in the old mining town
Templum: A Place Thought of as Holy
Stanton Harris HallI. The coming
Inside this precise granite
the immensity of the walk comes home
After a Late Night, Waiting
Dixie Lee PartridgeAgain, that rim before sleep:
I tried to pause there—listened
to the mantle clock, the distant
sprung rhythm of a dog barking,
Out of the Night: Childness
Emma Lou ThayneFrom my Mystic Life after near-death accident
More than a state of being
A new being
Suffused in light
Sacrament Hymn
Lee RobisonJesus Deathkiller,
God’s Lifer, Earth Rover, Gift:
Be sure,
in your name and our hope,
From the Land of Nod
Timothy LiuI will go on
loving you, even after
you have stopped loving
anyone. What if
Holy Sonnet for Mother’s Day
Judith B. CurtisNo need to pierce my side with soldier’s sword
Or bleed from every pore as in Gethsemane;
Designed by Thee to shed blood naturally
Cycling with the menstrual moon. Lord,
History
Philip WhiteSmall things:
the smell of
blocks he cut
from pine light
A Prayer Addressed to Lord of Death
Satyam S. MoortyO Yama, God of Death, wield not your arrogant power!
Shield me from your wrath and dark terror.
You well know that you’ll succeed.
Mormontage
Addie Lacoebaptism—
separation anxiety
immergency
Allelujah
Joy K. YoungWhen the semicircle is complete,
each pedestal placed aesthetically
on stage, the girls enter.
Thirty earnest seraphs
Long Distance
Linda SillitoeSo now you sit with a black eye
by a glass wall on the sixteenth floor.
Already I see our talk in paragraphs
I can’t read, topics in the margin,
one clear sentence about clutter.
At Fifty-Five
R. A. ChristmasWas he improving,
or just too tired to sin?
Regardless, it was pretty clear
that where his broken heart and contrite
Alder and Maple in Molting
Stanton Harris HallLeaves
rusted and dry
fall to the earth
Creations: Mississippi
Casualene MeyerAdam, I know,
came from this red clay.
I am ever created
of dust.
Multiply and Replenish
Casualene MeyerAdam’s sperm number
one hundred million per cubic centimeter,
hope he can comply with God’s command.
Sesquicentennial Pioneer Commemoration Speech
Robert W. ReynoldsMy grandpa Walker Reynolds was a pioneer, too, with a Brigham beard.
Mom says he loved pickles, and dancing music.
Last time we saw him, Grandma said, “It’s time to hug goodbye,”
and all I could think is how Grandpa’s
Soft Sculpture
Mary Lythgoe BradfordI sink into a beanbag chair
shaped like a giant ear
but changing shape to fit my rear
Basic Training
Lewis HorneWe were like filings, lifted straight
As though a magnet stiffened up
Our figures like the hair upon
Our closely cropped skulls. But we,
She and He: Alternatives
Lewis Horne—Or on summer evenings as the sky
Draws down its light, prodding the question why
They sit in cast-off wicker furniture,
The kids cross-legged as though the lawn made a shore
Lectures on Death at Chaco Canyon, New Mexico
Pamela Porter HamblinThe ranger stoops to toss a stick away
and points to a narrow hole dug in the mud.
“Snakes,” she says, “are plentiful this year;
there’s some bubonic plague in rodents here.”
On the Fringe — The Singles’ Ward (The Appeal of the Foyer)
Bradford FillmoreThe quick exit—
Space, windows, safety.
Cozy couches and easy
Chairs versus the hard
Widow’s Weeds
Mary Lythgoe BradfordBlack
is the absence of color
to which the eye adjusts.
Black magnifies the face of
the beloved.
Thistle Field
Casualene MeyerSo speaks King Saul:
I want this modest man of war
David, dead.
Snare him with a string
Straight Up
Marilyn Bushman-CarltonShirley is the punch line who holds the joke
while we wait like pieces on a game board
in the line that wanders
from the classrooms, through the halls,
Miguel
Peter RichardsonI meet Miguel
bear hugging him from behind
tense tendons in his neck
rage squeezing out his eyes:
One Method of Hope
Todd Robert PetersenThe only motion here is an old
Dodge pickup leading a coil
of white exhaust across
the horizon—a snow-dusted
Lucifer’s Obit.
Brent D. Corcoran We note, today, the passing
of our most dreared departed—
father of lies, child of perdition,
mother of woes, and friend to sin.
Begotten of the Ash
Bryant H. McGillBorn of the ash,
Bloom of the dust
Fires of the soul,
Colors of rust
Joseph Loved His Women
Mary Lythgoe BradfordJoseph loved his women
beginning with strong Lucy
who prayed him back to health.
He loved his sister Sophronia,
To a Cymbidium Orchid Blooming on December 25th
Michael R. CollingsYou must have burst surprised
thrusting up your single spear
so soon past All
Hallow’s-Eve
Fashion Show
Lewis HorneDid she think, “Depression,”
As banks collapsed,
Men took to the road, farms
Reclaimed and lost?
Ordinary Light
Marilyn Bushman-CarltonOne hour of a particular day,
like a sudden flu it descends upon you
the first time.
You could not have known.
Fact of my life
Linda SillitoeMy job was once threatened if I published a poem.
I lived in another place
but in America and knew my rights.
I let the poem wait. Oh, I read it aloud once
We Write What We Want to Know
Anita TannerI want to know why water has the right of way
where God dwells near zenith or nadir
why you see stars better peripherally
why some people have a fear of trees
My Father Comes to Me
Brent PaceMy father comes to me
his hand scrapes on the door
that he opens to this bedroom where I am still,
not sleeping but waiting for his hair oil scent to reach me.
To a College Friend Killed by a Drunk Driver
Carol Clark OttesenIn those days
we all wanted a man
to cover our shame, the nakedness
of being a woman alone.
A degree yes unless
The Knight came
Drama Queen
Brent PaceThe week they turn off your phone,
I wait in your car while you give quarters
to a pay phone mounted on red brick
at a convenience store.
Night Fires
Brent PaceFamily sentinels, we watch flames grab scrub oak
roughly on the shoulder of our dysphoric mountain,
shiver as three firs’ tired arms collapse in slow motion
silence.
Women are the Keepers of Secrets
Mary Lythgoe BradfordWomen keep the secrets of men
by candlelight and telephone,
growing in their wombs.
A Name and a Blessing
Carol Clark OttesenI raise you my just born daughter
to the Father of All Lights.
He has set a flame in you;
this fire connects you to the trees
the earth and creeping things.
Luke 7:37
Kathryn KimballThe alpha and omega sat at meat.
The woman could not speak. She only knelt
And wept. Translucent tears upon his feet
Flowed like river waters to the Delta.
Courting
Peter RichardsonI. Prayer
Bless us as we try to find
ourselves,
each other.
If the Din of Cities Makes the Moon
M. Shayne BellIf the din of cities makes the moon
shine dimly in the night;
if the touch of concrete and tin
drowns the sound of water;
Dragging Fanny
Paul SwensonHer last hymn in the book—and they’re dragging it.
Behold, her royal army’s old. Band of stragglers,
banners furled, tired voices buckling the pews.
Afterward
Dixie Lee PartridgeOnce on the porch I asked
great-grandfather Porter a question
loudly and he said wait
though he was just sitting still
his face raised to low sun
eyes half-open
Above the Estuary (Before the trail closure through Cascade Preserve)
Dixie Lee PartridgeThe river’s long curve
enters the bay in streak between meadow
and forest—algae green of freshwater,
kelp green of salt.
Metaphysics over lunch
Linda SillitoeEnglish professor and rebel:
Off campus, our sentences race
the tabletop, garbed in wit and color.
By the time food comes, our ideas dance
Caught Gull, Plowing
Derk KoldewynAt five, standing at the edge of the field,
Dad up there on the great green Deere,
I must have been scared he’d leave.
He made me an offer: Catch me a seagull
Companionship
Derk KoldewynWe’d had problems, especially lately:
Just last week I snapped at him
and found myself staring into the outraged eyes
of a former national rugby star, his one fist
Clay
Philip WhiteOn the sill, torsos wrenched out of clay
still bore the sculptor’s mark, the print
of cocked thumb and nail. Tortured, vaguely
female, they shamed us. We crowded in,
The First Christmas Eve at Home
N. Andrew SpackmanThe air above my parents’ roof is cold.
It pushes smoke back down the chimney,
forcing me to turn off the fire alarm
and open both windows.
Practicing at Sunrise
Joy K. YoungIn the morning’s glissando,
Canadian night wrapped tightly
against opaque windows,
she rises. The brick in her bed
Natural Symmetry
Ken RainesThe restaurant juts above the pond,
casting lucent shadows in those moments
that fall still between dinner and dark.
Reflections luminesce against the faces
Night Thunder at the Cabin
Emma Lou ThayneIn thunder at 2 a.m.
I occupy all my lives
my loves hovering holding
rising with me to the wild night
Military Funeral in a High Hills Cemetery
Robert L. JonesAn adulterous generation after all.
We seek a sign, some old tune or rhyme
Like Grandfather’s Clock, even as we stand
Among the tumbling chaos of death and birth
Day Music
Joy K. YoungThe mountain is a redhead
lying on his back
nose and knees pointed
to the sun. His hair
Wild Things
Lisa GarfieldI’ve heard of horses—mustangs mostly—who run wild across Nevada’s
bleak terrain. (They kind of remind me of Uncle Bill, who ran wild, too, last
summer, until Aunt Shirley caught up with him at the border). Horses know
no borders, don’t allow limits, except those imposed by a weariness of
Plain and Simple
Marilyn Bushman-CarltonIt could have been an impossible day.
And then the wind
helping the Gardener’s Eden keep its promise:
the outdoor ornaments
Temple Square — Past and Present
Delbert W. EllsworthPast
Through iron gates shine
Bronze doors never opened—Holiness to the Lord.
Sun, moon, and stars live in granite,
Carved by dead ancestors
Reclamation
Ken RainesThe Oquirrh Mountains form a finger of land
which rests its tip in the Great Salt Lake. Slopes
behind alfalfa gently rise until they stop
where the motion of ancient waves left benches of sand.
Grandma Comes for Me
Emma Lou ThayneOut of Sunday morning dark
My grandma came for me.
Stripped bare to dreaming I saw
Her occupy the fat black leather rocker
Thin Ice
Ken RainesI watch two girls on wheels.
Four neon-green wheels
on each foot. Rollers
Fertility
Carol Clark OttesenOn your twelfth birthday,
the day you found a kinship with the moon and tides,
you sat on the front steps as a great burlap ball
rolled in its place secured and shimmering—
an olive tree.
Naked
Marilyn Bushman-CarltonThey’d come from practice at the gym,
their hair steaming,
and in the flirt and banter
would reach inside my girlfriend’s car
Hop Hornbeam
R. A. ChristmasIn the Sacred Grove
near Palmyra, New York,
there’s hardly a tree
old enough to have been
From Under Ground
Lisa GarfieldFrom under ground
you can hear them stomp,
a chaotic cacophony
amplified by mud and bone,
Planting Day
Quinn WarnickBehind the weathered barn, I crouch
among burlap bags full of this year’s
seed. These kernels promise before
they prove, and I have no choice
Trajectory at the End of Winter
Emma Lou ThayneBack from a walk along the Big Wood River in early May
I am the river alive with spring run-off
one moment rushing to be where the calling calls,
the next a pool reflecting or an eddy at play.
Russell
Philip WhiteYou’d been the one taken out and talked to during stories of Jesus.
On the scuffed pew you stuffed the blessed bread
in your mouth and blew it out, laughing.
So when they found you in blood at the foot of the stairs,
Jesus Lost
Paul SwensonDo you know this picture, asks
the magazine. Yes, I’ve seen
this man before. I’m sure
that clean, bronze brow, those
dark eyes’ intensity surprised
Through a Glass Darkly
E. Leon ChidesterIn their projected restoration, contractors
pulled down aging plywood, discreetly
placed to hide remnants of the stained-glass
window shattered in the fifties by a bevy
Under the Faultline
Philip WhiteThe night before, the earth had jolted us,
A ripple in our sleep till Dad called it
A quake and brought to life the massive plates
Beneath us gnashing the ages. It was
The Basic Tune of the Sparrow
Marilyn Bushman-CarltonOutside the glass that keeps us warm,
the sparrows,
most common of creatures,
of whom the promise is made
The Charity of Silence
Todd Robert PetersenThis is the story of my father’s demise. It wanders when I tell it, and I never know when to bring in the polygamy, so I just do and let matters take care of themselves.…
The By-pass
Lewis HorneIf I looked up the road from the irrigation ditch, I could see the church house bumping stiff and dark against the sunset’s blaze. “The old church house/’ people called it now. “The old churchhouse,”…
Salt Lake Citations
Tim BehrendA friend writes: In a walking excursion last fall through the old block lying between Fifth and Sixth East, Seventh and Eight South—in a narrow alley behind Charon’s Mexican Bakery—I came across a shop of…
Thin Ice
Ken RainesI watch two girls on wheels.
Four neon-green wheels
on each foot. Rollers
Emma’s Anguish
Emma Lou ThayneJoseph, Joseph,
How has the night persuaded you?
What bed but this?
What arms but mine?
Joseph to Emma
Emma Lou ThayneOut of the night of holy election,
Out of the silence, the eloquent silence
Only believing whispers to me:
Follow the guiding of soul-felt selection,
Winter Dies
N. Andrew SpackmanThe full third moon of passing
winter rears up
against an x-ray white orchard.
There are tree skeletons.
Indian Summer
Holly WelkerPah Tempe
Sally StratfordParched
Amy E. JensenIn Riverdale
Linda SillitoeIn a Pueblo Indian Dwelling, Four-Corners
Amy E. JensenAnhedonia
Eugene EnglandNote: The Dialogue Foundation provides the web format of article as a courtesy. Please note that there may be unintentional differences from the printed version. For citational and biographical purposes, please use the printed version…
Learning to Disappear
Anita TannerSensing Spirits
Linda SillitoeAn Act of Faith
Michael R. CollingsMaps of Time
Ken RainesCommonplace Nightmares
Holly WelkerHistory of the Church — Part One
Robin RussellComing Home
David K. IsomLove is a Delicate Chain
Marilyn Bushman-CarltonBeing World
Joann FariasAbout My Conversion: Directions to a Nonbeliever
Anne Elizabeth BerbertForever Family
R. A. ChristmasPlenty
Emma Lou ThayneSpiritualizing the Organic
Anne Elizabeth BerbertIn the Kitchen on a Saturday Morning
Marilyn Bushman-CarltonLament for My Eyes in a Mirror
Ronald WilcoxThe Handing
Emma Lou ThayneProud Flesh
Anita TannerThe Rose Jar
Emma Lou ThayneOut in the Shop: In Memory of Grandpa
Candace KearlEncounter
Linda SillitoeBalsamic Vinegar
David K. IsomWedding Vows
Anne Elizabeth BerbertWithout Question
Emma Lou ThayneEve’s Psalm
Anne Elizabeth BerbertAspiration
Ken RainesSestina of the Martyrdom
Mark D. BennionOn a Morning After New Snow and a Winter of Healing Inside
Emma Lou ThayneThe Passing Lane
Ken RainesMiracle of Wood
Anita TannerChristmas Card from Siple Station, Antarctica
Danielle Beazer DubraskySyllabus
David K. IsomRemuneration
Adam C. BradfordWater Will
Lewis HorneTrouble in Eternity
Joann FariasNobody’s Grandpa
R. A. ChristmasThe Empty Cistern
Sally StratfordDisrobed
Sondra Sumsion SoderborgI Add Craig to My Prayers
Marilyn Bushman-CarltonGardner’s Song
Max FreemanRed’s Tire Barn Titans
Ken RainesArchaeopteryx
Ken RainesNight Light
Dixie Lee PartridgeChildhood Homes
Lewis HorneVicarious
Max FreemanLiahona
R. A. ChristmasChristian Spinning
Marilyn Bushman-CarltonListening to the Lord
Max FreemanBreach Birth: Aug. 20, 1891
Maureen ClarkUtah Territory, 1893
Maureen ClarkDelineation
Maureen ClarkAlive in Mormon Poetry
Danielle Beazer DubraskyPoetry Matters in Mormon Culture
Robert HughesThe Woman of Christlike Love
Emma Lou ThayneAlmost Pentecostal
Rita GrabowskiA Motherless House
Carol Lynn PearsonThe Middle Path, Colorized
Rita GrabowskiWe Were Not Consulted
Anita TannerThe Right Place
Sally StratfordNight Work Near Escalante
Dixie Lee PartridgeYou Owe Me
Joann FariasAntler People v. Womb People
Joann FariasContralto
Marilyn Bushman-CarltonThe Mothers’ Antlers
Joann FariasInheritance
Sally StratfordNothing We Needed to Know
Marilyn Bushman-CarltonCargoes II
Brent D. CorcoranWar Bride
(author)The Cedars of Lebanon
Robert A. ReesAladdin’s Lamp, March 4, 2003 on the eve of first strike in Iraq
Emma Lou ThayneMovement: Out of Doors, Out of Town, In Dangerous Times
Dixie Lee PartridgeGene, My Eternal Brother
Mary Lythgoe BradfordBlind Tears
Robert A. ReesHeart Mountain
Robert A. ReesResurrection
Lisa Madsen De RubilarYahrzeit
Anita TannerThe Meadow
Holly WelkerEve’s Offering
Jennifer LeeAfield
Anita TannerDeath to the Death of Poetry!: The Art is Alive and Kicking in Mormon Circles — and in Mainstream American Culture
Lisa Madsen De RubilarNov 1, 2001
Robin RussellTiananmen Square, Beijing, 1999
Carol Clark OttesenThe Riverbank, Late Winter: Living North
Dixie Lee PartridgeThe Fall of My Fiftieth Year
Dixie Lee PartridgeEighteen Thousand Sundowns
Dixie Lee PartridgeReading into Dusk
Dixie Lee PartridgeAmbulance Unit
Arthur Henry KingThe Banality of Evil
Arthur Henry KingPrayer for a Grandchild
Marilyn Bushman-CarltonBaptism
Robert A. ReesEl Cordero de Dios
Robert A. ReesA Spinster Physician Weeps While Speaking Her Sermon on Abstinence: A Sonnet without Rhyme
Lee RobisonTriptych-History of the Church
Robin RussellMartin in Me
Paul SwensonConfession
Mark Sheffield BrownThousand Springs
Mark Sheffield BrownSorrow and Song
Mark D. BennionWomen in a Time Warp: Discoveries: Two Centuries of Poems by Mormon Women, Edited by Sheree Maxwell Bench and Susan Elizabeth Howe
Danielle Beazer DubraskySalad for Two
Henry Landon MilesThe Good Shepherd
Craig WattsThe Peach
Patricia Gunter KaramesinesFamily Tree
Michael HicksFaith Healing
Michael HicksChurchgoers
Shelley GroseThe Orchid Grower
Patricia Gunter KaramesinesTriple A’s
Tom RileyThe Elect
Tom RileyScriptum Est
Tom RileyMy Brother’s Bed
Mark D. BennionMy Brother Was Buried Wearing a Red Jacket
Mark D. BennionBrooklyn: City of Churches
Russell MooreheadOld Rodeo Man
Lee RobisonCarol Took the Call
Henry Landon MilesEverlasting
Helen Walker JonesBliss
Helen Walker JonesThe Holding Room
Helen Walker JonesGuest Room
Helen Walker JonesSheep Ranch Near Hillspring
Helen Walker JonesOn Reading a Blank Page
David Clark KnowltonJonah in the Belly
Lon YoungChristmas Carol (Post-Christmas: 2005)
Dawn Baker BrimleyWashing Mother
Darlene YoungTonkas
Aaron GuileFruit
Tyler ChadwickOrisons
Marie BrianMouths
Nathan RobisonSummer Dam
Judy CurtisUpon the Face of the Water
Lon YoungReflections on Darkness and Light
Judy CurtisWhere Are the Horses?
Stanton Harris HallCompass
Mark D. BennionGraduation
Marilyn Bushman-Carltonpoetry on the ‘fridge door
Simon Peter EggertsenShowshoe Song
Caleb WarnockBorax
Ken RainesDining with the Devil: A Long Spoon: Poems by R. A. Christmas
Robert A. ReesQuantum Gospel: A Mormon Testimony
Ronald WilcoxAt the End of the Street Lies the Sky
Michael ParkerSonnet to Japanese Spring
Armand L. MaussBlack Handkerchief
Robert A. ReesWedding Flower
Robert A. ReesAfter My Brother’s Remission
Dixie Lee PartridgeSome with Shadows
Dixie Lee PartridgeWhile Planting Hollyhocks
Dixie Lee PartridgeYorick
Javen TannerThe Clearing
Stanton Harris HallI Teach Six-Year-Olds about Jesus in Sunday School
Deja EarleyHunter’s Visitation
Lee RobisonNephews
Lee RobisonPatriarchal Blessing
Darlene YoungTo My Teacher
Darlene YoungMoving the Story, with Conviction: On the LDS Church and the Marriage Amendment
Johanna WagnerLand’s End 1997
Don W. JenkinsThe Word
Mary Lythgoe BradfordOne Tree
Mary Lythgoe BradfordSpring Variations on a Theme by Lorenzo Snow
R. A. ChristmasMechanical Failures
Ken RainesThree-Legged Dog
Simon Peter EggertsenA Proposal
Evertt WilliamsCity of Brotherly Love
Jamie NaylorBeautiful Black Madonna of Czestochowa
Jamie NaylorCaught Up
Mark D. BennionEpithalamium
Krista H. RichardsonFidelity to Objects
Anita TannerNecktie
Anita TannerGrace
Annette WeedThe Local Police Report
Marilyn Bushman-CarltonJesus Was There
Marilyn Bushman-CarltonAlways with Us
Marilyn Bushman-CarltonCurious
Mark BirchChange
Mark BirchMan, dust
Joshua Stewart WeedMulti-level Marketing
R. A. ChristmasGlaucus
Patricia Gunter KaramesinesOne Tree Redux
Mary Lythgoe BradfordPierce the Veil
Cathy Gileadi WilsonSalt Lake City Cemetary: Jewish Section
P. D. MallamoWhite Rain (forty years since our meeting)
Dixie Lee PartridgeFlying Out
Dixie Lee PartridgeWhat Rocks Know
Clifton Holt JolleySober Child
Mark D. BennionNeshutan
Matthew Wynn HemmertA Shaker Sister’s Hymnal
Elizabeth PinboroughAbba: The Name of God
Anita TannerEtching
Randy AstleOn Losing My Cell Phone
Linda JefferiesOceanography
Mary Lythgoe BradfordRelinquishing
Mary Lythgoe BradfordGentle Dad
Mary Lythgoe BradfordSelf-Portrait as Burnt Offering
Holly WelkerA Perfect World
Reed RichardsThe Man with One Foot Outside of Hell
Reed RichardsHandmaid
Clifton Holt JolleyOur First Home Has Forgotten Us
James BestContingency #4: White Out
James BestFrom Outside the Settlement
Darren M. EdwardsUntitled
Russell MooreheadSheets
Russell Mooreheadthe god of small things
Reed RichardsThings Missed
Simon Peter EggertsenTime Being
Dixie Lee PartridgeIn this Version of Autumn
Dixie Lee PartridgeSisyphus
S. P. BaileyRipple Rock
S. P. BaileyThe Leg
Annette WeedInternal Affairs
Lizzie SkurnickBlue Glass
Lizzie SkurnickAbracadabra
J.S. AbsherBum Bam Boom
J.S. AbsherFlannel Board
Brent D. CorcoranTurncoat
Timothy LiuRomance
Timothy LiuAn Apocalypse
Timothy LiuAccidental Mystic
Paul SwensonMarginalia
Paul SwensonGirl Without a Mother to Her Big Brother
Sandra SkousonMother Willow
Karen KelsayWinterscape: Prairie
Jonathon PennySeasonal Ritual
Jon OgdenEaster Sermons
Harlow Soderborg ClarkGaius
Sarah DunsterDishes
Anna Kohler LewisIntermission Wine
Deja EarleySex Talk Sunday
Deja EarleyListening to My Parents Through the Ventilator Shaft
Anita TannerBlessing My Son
Matthew Thomas NagelVitae
Dixie Lee PartridgeVisible from Here
Dixie Lee PartridgeDark Energy
Dixie Lee PartridgeFour Passes on Mount Horeb
Les BlakeGood Government in the City
Elizabeth WillisNazarín
Elizabeth WillisSan Diego Virgin and Child Enthroned with Saints
Elizabeth WillisThe Afternoon Hour
Terresa WellbornAtlanta to Salt Lake
Elizabeth GarciaRevelation
Elisa PulidoAfter Her Stroke
Shannon CastletonFinding Place
Douglas L. TalleyRunaway
John SchoutenMass Transit Madonna
Will RegerPerplexed by the Revelator’s Heaven
Scott CameronReview: Tyler Chadwick, ed. Fire in the Pasture 21st-Century Mormon Poems
Brent D. CorcoranMormon Scholars in the Humanities Conference: Savior, silver, psalms, and sighs, and flash-burn offerings
Jonathon Penny“Epithalamion” by Gerard Manley Hopkins
Jonathon PennyFern Hill Revisited
Jonathon PennyJanie Goodmansen’s Reply
Jim RichardsSixth-Grade Broadway Revue
Jim RichardsInaccuracy
Justin EvansHobble Creek Almanac
Justin EvansGraphene
Clifton Holt JolleyA Short Poem about Nearly Everything
R. A. ChristmasIn Those Days of My Spirit: A Found Poem
Sarah E. PageSame-Sex Attraction
Clifton Holt JolleyBlessed Virgin
Diana DeanThis Dock My Home
Calvin OlsenFractals
Calvin OlsenGhazal
James GoldbergThe Feather Pen
James GoldbergGlazier
Dayna PattersonOfferings
Dayna PattersonSinging in the Easter Choir beside My Enemy
Michael HicksPuzzled
Brian BrownEmptying Pockets
Brian BrownBeyond (on the Beach)
Brian BrownThe Hosanna Shout
R. A. ChristmasSabbath Baptism
Robert A. ReesMelancholia
Robert A. ReesEaster
Robert A. ReesTrying to Keep Quiet: A Poem Constructed Around Fragments of Leslie Norris’s “Borders”
Simon Peter EggertsenIRRELEVANT—RELEVANT
M. Shayne BellFor Margene
S. P. BaileyAbout Half
S. P. Baileyevidence of things not seen
Clifton Holt JolleyJungle Walks
Mark PennyWhat Kind of Truth Is Beauty?: A Meditation on Keats, Job, and Scriptural Poetry
Michael AustinShade
Dixie Lee PartridgeEvenings in October
Dixie Lee PartridgeNot Far Off Trail, Late Summer
Dixie Lee PartridgeCrow Games
Will RegerHaiku for the Cat
Will RegerBlood Cries
Will RegerOblation
Will RegerFaith
Ronald WilcoxLet Rocks Their Silence Break
Anita TannerReview: When Good is Better than Great: Susan Elizabeth Howe’s Salt Susan Elizabeth Howe. Salt: Poems
Douglas L. TalleyReview: Job: A Useful Reading Michael Austin. Re-reading Job: Understanding the Ancient World’s Greatest Poems
John Crawfordflicker
James Deweywith gratitude to Adam S. Miller and Ryan W. Quinn in the beginning, Godgave grace awayfast and free to all this is what we call creationwhich was actually continuationand still continues every day, every hour,…
Noted in the Dark
Dixie Lee PartridgeSome nights here there’ve been singings the children out into twilight . . . their countings,their hidings, their ally ally oxen frees.And sometimes the crickets were not sounding bereft but offered impressions you needed to hear. Now in…
These Are the Hours
Dixie Lee Partridgewhen birds disappear taking strips of light folded in feathersnight insects ready themselves for meals from leaves of rose and raspberrythe hollow by the lane pools with evening like waterno moonrise cool radiance but night…
Vantage: Hoback Rim to Wind River
Dixie Lee PartridgeClosed to drift most of the year,trails descend through short lives of wildflowersbright in colonies, August air verging on frost,its thin metallic edge:snow squalls visible aheadwhere a continent divides.Life stays steep. Nothing in the view…
The Days Between—After Leaving Our YoungestAt College
Dixie Lee PartridgeIt’s turning fall in this long alley of young trees,poplar leaves still and golding in deep shade.You see no one and hear not even birds. But the pale trunks together seem to humlike choir rows,…
Lithium Shuffle
Reed RichardsDown the streettrusties from the state hospitalfollowing the horizon of their noon shadows,their feet scooping up the sidewalk,the fastest as slow as the slowest.The sun is on them and pitiless.If we, shaded neighborson the other…
heavy seeds
James Dewey. . . they buried the weapons of war, for peace. Alma 24:19 bury seeds these with covenant gritshrill songs on our lips as we circle the pit clank seeds clanging as we cry-file bybeg,…
Homemade Medicine
Emily UpdegraffGrandpa filled gelcaps with his own mixof dried herbs. Before clean food,before expensive organics, beforewellness became photogenic,he was a health nut. I asked himwhy did he grind dried leavesthe color of new hay,why did he…
Heart Sutra (In the guest bedroom at dawn, after the pandemic)
Charles Shiro Inouye1Today we scorn Russians,But we were invaders, too.Our lifestyle at stake in Iraq.Searching but not finding.Blood and bones and dirt.Infection and tears.Fighting to prove . . . what?Truth? America? God on our side? Twenty years ago, I heard…
No Man Can Serve Two Masters
Gregory BrooksEnjoy this poem in audio version here. But my diagnosis says otherwise. Depression oozes under my door: the destroying angel visits:until I can’t get out of bed. One week later I’m waving bloody hyssop like glow sticks at a ravenudging sushi…
Throwing Up in the DC Temple
Gregory BrooksEnjoy this poem in audio version here. Maybe it was envy that churned inside meas I looked around the room. Wonderingwhat healthy Mormons felt instead of fear. My body forced everyone to consider what it meant to be sick in…
Passion
Alixa Brobbey“And he said unto me: Knowest thou the condescension of God?”—1 Nephi 11:16 A body so light, it floatedacross wind-whipped wavesand did not sink. So full of life,it survived empty forty days,no wheat for forty…
Fierce Passage
Darlene YoungEnjoy this poem in audio version here. Today while researching ancestors, sifting through nested petalsof records for names that belong to me, peoplewho’ve left their bloody signatures in my genes, I found Melissa, some sixth…
A Good Sick Girl Never Gives Up
Darlene YoungEnjoy this poem in audio version here. A good sick girl would never give up.She pushes on in search of a cure,working as if all depended on her.“Not knowing beforehand” what she should do,she moves…
Hippocrates
Darlene YoungEnjoy this poem in audio version here. The doctor calls her sweetheart when she criesat hearing there is nothing he can find.He pats her back but will not meet her eyes. He doesn’t really mean…
Migraine Suite
Darlene YoungEnjoy this poem in audio version here. Prelude Something is not right. A haunting quaver to the world. Your mind feels viscous, your body watery. The lights have dimmed. The sense of the smell of ozone. AllemandeA greasy fingerprint on…
Thanksgiving in Kindergarten: Salt Lake City, Utah, 1996
Hilary BrownWe grew up in a city named for water we could not drink.Our ancestors walked for miles to finda home that would not burn so easily,then stumbled on salt, which meant preservation. In 1996 we…
Mormon Tea
Emily UpdegraffI.They leftDenmark’s ripening wheat fields,crossed moss-covered pathsof England and Wales, forsookthe saturated airof Tennessee to build homeson ground glazed in the open-air kilnof the western sun.Called by God,they did not think to askfirst peoples for…
Collect for a Family Friend Killed in a Sabbath Morning House Fire
Tyler ChadwickListen the Out Loud version of this poem here. O, preening angels, voyeursof bright and burning things, of underbuilding flare-ups andflaming caved-in tinder, whose breathing—plumed, infernal,unforgiving—sweltered her last daybreak with unholy invocation—Please, if mercy be,…
Earthen Lavers Tyler Chadwick, Litany with WingsScott Hales, Hemingway in Paradiseand Other Mormon PoemsElizabeth Pinborough, The Brain’s Lectionary:Psalms and Observations
J.S. AbsherA few years ago, William Logan wrote, “Poetry has long been a major art with a minor audience.”[1] We could more accurately call it a major art with many minor audiences grouped, like the poets,…
My Body in the Temple
Darlene YoungListen the Out Loud version of this poem here. Halfway through the session, I become awareof a full bladder and nothing else.All that is holy is eclipsedby flesh. I pant in claustrophobiabetween the lady who…
Like a Prayer—Phormium tenax
Tyler ChadwickListen the Out Loud version of this poem here. How that late sabbath afternoon you sat cross-legged on their lawn, Elder S at your side, the couple just across, their backs to her late summer…
anamnesis: confronting God in the flesh
Anita TannerListen the Out Loud version of this poem here. 1. a patient’s accountof medical history,a reiteration of conditionscontracted by mortality,a form of proud flesh’sgranulation over a wound,a raised tissue massdelineating impact to sayhere is pain,…
Osmond Ward Chapel, Now Demolished
Anita TannerSometimes from the thresholdof these doorswe are greeted by another self,another worldwe wish to worship, incarnationthe tithe we offerfor such a crossing: we, seeking the divine,the divine leaning toward us,fading coal of memory igniting into…
Portrait of Agnes
Sarah EmmettListen the Out Loud version of this poem here. Stern little lady,ancestor in an oval frame,I like the way your shoulders slopeand your fingers dangleover the book and the carpetbag skirt.I like the way your…
Cemetery Walk
Sarah EmmettListen the Out Loud version of this poem here. It was somewhere around here, I think.Where they buried that baby,yeah, the one I told you about.No, not by the pioneer obelisksa wife for each sidefresh…
The Garden I Know
Sarah EmmettListen the Out Loud version of this poem here. In his artistic agony,diamond drops of bloodcovered Christ’s chiseled body,sacred sweat shimmeredin the light of the Passover moon.The Son of God, an altarpiece,in serene pain and…
Third Place: Penitent Magdalene, Donatello
Anita TannerShock of agingin a wooden sculpture—more than yearsdisplayed here,her gauntand weathered faceportraying time had its way—sunken eyes,broken teeth,parched and haggard lips. The cathedralof her handsforms a gothic archbelow her chinsuggesting prayer,her frail body embracedby heavy…
First Place: His Own Hand
J.S. AbsherI desire to be to the Eternal Goodness what his own hand is to a man.—Theologica Germanica i. What the Right Hand Is Take my right hand—the index finger crookedfrom a long-forgotten break; the dintwhere…
Second Place: Our Lady of Innumerable Appellatives
Dayna PattersonListen to the Out Loud version of the poem here. Enter into Her gates with thanksgivingand into Her courts with praise.—Psalm 100:4 1.Swirl of gold gleaming in our daughters’ eyes.Amen. Whorl of cirrostratus haloingthe moon.…
Saint George, Utah
Millie TullisListen to the audio version here. Not named for the Saintwho met the princess bythe lake and with her girdleleashed the dragon. Who killed it for the people’s conversion.Whose chapel in Windsorholds a part of…
Bear One Another’s Burdens
Lorren LemmonsGetting there
Millie TullisPaper Route
Scott StensonPodcast version of this piece. Sabbath afternoon in summer sometimes feelslike those February mornings I’d wedge thedamp butt of each newspaper in friend’s saddlepack clouded gray with his indistinguishablefingerprints. Their buckling mouths a smudgedbouquet of…
From the Angels’ Perch at Mount Moriah
Elizabeth PinboroughPodcast version of this piece. Scene: Thicket for a Slaughter We have seenbets, contests— only the greatones sent tospar with God: father, son,sacrifice. Scene: An Examination Question:the brain, a tangledbramble—the fire and the knife,a fearsomebinding.…
Recreating Abraham’s Star Charts
Elizabeth PinboroughPodcast version of this piece. I pause on the path, drop my sticks,and bend to read them like runes.Tell the stars, They said. So I do daily— I chart their breathless turning asI gather berries…
Addendum to Jacob Sorensen’s Patriarchal Blessing
Hugo N. OlaizPodcast version of this piece. I don’t know, Jake,why Dad asked me to drive you there,but I did hear every word Brother Allen said,and here’s a few he skipped: Our Heavenly Fatheris pleased with your…
Ministry of angles
Lisa Ottesen FillerupPodcast version of this piece. You who more than oncespelled angle when meaning angel,are now one—maybe both.A sharp line on white paperdriving hardand fastin another spacewhose numbersI do not know. YetIn the arithmeticof our individual…
Morning Light
Estee Arts CrenshawPodcast version of this piece. That dark matter that fashioned us, days laterMade light by command, what voice, I wonderCould shake atoms into place and stir invisibleWaves through the air, as something we cannot seeAllows…
Tender Rills
Elizabeth PinboroughPodcast version of this piece. If Gods are poeming Kolob,if I am poeming God, if we arepoems to each other, A word is more than a destinationthan a path, than a map. A word is…
Prism
Robert A. ReesPodcast version of this piece. They had agreedthat if she were seenthe boy wouldn’t be believedin seeing them.Nevertheless, she was there,her iridescent spherea coronaover their column of sun,reflecting,refractingthe morning.The flowers turned to her,the green of…
God the Mother Speaks of Salt
Dayna PattersonPodcast version of this piece. I baptized you before you were born. After, rubbed you clean.I’ll cleanse all your wounds in season. You’ve forgottenhow to savor my holy. If you seek,you’ll find these veins run…
God the Mother Speaks of Xenia
Dayna PattersonPodcast version of this piece. I AM the children sleeping under mylar in a Texas warehouse.I AM the fathers lifting toddlers to their shoulders on our journeyto safety and rest. I’m safety and rest. But…
Benediction
Neal ChandlerPodcast version of this piece. Here’s the truth: My faith remainstepid. Lukewarm as summer rain. Spew-worthy. A compass in fragments, I saved pieces: base plate, arrow, needle.Reassembly is beyond me. Millennia ago, I stood on…
Book of Life, for Timothy Liu
Dayna PattersonPodcast version of this piece. If there is a literal bookon a plinth of filigreed gold, and an angelstanding as sentinel at heaven’s needle-eye entrance, who’s not to sayour names appear etchedon its pages, un-erasable.…
God the Mother Speaks of Hearts
Dayna PattersonPodcast version of this piece. won’t you agree with me the heart’s a glorious organ moon jelly a ghost heart throbbing in oceanlily bulb an earth heart humming undergroundbear a furred heart curled up in cave’s dark I’m…
Mothersong
Bonnie Shiffler-OlsenPodcast version of this piece. Let us amass our wandering kicks, wondering in awe at thesecostumes her womb hath made. O Motherof the sacred hearts, sing your peasant lullabies before our every sleep. Ring like…
creation story
Maren LovelandPodcast version of this piece. He makes the light and the primeval oceans and the rapturous Word, but I have the dirt the ground the chthonic underbelly and sustenance of all. I have the jewel-toned…
Big Bang, with Sternutation and Seer Stones
Tyler ChadwickPodcast version of this piece. i. In the beginning, Mother worked yleminto a loose sphere. A swirl of stray particles, stirred by the breeze blown through herstudio window, circled her workbench, tickled her nose. She…
Ascension, after John Donne
Kathryn SonntagPodcast version of this piece. Embrace the first and forever night,Heartening as this Moon journeys from crestingTo full-figured, and in this ecstasy begins to fallEarthward, pulling me down to orchards heavyAnd underground, into mysteries of…
Acoustic
Gerrit van DykPodcast version of this piece. My devotion never translates to my fingers.There is something lost.The scaly chaff of my heart opens my lungs.I pinch my pic like a quillwhat can I scrawl in the dusk?…
Hymn to a Maple
Gerrit van DykPodcast version of this piece. Your inverted slant is an acute notewest to east in the shaded sunrisesurrounded as you are by that moatof rocks and weeds, dry as a chalk line. One Goliath’s push…
Salt Lake City, 1957
Judy Darke DeloguPodcast version of this piece. Sunday morning in Salt Lake City, whenfaithful Mormons flock to worshipat neighborhood wards, my father’ssecret psychiatric patients slip insidethe back door of 508 East South Temple,for fifty-five-minute appointments.A nurse impersonator,…
Color
David K. IsomPodcast version of this piece. Morning at homelistening to silenceand a solo cello,caressing old books,fog outside,fire inside. Treesin crystal veils,fog-doused sun,Earth’s palette replacedby soot and chalk. No color.Only grays,darker or lighter.No real black.No clean white.…
Book of Mormon Poetry James Goldberg, A Book of Lamentations
Edward WhitleyA few years ago I was researching poems written about the Book of Mormon. I had read Eliza R. Snow’s “The Lamanite” (adapted from a poem she wrote before becoming a Latter-day Saint titled “The…
Young Gods
Blaire OstlerSlipping off a Sunday dress—hoping you’ll join me and undress.No more dark slacks and white shirts,corruption of innocence tends to hurt.It’s worship too irreverent for pews,forgive my transgression against a holy muse,but, trust me, crisis…
Casual Violence in Sunday School
Gregory BrooksJohn the Baptist was a hairy scorpionwho skittered out from the wildernessand began stinging folksuntil they saw the Holy Ghost. He molted like all prophets do,lived in caves, under rocks,until the predators found him—took his…
The Leper
Gregory BrooksAn armadillo dug up the grassin my parents’ yard last year— the kind that bounce buckshotoff their back and carry leprosy. If only I could do the same:materialize armor, lumber along. I could curl up…
Bi-Bestiary
Gregory BrooksI suppose only the animals that paired offand shuffled up the rampsurvived the flood. So this Bishop, pointing outthat we would rather flirtthan marry—well, he built an Ark out of the treeslining the church property.He…
Daffodils
Alixa BrobbeyYour lips are melting petals,Wilting into my mouth.My tears not clearEnough to revive them. When you learn to fly,Will they forget to dance?Lose their maypole eyelashesAnd languish, lonely, withWings cut. And yet,I pray, make me…
Created in His Image
Alixa BrobbeyI.The first lie they told me wasBlonde Jesus. Thick Belinda locks,And blue ocean eyes.He hangs on the cross, whiteLike a tender lamb, orWhite like a lily flower,Or like white snowSmothering brown ground. II.The second lie…
“I Cannot Describe Salt”: Elizabeth Willis, Poets in Exile, and the Church Invisible in the Age of Pandemic
Jacob BenderEver since Socrates banished poetry in Book X of Plato’s Republic with a flippant “if . . . poetry can show any reason for her existence in a well-governed state, we would gladly admit her,”[1] Western poets…
Review: Poetry as Ceremony Tacey M. Atsitty, Rain Scald
Michael P. TaylorO Holy People, show me how I am human,how I am soon to sliver. Stay please, for womanor man’s sake. Succor me from a telestial state,where I long to be self-luminous in a slateof granite.…
Candy Dish Sonnet
Tacey M. AtsittyAlready the heart-shaped dish on my end tablelies combed bare: long strips dug out============== a cleaning out============== a scratch in grain, table scraps lain out so comely, meaning to loveor hold cacao or almonds—those striaeof…
Lacing
Tacey M. AtsittyVII. Sometimes I kneel down to play a gamefrom my childhood. Only then can I feelgrains of gravel, each pebble digs in so real.Sometimes I act as though I am the same,a young girl, rope…
Review: Dayna Patterson, If Mother Braids a Waterfall
Theric JepsonReview: Dayna Patterson, Titania in Yellow
Theric JepsonReview: Sunni Brown Wilkinson, The Marriage of the Moon and the Field
Theric JepsonReview: Michael Lavers, After Earth
Theric JepsonReview: Kate Piersanti, Life in Poetry
Theric JepsonReview: Jan G. Otterstrom F., Move On
Theric JepsonReview: Colin B. Douglas, Into the Sun: Poems Revised, Rearranged, and New
Theric JepsonReview: R. A. Christmas, Leaves of Sass
Theric JepsonParousia
A. I. ChristensenShe says she was eating or opening a window or just walkingdully along, and always had been, but tonight there might befew angels. These things. Our dogwagging across the foreground, the porchthat still needs fixing…
Matriarchal Blessing
Kyle BondYour hands were on my head first. No formal ceremony. I was an infantand shouting clouds trundled and thundered,atmospheric pressure strangled my stubborn ears refusing airflow.The blue chair in the living room rocked,my cries received…
Grasshoppers in the Jar of the World
J.S. AbsherThe jar is silent because it is full of praise.The grasshoppers are loud because they, too,are full of praise, clicking as they fly. The grasshoppers jump, but the jar is too high.They try to climb,…
Praying on Gravel
J.S. AbsherNot yet March, already weedsbring me to my kneeswith trowel and bare fingers. Under the loblollythe hellebore are in bloom,a periwinkle or two. The weeds are in the white gravelof the walk. My son has…
Until You Come
J.S. AbsherTaipei, ’97. I walk past side-streetvendors selling lychee nuts and blackrice cakes, to an acre of bare dirt,concrete pylons lifting a cloverleaf.A grizzled man by a beat-up Buickthrows gobbets of meat from the trunkto a…
James Goldberg and Ardis Parshall, Song of Names: A Mormon Mosaic
(author)His Twelve Points of the Scout Law (Grandpa Fesses Up)
R. A. ChristmasSunni Brown Wilkinson. The Marriage of the Moon and the Field
Elizabeth Garcia“To speak to Moses, God / put a stone in his mouth, put on / a sackcloth of verbs (want, need), / cleared his throat. Cried out” (3). Sunni Brown Wilkinson this way begins her collection The…
Karen Anderson’s Excavation of Ghosts Karin Anderson. Before Us Like a Land of Dreams
Lauren MatthewsMark 5:9—“My name is Legion: for we are many”—opens Karin Anderson’s masterwork Before Us Like a Land of Dreams. Anderson lyrically pools her ancestral narrative in sweeping loops, eddying history, religion, and landscape. Ghosts speak elusive,…
Becky, Not God
Henry Landon Milesset the hour for their reunion.She’s under the greencanopy in the closed coffin. She signed away her body,except for her skin,so her hip bones might be recycled into screws to repair broken anklesor wedges to…
The Stars Saw God
Chris A. PeckI found God huddled in my father’s insanity.There beneath the layersof confusion—as to why none of us saw thespinning ball or the parade outside—I saw his vacant expression shine out likeGod-rays through the clouds.Clarity in…
Daryl Prays, The Snake River, and Insomnia
Tamara Pace ThomsonDaryl Prays How is the gold become dim! how is the most fine gold changed! Lamentations 4:1 At fourteen, Daryl cut across an empty lotbehind a brick pharmacywhere he had picked up his mom’s pills(linden…
Genesis Chiasmus
Luisa PerkinsIn the Big Ending,My son used to sayWhen I read him the Genesis board book.Which was perfect, I thought.Such a start must surely have followedAn ending that was big.What brought that ending on? And whatGave…
Born Again
Christopher BissettBecause I did not fit a second timein the womb of my mother,I was born of my father instead. He held my arm to haul me from the waterand with the other, squared it to…
Women’s Blessing
(author)Issue of Blood
Twila NeweyExplaining God the Mother to My Father
Terresa WellbornSelf Portrait in Which I Fail to Hide My Daddy Issues From Google
Allie SpikesWilling the Storm
Holly WelkerOn Women and Priesthood Power
(author)Mother’s Blessing
Mette Ivie HarrisonReason Stares
Emily Harris AdamsA Found Poem
Marilyn Bushman-CarltonThe “Blackblue Heartguts” of Trees Brooke Larson. Pleasing Tree.
Amy TakaboriThird Watch
Jonathon EganVernal
Jonathon EganDry Tree
Dennis ClarkTrue Religion
Michael HicksThe Agreement
Michael HicksThe Four Stanzas of the Apocalypse
Michael HicksAdvent: Moose in Moonlight
Anita TannerCreek Skating
Anita TannerBridegroom
Dennis ClarkJesus Christ
Tyler ClarkNew & Everlasting
Theric JepsonSweater
Theric JepsonThe Moldau in a Utah Living Room
Simon Peter EggertsenThe Mormon Peace Gathering
Dennis ClarkSunday School
Marilyn Bushman-CarltonJudas
Marilyn Bushman-CarltonDevotion
Terresa WellbornProdigal Daughter
Rachel Hunt SteenblikWhat Ashmae Taught Me
Rachel Hunt SteenblikCircles and Lines
Dalene RowleyJanuary 21, 2019
Elizabeth PinboroughOur Lady of the Temple
Dayna PattersonPrayers for the Altars
Linda Hoffman KimballFriday Morning Shift
Linda Hoffman KimballSkin of Garments
Melodie JacksonMy New Temples
Mette Ivie HarrisonThen and Now
Cheryl L. BrunoLimen
Emily BrownRitual
Emily BrownPlacenta
William DeFordDream Psalm
William DeFordWalking Back to the ‘70s
R. A. ChristmasTalitha koum
Tyler ChadwickOn Cherubim and a Flaming Sword by J. Kirk Richards
Tyler ChadwickReview: It’s Lonely at the Top Ryan Shoemaker. Beyond the Lights.
Alison BrimleyReview: Mother, May We? Dove Song: Heavenly Mother in Mormon Poetry. Edited by Tyler Chadwick, Dayna Patterson, and Martin Pulido.
Gail Turley HoustonThe Older Covenant
Kathryn SonntagThe Tree at the Center
Kathryn SonntagOne Thousand Two Hundred Sixty Days
Kathryn SonntagThe Pioneer Woman, St. George
Kevin KleinSelf-Portrait of Mormon Middle Child as Isabella
Dayna PattersonAfter the Curtain Falls, Isabella Speaks in Achromatics
Dayna PattersonReview: “Twisted Apples”: Lance Larsen Takes on Prose Poetry Lance Larsen. What the Body Knows
Darlene YoungRaking
Melissa Youngthe fog
Elisabeth RichardsonSoft
Kevin KleinA Better Country
Kevin KleinPoema de Halloween, 2001
Hugo N. OlaizAlpha
Douglas Summers StaySonnet—For Solstice
Theric JepsonAgency of all that matters
Robert J. FredericksonChoose Your Own Belief: Of Sharks, Art, & God
Sherilyn OlsenForgotten Birds
Robert A. ReesDomestiku
Theric JepsonThe Goodness of Created Things
Susan Elizabeth HoweIf Joseph Smith Had Been Born in California
Theric JepsonAs If Nothing Matters
Chris A. PeckFaith
Natalie Shaw EvjenAt Least
C. Dylan BassettTrevor at the Fountain
Simon Peter EggertsenGrand Canyon, North Rim
Terresa WellbornAjalon Moon
Sarah E. PageThe Holy Ghost in Polyhymnia’s Closet
Elizabeth GarciaThe Holy Ghost in Melpomene’s Closet
Elizabeth GarciaEcho of Boy
Darlene YoungNosebleed (A Mormon Pilgrimage)
Tyler ClarkChristus
Laura Hilton CranerThe Grammar of Quench
Ronald WilcoxNot the Truman Show
R. A. ChristmasSolomon the Wise
Riley BassettAverted Vision
Joanna EllsworthElegy / Prayer
C. Dylan BassettTrue Ideas
C. Dylan BassettMy Sadness
Susan Elizabeth HoweThe Skin of the Story
Susan Elizabeth HoweThe Flock
Les BlakeWords
Jamie NaylorEight Visions of the First
Bonnie Shiffler-OlsenDialogue 49.3 (Fall 2016): 151–155
Shiffler-Olsen turns Joseph Smtih’s first-person First Vision accounts into poetry.
Temple
Mark BrownKeeping Faith
Warren HatchOctober Above Trial Lake
Warren HatchStony Places
Sarah E. PageMy Sister Once Died
Jenny WebbGrief
Mark BrownThe Trail
Stephen CarterThe world was divided into three. Three shards of sagebrush and sky. That’s how it looked to Emma as she blinked through the thick wooden wagon spokes next to her head. She winced at the…
Baptism
Christinah CrossOrdinary and Profane Poems
Ronald WilcoxTropical Butterfly House
Dayna PattersonKill the Poets
Emma Lou ThayneProphet by the Sea
Phyllis BarberOne late afternoon just before sunset, the Prophet with white hair like the mane of a lion was walking by the sea with his friend, Fernando. They walked and talked about many things as the…
Mormon Conversions
Laura HamblinThe songs mutate
like a virus in my blood:
“I Am a Child of
God,” “Firm As the Mountains
From Utah Poems: To Elias
Stan AndersenI brought my daughters to your grave
There in the river’s bend
Not far from where, their age,
I watched you dedicate the monument
To Jim Bridger: trapper, river-searcher.
You lay deep in Utah’s summer
So still they couldn’t imagine
This was their grandfather,
Yourself a monument now
To probing dry country.
Boy Diving Through Moss
Dennis SmithA boy with joy and fear inside
stood on the plank
above the pond.
He sensed the cold, dark water
underneath,
and, daring,
Mental Gas
Eliza R. SnowCharles to his teacher—Sir, you say
That nature’s laws admit decay—
That changes never cease ;
And yet you say, no void or space ;
‘Tis only change of shape or place—
No loss, and no increase.
New Acts of Poetry | Emma Lou Thayne, Spaces in the Sage, and Dennis Drake, What You Feel, I Share, and Christie Lund Coles, Speak to Me, and Gale Tampico Boyd, the lost, the found
Mary Lythgoe BradfordMore and more acts of poetry are being committed by Mormons these days. Before me are four volumes attesting to a variety of interests and a variety in printing and format. I am happy to…
On the Precipice: Three Mormon Poets | John Sterling Harris, Barbed Wire: Poetry and Photographs of the West, Clinton F. Larson, Counterpoint: A Book of Poems, and Emma Lou Thayne, Until Another Day for Butterflies
Edward A. GearyAll three of these poets claim, explicitly or implicitly, to be “western,” and it is unlikely that anyone will challenge the claim. Their poems reflect the western landscape, or, more specifically, the Great Basin landscape…
Sacrament of Terror: Violence in the Poetry of Clinton F. Larsen
Thomas D. SchwartzDr. Clinton F. Larson has been acclaimed as a Mormon poet, even as the first Mormon poet. In his review of The Lord of Experience Professor John B. Harris seems to have represented many of…
The Poetic Mystique | Marily McMeen Miller Brown, The Grandmother Tree, and Vernice Wineera Pere, Mahanga: Pacific Poems
Veneta Leatham NielsenBeyond the sentience and the craft, under the sound and shape and color of the poem, one seeks the mystique that synthesizes and sets forth a poet’s real reality. Marilyn McMeen Miller Brown’s book of…
New Voices, New Songs: Contemporary Poems by Mormon Women
Linda SillitoeThe sensibility described by Amy Lowell—that there is something odd about women who write serious poetry—is still given substance today by the endangered state of the species. Even I will not waste time counting the few woman poets anthologized before Lowell’s time; contemporary statistics suffice.
Persephone
Jeanette CloughThe trees are making white
buds. Shrunken heads,
last year’s berries, hang
on leafing branches. I do not
Hold
Emma Lou ThayneGray day with a brown leaf refusing
at the end of a wind to drop,
why is the crabbed clinging
so intricate a part of the dance?
Repapering the Kitchen
Randall L. HallWe probe and scrape and peel away the faded
Multicolored layers of a lifetime,
Like Schliemann
(Who ? Grandmother asks)
Gratitude
Dianne Dibb ForbisAs I kneel to
needlepoint nice words
in quiet
careful
Memory’s Duty
Ronald WilcoxLike an irresistible green vegetation
easing over everything in time,
a sense of comfort crept over my mother,
weaving into her slowly tendrils of death.
Bronzed Cadences
LaBerta BoboI hear faded trumpet sounds of summer
and fill my arms with sleepy wildflowers,
hold them close, feel the damp,
smell the last fragrance.
The Golden Chain
Michael R. CollingsParadise pendant from a golden chain
opal pendant paradise
swirling blue and green
through white cloud streaks:
golden chain gleaming on the breast of God.
“Moonbeams From a Larger Lunacy”: Poetry in the Reorganization
Paul EdwardsDialogue 16.4 (Winter 1983): 22–31
This study addresses poetry within the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, and defines an RLDS poet as someone who belongs to the RLDS church and who has published poetry in some form or other.
The New Mormon Poetry | Lewis Home, The seventh day
Dennis ClarkA new Mormon poetry is beginning to emerge from the shadow of traditional, more bardic Mormon verse. Peeping about in the bright sun, blinking a bit and rubbing its eyes, it shows itself in poems…
Still Sounds of Winter
Dawn Baker BrimleyWaking from my loud dream
I hear only what is here:
the cornered stars rattling in glass
and the slow roll of a drumhead moon.
Charm for a Sick Child
Linda Sillitoewe will dream now of a cave
with a figure at the entrance,
see the magic seeds she holds
Another Birth
Linda SillitoeThey dream of going hack.
The bars on their beds
are fingers before a face.
Their knees rise up toward chins
Fishers
Robert A. ReesIn the last days of summer
we walk through tall grass
to the river
long before the sun spills
Expatriate
Jim WalkerThe Hawaiians are surprised that we also had beaches.
In their minds we represent one vast igloo
Filled with people anxious to escape
To winter in Hawaii.
Born Again
Mary Lythgoe BradfordAs you enter the water unsinning,
I shall repent eight years
Of watching in the dark and loving
Without turning on the light.
Oil upon Oil
Brooke Elizabeth SmithLike the sound of laying the warp, whispered names
resonate within the grained, muraled, marble
and curtain walls of this holy place, and veil
the light and air with your form, hands
How Much for the Earth? A Suite of Poems: About Time for Considering
Emma Lou ThayneThe peril of extinction brings us up against this reality, this simple basic fact: Before there can be good or evil, service or harm, lamenting or rejoicing, there must be life.[1] About Considering Consider is…
Unfinished Sestina for the Secretary of Defense
Kathy EvansWe were inside the world.
The children were sleeping.
Light fell through the window.
One of us wore red.
The High Price of Poetry
Glenn Willett ClarkAdolph Hitler was barely one month old when my father, Walter ‘Edward Clark, now still living, was born on 31 May 1889. When he was fifteen, in 1904, Father started to farm on his own in Idaho. Hitler was then a choirboy in Austria, avidly aspiring to become a priest. Only six years earlier, the United States had been engaged in a “splendid little war” on the largest Carribean island — at the enthusiastic urging of William Randolph Hearst and Teddy Roosevelt.
Returning
Kathy EvansMouth over the reed,
you empty your feelings
into the hollow heart.
These are the pieces left:
Diaries
Joyce Ellen DavisI keep diaries in my head
At night I write on sealed pages
In dream codes a sort
Of dot-dot-dash Morse himself
David and Bathsheba
Michael R. CollingsWhen I slid the damask
from its plastic sleeve
to spread it on the table,
the stain throbbed against crisp white.
Fathering
Jim WalkerWhen I first hold our children,
Lately having labored alongside you,
I promised many things — too many —
Like the alcoholic too late repentant,
The Interview
John BennionTom looked at the sweat shining in the palms of his hands. Wiping them on his slacks, he opened the door into the stake president’s office and sat in a chair against the wall. A…
Benediction
Neal ChandlerArdmoore told Carmen Stavely, who’d been away in Idaho visiting family, that what happened that Sunday morning was absolutely confidential. The bishop had instructed all who’d been present to keep the matter strictly to themselves;…
Lightning Barbs
Marden J. ClarkI’d ridden this way a hundred times,
Up Monday Town along the fence
Dividing wheat from perennial sage
Herding cattle to summer grazing
One Year
Margaret R. MunkThe scene was written
In advance,
Rehearsed as often
As the days of waiting
Would allow.
As Winter Comes On
Helen Walker JonesBeyond my chrysanthemums and barbed fence,
aproned sisters, some in hair nets like cafeteria cooks,
whisk their casseroles to the kitchen of the old wardhouse.
This Is My Body
Marden J. ClarkA deacon offers the broken bread.
Aware of awkward wait as bishop
Receives the bread of ritual first,
I take it up, thoughtless of blessing,
All My Silent Midnight Hours
Lisa Bolin HawkinsThings just get worse.
Which heavenly linoleum stripe
Leads to universal Emergency?
The resident angel could scour my soul.
Grains of Life: Fragments of a Sonnet Cycle
Helen Candland StarkIf I could give to you a dew-wrapped day,
You have no need to tell me — I should know
That you would use it all to make things grow.
The furling bud, the fruiting branch are pay
Sonnet for Spring
Linda Sillitoethere’s honeysuckle in the exhaust, a fine green
beard between walks, spring softens us
again, now we confess the earth is a drum
encased in living skin, not concrete,
For the Bishop’s Wife
Kathy EvansSome of us stood together
on your star-gray lawn,
sang you Christmas carols
in the warm California air.
Grandmother Envisions Her Own Death
Helen Walker JonesA white pillar will glow from the sand as I die.
Those backyard trees will shake their empty pods
against the sky. My moldy body will sink
into its bed, smothered by sinners.
Winter Burial
Carol Clark OttesenGrey clouds, March-heavy hung over
an old and mottled snow that day
we brought him there to you.
Seasoning
C. Thomas AsplundThat fine white burst of bush blossom
Has come again. Blast
ing through the winter crust
And scattering the afterbirth of spring,
Nativity
Kathy EvansThe eyes of the beasts shine into my own.
The archangel’s hair is on fire. I stumble
through the mudprints of cows and ewes
toward the damp side of the cave
They Have Closed the Church My Father Helped Build
Anita Tannerwhere he sawed through his finger
now perpetually stiff,
paid three assessments
Evenings: His Church Calling
Anita TannerThe sound burrs in my head
like a racket of angry birds
swirling from the sky.
He’s gone again;
Christmas in Utah
Leslie NorrisIn barns turned from the wind
The quarter-horses
Twitch their laundered blankets.
Three Steller’s jays,
Cancun Beach, Mexico
Carol Clark OttesenWhat kind of God has made this sapphire tide
stroking the white sand mouth of Yucatan,
outrageously extravagant, a place
fit for the baptism of God or kings
Sons
Connie Hendrickson JorgensenNew grain, you are comely;
Long, straight, supremely vernal.
Standing in Earth’s sun
Unashamed green,
You sway.
Recollections from an Ex
Karen Marguerite Moloneymused in several voices
to the tune of tinkling cymbals
It wasn’t like she didn’t blend right in.
In fact, based on the type of clothes she wore,
People always figured she was from Salt Lake.
Her skirts were long enough, that’s for sure.
For Brother de Mik
Dian SaderupCupped in your papery palm the rose
was like a wound, flowering.
Your wife nodded when we brought it.
Yes, Papa, yes is pretty. Then
she put it in a bowl to float
and wilt on water.
Lulu: On the Death of a Sister
Frederick G. WilliamsGone
from the pampas.
The only brunette;
her first airplane flight at six months.
Discouragement
Frederick G. Williams Discouragement,
is the adversary’s vision of the work
revealed to and
Stones; The Salutation; The Problem; Grandmother, Grandmother, Grandmother; Bishop
Loretta Randall SharpFeliz Navidad
C. L. ChristensenNo room at the inn,
For them, anyway.
It didn’t take ESP to read the situation.
Just avoiding unpleasantness later.
He had enough on his mind just then.
Our Way
Paris Andersonwe were young
and war was our way
we’d fight in class
or after school
Luggage
Dixie Lee PartridgeYou are required to keep the poundage low:
two large cases and a carry-on:
what you take for months overseas.
In a year of famine, you have volunteered
Pruned
Kathie Rampton RockwoodI have always been a flowering vine,
Seeking new trellises to trail on,
Climbing ladders to the sky,
Lusting over neighbor fences
To Watch a Daughter Die
Kathie Rampton RockwoodTo watch a daughter die —
One could practice a lifetime
And never do it well.
The labored hell
Prayer of a Novice Rebel
Kathie Rampton RockwoodDon’t try to drop little nuggets.
Please, Sir, I mean.
Or give me too much of a sign.
I don’t want a sign now—
Bodies
Michael R. CollingsWeight —
heavy weighting down
of airier stuff
in birth
A Life Well-Shared | Margaret Rampton Munk, So Far: Poems
Mary Lythgoe BradfordIn the Fall of 1985 DIALOGUE published Meg Munk’s suite of poems entitled, “One Year.” In a mature voice and through particular images, she dramatized her battle with cancer. In the spring of 1986, this…
Winton Night Walks
Steven L. PeckAt night along the canals
Dad was best.
Beside narrow dusty tractor roads
Slow dark waters,
August 6
Marden J. Clark“Go get dressed. You’re no man for this army!”
I went, thanking for the first time the crook
In my spine that stopped me buck naked
From buck privacy, and took me back to you
To a Modern Isaac
C. L. ChristensenI’m no Abraham.
I’ve bowed to a few idols in my day —
Just somewhat unintentioned.
Sacrificing children to idols
Navel
Anita TannerI drive by a red farmhouse
in the setting sun. Orange morning
darts through rippled glass.
High-glossed linoleum
The Oldest Son Leaves for Nagoya
Jim WalkerSurprisingly tall, he looks down toward
His six-inch shorter father
And shifts his feet, anxious
For the moment of departure, awkward in uncertainty
Burial Service
Jim WalkerThe place they put him seemed extravagant —
Sprawling flowers, hovering crowd, artificial grass
To cover up plain dirt.
The coffin shone, wood lustrous as the new organ
For Bonnie
Randal AllredEver since the homestead days, when you,
The eldest, baked the bread for barefoot boys
Flushed from the corn for lunch, the care we knew
Was testimony of your oaken poise.
Here’s the Church
Kathy EvansWhile the organist pumped
“Let Us All Press on in the Work of the Lord,”
and the chorister napped her arms
like a whooping crane, and some sat there
Failed Friendship
E. Victoria Grover-SwankSisters nod and smile,
inclining intimately toward her in the crowded room.
Years of testimonies shared and friendships deified
linger in the worn cushions and heavy curtains.
She brushes jostling shoulders, turns and feels
Lesser Voices
Sherwin W. HowardSun-circled history
Paints famous fools
But leaves plain brown men
Unremarked
sonnet on life’s dangers
Linda Sillitoecop and father, he cautioned us of more
than boogeymen and fire, in case of snakes,
freeze where you are, same for skunks and por-
cupines, brave enough to tromp on cracks,
The Lord’s Table
Timothy LiuThe banquet table was spread,
But I could no longer smell
Satisfaction in the room.
Two Fishermen in Hong Kong
Timothy LiuWe couldn’t find anyone
in that inner-city maze.
Between thick buildings
Three Poems for My Mother
Philip WhiteFor Your Birthday: Planting in the Rain
Fall Canker
A Place for Roses
Early Through Winter
Jill HemmingSomeone went shooting rabbits last night
blasting any flesh too slow to dodge.
I track the powdered ground until I toe
a scarlet gash melted to concrete.
Pure Thin Bones
Lisa Madsen De RubilarJosé Luís was sick. That was why Michelle and Renata stopped by to see him on their way home from missionary zone meeting. They walked with Nielsen, his companion, who had gone to the meeting…
Three Generations of Mormon Poetry | A zipper of haze; Tinder; Christmas Voices
R. A. ChristmasDennis Clark loves poetry and poets, and he also loves to write poetry. I don’t think this can be said of everybody in the poetry business. These three chapbooks are evidence of Dennis’s development as…
Inadvertent Disclosure: Autobiography in the Poetry of Eliza R. Snow
Maureen Ursenbach BeecherThree turning points mark the early life of Eliza R. Snow: the 1826 publication of her first newspaper verse, her 1835 baptism as a convert to Mormonism, and her 1842 sealing as a plural wife…
Grandpa
Jill Hemmingyou talk of breakaway stallions
with hooves poised to strike teeth,
years on long lean roads past Las Vegas
selling church pews down the valley.
Passion Poems | Emma Lou Thayne, How Much for the Earth?
Linda SillitoeOne might suspect that a book of poems published by Utahns United Against the Nuclear Arms Race might possess as interesting a history as the poems that comprise it. How Much for the Earth? by…
A Lot to Like | Eugene England and Dennis Clark, eds., Harvest: Contemporary Mormon Poems
Miriam B. MurphyHarvest is a good title for this collection of twentieth-century Mormon poetry with its bounty, variety, and degrees of ripeness and appeal. One feels a generosity of spirit emanating from this aggregate, a poetic vision…
One of the Women
Dixie Lee PartridgeOne of the women inside me
cannot rejoice with anyone.
She stays in the shadows
bowing her head.
Her long hair has never been cut.
The Slow Way Home
Loretta Randall SharpShe leaves the women in her husband’s house
and makes a slow way home
to her own mother, to friends singing
as they bring sweet butter
for the first month, molasses
Deity
Anita TannerWho is he from the Sunday pulpit
acquiring the air of sins
with his lecture,
hell’s woes never hidden
Daddy Hung Me Out
A. R. MitchellHe hung me next to the load of dripping clothes.
I was just a child! Couldn’t walk! Couldn’t talk!
Too frozen stiff to cry! But strong enough
to clench my monkey fists around the line.
I still can see the pomegranate bush.
The Blood in My Veins
Dorothy K. WheelerTonight while combing my long dark hair,
Sprinkled with strands of white,
I am grateful for my legacy
And wish others would not look down
If I Had Children
May SwensonIf I had children, I might name
them astrometeorological names:
Meridian, a girl. Zenith, a boy.
Eclipse, a pretty name for either one.
I Can Wait For
Holly WelkerI purposely forget what you look like
so each time I see you I am surprised
again by your beauty. Your name is the
charm I offer nervous cats instead of
Heartbreak Hill
R. A. ChristmasI go to Brenda’s wedding wearing
her ex-husband’s cast-off temple garments.
The Next Weird Sister Builds a Dog Run
Laura HamblinWith fortune’s damned
quarreling smile,
the neighbors complain
Transformation
Jerrilyn BlackI had wanted your wife
to be born to the graces,
elegantly muted
in dove-gray and gloves,
to take tea from fine china,
walk perfumed in silk.
A Call Before the Obituary
Jill HemmingHis name, distant to me,
opened your mouth to blackness.
It seemed you laughed before
the half-crow caw fell out.
Island Spring
Philip WhiteAlways she is there on that far island
in my mind, where it is always night,
and the moon tears into a world of leaves,
and is torn. A child, she steps
Innocence
Holly WelkerI confess I have invented a word
for the thing I am and the thing I have done.
It is a pleasant word and may be spoken
to young children or written in their books.
I Consider Jonah’s Whale
Paris AndersonYou must have been lonely,
slowly swimming
in that vast darkness,
waiting
Burn Ward
Ellen KartchnerLate at night, the kids in their rooms come
drifting towards me, thinking of home, perhaps,
wrestling a kiss fire of pain.
And the ward is yellow with breathing,
Sisters
Jerrilyn BlackMy sister and I had no whispered secrets
between us, shared no hollyhock days.
Being Baptized for the Dead, 1974
Lance LarsenIt throbbed a little, the gash in my left palm.
I pressed the gauze, something to finger
while we waited —boys here, girls over there,
all of us wearing jump suits heavy enough
In the Back Lot at Hillview Manor
Mary Ann LoseeOn any given Thursday,
Papa adjusts the strap
And plucks out a phrase or two
Baptism: As Light as Snow
Michael R. CollingsCool, waist-high,
shallowerthanremembered;
eight years ago, it seemed
that I would float.
One Sunday’s Rain (After Word of My Father’s Illness)
Dixie Lee PartridgeAll morning: rainwater
off the roof onto pebbles
washed smooth of pale soil
in the garden.
The Dark Gray Morning
Tom RileyThe dark gray morning has its eye on you
Forget about the stormy
you have more pressing worries. What to do?
The dark gray morning has its eye on you
Cure
Michael GrayThe white man is loud,
he is also blind.
His dreams are bad
and teach him nothing.
The Virgin Mary Confronts Mary of Magdala
Richard ShortenDon’t say that.
I never called you whore.
It’s a dream word I never knew.
How Could We Have Known
Laura Hamblinthat loneliness is like
the whole of the moon
rising in a sky so lucent,
the clouds cast shadows
The Perseids
Philip WhiteNerved sparks, the Perseids
tonight, wincing out over Loafer
Father, you taught me to name
these — each streak of fire
Mechanics
Mary Ann LoseeThey tell us now
That the darkness of space
Is what’s left over,
The Hero Woman
Karla BennionWhen the days drag on like TV reruns,
The Hero Woman conies.
She walks in with long strides from the hips.
She keeps her eyes on the horizon.
Patchwork
Michael R. CollingsThe fields south of Salt Lake
Must be old.
From the air, in October,
They lie barren, empty,
Losing Lucy
Karla BennionJust as we were meeting, she
Slid quick away—too far—
And I, surprised at sudden loss,
Ran leaping after her.
Nickel Girls
Holly WelkerSometimes boys would stand
on the high school stairs
and throw nickels at girls
in low-cut blouses, hoping
Over Coffee, 600 B.C.
Melanie D. ShumwayA friend of mine told me —
so I know it’s true —
she saw someone in the road
behind her house
Song of the Old/Oldsongs | Leatrice Lifshitz, Only Morning in Her Shoes: Poems about Old Women
Karen Marguerite MoloneyAs Leatrice Lifshitz explains in her introduction, this unusual collection of verse represents “an attempt to return old women to the circle, to the continuum of women and of life” (p. viii), and its rich…
Ovum
Susan Elizabeth HoweThe egg insists on its own reality,
So I go along, easy, not one
To counter what I don’t know.
The Good Life
Edward L. HartWhy do I strain for a freedom found outside,
Where worlds in time and space lie wide and full?
My room is closed and airless while the tide
Slaps up the pier and churns me in its pull.
And yet old times of weary venturing pall.
Jackrabbits
William PowleyGrandma teased us
for the time it took
to kill one jackrabbit
on our backyard picnic table.
Waiting
Mark Koltko-RiveraThe absence of a signal
is itself information,
a zero giving meaning to binary ones.
The call that doesn’t ring,
A Vision of Judas
Timothy LiuThe light was too harsh
in the South. All day
I sat beneath that tree
growing darker and darker
until I was all shade.
Two Sisters Visit Dieppe
Mary Ann LoseeWe leave the town at noon
For a beach of white pebbles
And small, clean bones. The wind
Whips our sensible skirts, and sun glints
Celebrations | Emma Lou Thayne, Things Happen: Poems of Survival
Susan Elizabeth HoweThe publication of a new book of poetry is an occasion for celebration, particularly when the poetry is by such a generous and great-hearted soul as Emma Lou Thayne. But the title of this volume,…
When I Swam for the Utah Valley Dolphins
William PowleyMy mom could sleep each night
without waking except
when my ear ached so much
I became a nightmare
The Mistake of the Psycholinguists
Karla BennionThey say people nominalize too much.
We tell ourselves, “I am in pain,”
instead of simply, “I hurt.”
“Pain is not a prison you’re locked in,” they say.
“You hurt because you choose to hurt,
and you can choose to not hurt.”
Art and Half a Cake
M. Shayne BellOn Saturday mornings, mother baked good bread.
She always called my two sisters,
My two brothers, and me
To come and eat the crusts hot,
Spread with butter and strawberry jam
Made from strawberries she had picked and washed.
My Mormon Grandmother
Kit G. Linford“Another girl.”
Unheralded birth
Beginning nothing.
Coney Island Hymn: Shore
Glen NelsonThey clap their hands together
and shout out
and sing the same song
The 20/20 Leap
William PasseraI approach God—
the distance is immense.
My vision is clear,
I am not.
Ecclesiastical Check
Richard WimanWhite pawn moves
forward two steps
onto an open square.
A black knight in grace
Woman Bathing | Authority
Marilyn Bushman-CarltonShe performs the persistent ritual of cleansing,
the splashing of water
upon her scarlet apple flesh
sullied with blood
Hands
Philip WhiteIn the chapel,
In the straightbacked
Ache of the pew,
We held them—lap toys
Missionary Court
Lance LarsenHunched over and rocking a little,
he answered the president in stutters,
and I wrote it all down in the ledger—
the girl’s name, how many times, my pen touching
Late
Jerrilyn BlackI mourn my father.
I am afraid to relive him
lest my heart break.
Relativity
Ronald WilcoxWhile a hummingbird scans it for wires
the red rosebud explodes in slow motion,
the two velocities firing simultaneously.
Riddled with inconsistencies, the rose is
Return (for my father)
Anita TannerOver the terra cotta earth
your truck like a cleft-foot goat
grazes homeward.
The down of trees in the hills
Manna in the Desert
Tom Riley“The satisfaction brought by morning dew
is more than human stomachs can endure,”
the men insist, hoping that they will die.
“The satisfaction brought by morning dew
Variation on a Love Letter
Holly WelkerI have written this letter to you before
and I will write this letter to you again.
In it I tell you that the days are starkly blue
and unbearably warm, that the cooling storms
The Book Handed Her
Anita TannerWanting to be one of twelve princesses
to disappear down a trap door
underneath her bed each night
and dance to weariness in a haunted place
Winter Fast Offerings
Lance LarsenWhen no one was faking sick, we were nine —
just enough to cover the routes if someone
doubled up. We argued over the packets,
weighing thickness against distance,
Entire Unto Himself
Michael R. CollingsAlready cold and stiff by the time I arrived,
It was a shallow shadow, gray against black;
A collar of blood fringed its matted coat.
The Pulpit
Marilyn Bushman-CarltonIt is a last bastion,
The pulpit. Prominent
Among muscular box shapes;
Fenced off and jutting skyward
Yellow Hair
Michael GrayI have got a blond, it’s true.
The others comment,
laugh behind their hands:
where did that one come from?
Sestina for the Coming Fall
Anneliese WarnickIn fall, I try to understand the dying
of so many innocent leaves. The changes
happen imperceptibly, till the once-verdant is carmine
or golden, but such pulsing color is only
prelude to their silent fall to the dark flesh
of life that decayed before them. A nectarine
Saint Theresa and the Lepress
Kathryn KimballFew teeth remain in her mouth,
And the mouth exhales rottenness.
I turn my back, my nose.
Still she presses in.
What El Salvador Meant to a Three-year-old
B. J. Foggan iguana in our empty pool
his eyes jumping wild
a metal fence around the yard
where naked boys waited outside for food
Beth-lehem
Richard TiceJacob and Rachel
But a little way to come to Beth-lehem,
and the pains came hard upon her. She heard,
“Fear not; thou shalt have this son also.”
Night Myths
Dixie Lee PartridgeSleepless with fever,
under one small lamp you stared
at a cherry wood cabinet, dark whorls
spiraled like galaxies and polished
Notes for a Son, 19, Living Abroad
Dixie Lee PartridgeOften when entering sleep
I start awake, your form having drifted
into vision, your name embedded
in the thickness of my tongue.
Snowy Night
Lisa Bolin HawkinsWhose poem this is, I think I know—
New England bard of spring and snow,
But eighth-grade teachers don’t explain
The depths to which the poets go.
Becoming a Writer
Derk KoldewynEarly on, in class, the smooth new pencils,
the ice-white paper, copper-bladed rulers,
all spoke order, a progression of lines.
Breadcrumbs
Dixie Lee PartridgeThe fairytales were wrong:
to identify big feet
with wicked stepsisters, ugly with unloved,
princes and frogs with anything
Exercising the Priesthood
Derk KoldewynA Wednesday evening
down in the back
of the chapel, we played
King of the Mountain on the
Postcard
Holly WelkerI debated hours, whether to send you a kiss
by the river or the overabundant lips
of a Rosetti madonna. You get both: See
the pansies the madonna holds? That’s how I know
Litany
Philip WhiteAll night, all day, angels
watching over me, my Lord.
And him slipping off,
letting the door close
Household of Faith
Dana Haight CattaniFrom where we sat on the fourth pew
the three square windows looked like cubes
of shimmery gold
vertically stacked
God With Us
Philip WhiteAt the baptismal Erma sings “Que grande es El,”
her voice breaking,
and the woman she has brought to Jesus,
clothed in white on the front row, weeps.
A Body That Expands
Holly WelkerMy sister sings Puccini in the shower.
A fever ripped the muscle of her heart
when she was five but now she is almost
twenty-one and lovely. She leaves music
Double Exposure
Lewis HorneThe picture gathers from a host of things—
From giggles of remembering, not play
By play but one word lifting from another
Into a rearview record, a happy weather
Sacrament Prayer
Lance LarsenIt’s the simplicity I like, no pulpit thunder,
no fiery “Thou shalt nots” rattling the soul.
A set prayer, phrases you can roll around
your mouth all week, then string together
Brando
Holly WelkerMarlon Brando’s such a babe in Guys and Dolls,
it’s an ideal, makes you feel
positively reverent, same as orange blossoms,
the way they delicately ask to seduce
Warren Travels With His Father
Michael R. Collingsin the
dense Montana heat, the BLM vehicle musty
and smelling of oil, sweat, and age.
Decoration Day
Jillyn CarpenterNo funeral today, but the town
has business at its cemetery.
Dust leads the procession;
handles of rakes and hoes protrude
Day Dreams
Karen Marguerite MoloneyMan of her house, her rooms
Are haunted by dreams.
Leavened by cool morning light,
Loft become sanctum, he lolls
Sole Makers
Russell MooreheadI wonder if I can still heal myself?
I’ve done it once before,
back when I cut my palm open
trying to be your blood brother.
The Man Without Sin
H. L. MilesThere’s this house where
four retarded men live who
go to church on Sundays.
Lancashire Saint Dies
Rita BowlesHe wanders the back alleys of his childhood
Mossed and decaying bricks
Tower skyward to imprison him
Cobbles rise to thwart his escape
Leave of Absence
Dixie Lee Partridgewalk out and arrive
near the lake—
any route taken
leads eventually
to this
Resurrection
Derk KoldewynOne gunmetal day, late fall,
a fat shabby robin tired
of flying in her natural world,
desired to swoop across our couch,
Our Fecundity
David PaxmanWhat have we done?
This wrinkled child
did not ask for entry;
it answered our call
For My Father, 1934-1990
Marni Asplund-CampbellHave you noticed, then, that sound moves
differently in fall—such falling
of leaves, a fall
from warmth and
Mama and Daddy Standin’ By
Paul SwensonBest thing that ever happened
In church was when Martha
Got Nancy to sing “Summertime”
On Mother’s Day—
In Passing To Her Fathers
Warren HatchIn Saint George, Lena McCain had cancer.
She set her house in order.
In Las Vegas, the doctors went after the cancer with a knife,
got it, watched her closely.
Bean Counting
Michael J. NobleShe adds up all the names
people have given her over the years:
‘Vain, difficult, cold.”
Someone once told her that
I Have Learned 5 Things
Elaine Christensen1. The sulfurous flame
sunbeams in corners
lightning like cracked glass
the bulb of an idea
your dark eyes
Aspens
Don W. JenkinsParchmental stand aspens,
Paper atrmeble accepts scars,
Words healing standing parchmental
Magi
Pamela Porter HamblinThrough Perean hills and Arabian desert,
pacing our journey by the pulsing star,
we come here, finally, to this quiet shelter
that houses the holy—to Bayt al-Lahm.
Commentary
Donna BernhiselWedged into the same chair,
my husband and son station
themselves, duplicates
of each other.
Too tired to talk,
my son listens.
Ireland
Brent PaceWhen did I find the music
of another open-window autumn?
I’ve left more vodka empties near
the wardhouse dumpster.
To Joseph of Nazareth: Patron Saint of Fathers Dispossessed
Harlow Soderborg ClarkJoseph, I too have known that sad angelic word
Visitation
Which renders a father not-father.
Your children
Hobby Horses
Lance LarsenWhat holds us together is our discourse—
hints and asides, a whisper in the cloakroom,
School of the Prophets held across the backyard hedge.
Stealth gives Adam-God a reviving breath,
let Gog and Magog flex their muscle in the U.N.
Movements Giving Off Light
Dixie Lee PartridgeDrops of water stretch and hold
in the sunlight: the small icicle
sways from the eaves in the thaw.
I see it fall
because I have come to the window
at this moment.
Mummy Pendulum
David PaxmanA man’s last wish
should be sacred.
I want to be wrapped
like a ball of roots
Sariah
Marni Asplund-CampbellShe’s not Abraham’s Sara,
who laughs and talks
to angels
as if the state of her womb
Jesus is Coming
Brent PaceThe tapping of the shower is
the insistent brush of reeds
along the Charles and the slap
of oars I’ve just left.
Marcus
Brent PaceIt is not that I miss you now
but I miss it—when I
swallowed your finger the first night
and restrained myself in deference to
Secrets under the Surface | Linda Sillitoe, Crazy for Living: Poems
Emma Lou ThayneJust under the surface of the obvious lie the secrets. Linda Sillitoe sees, hears, tastes them, feels where they lead, trusts them, takes us along. It is never a perilous journey. Rather, it resounds with…
The Invisible Woman
Holly WelkerThe invisible woman is angry.
Boy is she mad.
She took her books to the library last night
and last night she burned the library down.
Going Dark
Anita Tanner To escape from pursuers
I flee to the car,
gun the gas down the highway.
They’re on my tail.
Serving the Papers
Lance LarsenThey sit in stiff unmatched recliners,
a faint halo of grease smearing
the head rests. The Bishop asks again,
Do you want your names removed?
His Sermon
Anita TannerHe says there’s very little truth
in the world
and he can’t wait to go out,
preach, and spread his own—
like he has the corner on it.
Nestling
Michael R. CollingsThey hatched today. Last night
when I peeked among the apples
they were eggs, four, end to end
among twigs and scraps and a twitch
For the Girl Who Saw Her Mother Cold
Marni Asplund-CampbellJuly twenty-third in the canyon is
almost like hell-fire—sulfurous hot
waves off the powdery earth while
the children play in the trees,
A Courtship
Joseph FisherI remember the great bear
circling the blue night,
the black juniper and no motion.
On X-ing
Marden J. Clarkcrossed out—an inexact word in typescript
but not erased
left unused—an unread book
but not unneeded
My mama’s hands
Donna Bernhiselcan hold eight eggs
when she walks from the
refrigerator to the stove,
bacon fat popping out
Storytime
Philip WhiteEven now in the stony
courtyard under withered
vines the characters
Early Winter
Anita TannerHome from the dance in a howling blizzard.
The kitchen door blown open.
A heap of snow swirled onto linoleum.
I’m entranced at the violence,
Clean
Donna BernhiselCreekbottom
pushes up between our toes
like mushrooms.
Summer water
In a Far Land
M. Shayne BellSo many women on their knees
that if I knew how to tell them
they could find hope here,
or that there the men
Pilgrimage
Joanna BrooksAfter ten hours of driving, out of the old station wagon.
My mother, roadworn, care poor,
steps over the fallen gate.
Basilica
Jerry JohnstonFrank’s photos—
are like his fiction—
show clean, hard lines.
Bathing a Child
Marilyn Bushman-Carlton Elbow-deep in shallow water
with porcelain pressed against my breast
I dragged the sudsy washcloth
over your squirming body
The Violent Woman
Joseph FisherSarah your clarinet
body squeaks at the valves, moans
off key, and lying still
and flat as a paper doll
Naked
Lance LarsenI was expecting ripened avocadoes, Michael,
or half-used spices—the usual throwaways before
a move. Not a grocery bag of garments, unopened,
each slippery package a skin you never tied on.
Cap Meets the Prophet Brigham
Derk KoldewynOn the third day he stopped for a deserved rest,
though not intentionally. The bishop, she explained,
was hunting pheasants and wouldn’t be back
for hours. So he collapsed into a straw bed
1844
Philip WhiteSigns in the heavens. Great arcs of light
at midday. Drew it. Intend
to ask Joseph what it means …
Snows
Marden J. ClarkThat snow falling out there, not in flakes
But in clusters of flake, little snow balls
Loosened by November’s sun still barely struggling
Through the harvest haze, snow falling
The Time Traveler Comes to Cana
M. Shayne BellSo I went to Cana and spent Sabbath
in that house, their guest, before the wedding.
The daughter spoke with joy of her marriage;
the mother sat impatient—Sabbath’s end
March Children
Nancy Hanks BairdHer head nestled in the palm of my hand
not so long ago,
little lips tugged my breast,
fingers pink as birthday candles
Negative Space
Paul SwensonIt’s hard being Mormon Mormon mind regards nipples
Razor Sharp
Marden J. ClarkYou, my father,
Too damned independent at seventy-five
To admit you could no longer handle
A simple double-edge Gillette,
1948
Elaine ChristensenShe was learning German that year,
a war bride, living in Darmstadt,
trying to say ich in the back of her throat,
the guttural r of Herr and Frau, to introduce
The Three Boats
Brian EvensonAnd God came to me and shewed me
a boat on troubled waters.
“Shall you stretch forth your hand
to steady the vessel before it founders?”
“I shall,” I said, and took the boat
in my hand and removed it from danger.
Weight
R. A. ChristmasHe was folding garments in the back bedroom
when he heard one of his kids telling
his wife that his ex had “lost a lot of weight”—
hospital healing
Linda Sillitoeof course a two-inch badger
carved from liver-colored stone
with arrows bound to his back,
could not make the difference.
Sleeping on Wood
Nancy Hanks BairdThe blue ice is melting
off the high ridge,
draining down through the trees.
The blade of rock darkens in the sun.
RELEASE: A Moment
Dixie Lee PartridgeI did not plan survival or otherwise
craving absence for so long
so when awakened that snowless night
The Freeway
Lee Robisonis two currents of light on the hill.
One drains into the western sky,
the other, into the maw of rock behind me.
I am a dazzled part of light that opens
How Things Look from the Other Side of the Lake
R. A. ChristmasPut water between the highway and yourself;
put a fence too, and some cows to graze.
For as long as you sit on this rock,
you are not driving north or south,
Cereal Polygamy
R. A. ChristmasOne of his had just spilled
some Cheerios, and one of hers
was griping over the Grapenuts.
He was about to holler
Brides of the Afternoon
Paul SwensonWhite brides, dark grooms
lustrous silks on
an orange afternoon,
scuffing through dry leaves
Slant Sonnet for Melissa
Linda SillitoeThis visit you talk of Merlin in both poem and prose,
and how he transformed Arthur to insect or mole,
teaching him how to become.
Ghost Month
Holly WelkerIn China, in August, ghosts are released
from hell for a month of fun. Late July
behind the gates, ghosts start queuing up,
raising their hands and swearing to the guards
Reply to: “You Are a Spiritual Person”
Carol Clark OttesenSomething wants spiritual
yet hesitates, not wanting to show a lack
of substance intellect
to not win at tennis or good looks
Toni’s Song
Paul SwensonShe prays in the shower, lifts
her face to the streaming water
god, to the shining metallic head
Because Last Night Was Friday Night
Holly WelkerBecause last night was Friday night
I had to search to find a quiet place
and when I found it I wanted to leave it
though I wasn’t even working off a mean gin drunk.
Saturday: One Version (Fourth Week of an Unidentified Illness)
Dixie Lee PartridgeTired of enclosure, I sit near what view
of trees and sky my house will give.
Across the back fence, my neighbor
who can hardly walk
The Prophet’s Dream
Brian EvensonAn angel came to me and said, O Pitiable Fools!
O Foolish Mortals! O Everlasting Damnation!
I said, Perhaps you will be willing to shew me
their eternal lot, and my own. He said, Come.
What Remains
Anita TannerDay rolls over,
pulling at the covers of dusk.
Lights come on in sequence
and before they go off
Aristocrats
Robert L. JonesTwo black snakes
Made it down the hill
Through the high grass
Among the wild apple trees
His Faith-Promoting Story
R. A. ChristmasThirty-six years after his baptism,
nobody was converted.
His grown kids were apostates, and his exes
were either nudists or inactives
Bread: A Returning
Dixie Lee PartridgeIn the hayfields are loaves
to be lined along barns.
Like monuments to a lost art
they have browned in the summer heat,
The Statue of Brigham Young at South Temple and Main, Salt Lake City
Michael HicksThe cupping hand cradles the winds
that whir like crickets
beneath the swoop of traffic lamps.
The legs like stumps of pillars
I Will
Allen W. BurchBitter herbs and tears
Mulch, water the spiritual
Roots of human neuroses
Surely God sees through
Hemmed In
Michael J. NobleAbove, the divorcee
with the baggy eyes and bleached hair
draws an evening bath.
The dull pat of bare feet
A Killing Frost
Timothy LiuWhen the cold front came, all the leaves went limp.
That was that—no more white flies on the patio,
one bloom still curled tightly in its calyx,
its promise of color fading. Yet there’s nothing
George
Lee RobisonHe speaks in a poetry of mumbles, not quite rambling
under the breaking sky about what happened
half his life ago and the end of a promise
that makes him angry. Shows the confusion
Descending Order
Dixie Lee PartridgeSnow falling into the pond
leaves you weak with its metaphor
of sadness, as though all that makes you
could be instantly broken down,
Untitled
Peter Bloch-HansenSing a song of sixth sense,
a pocket full of Why;
four and twenty Reasons,
beams in your eye.
Fall Weekend at Rehoboth Beach
Peter RichardsonOut along the shore the sky is wide.
Ducks fly, drafting like cyclists in Central Park
but unfettered, their path dictated only by season, instinct,
and windshifts. Below with me
In a Far Land
M. Shayne BellSo many women on their knees
that if I knew how to tell them
they could find hope here,
or that there the men
They Eat Dogs in China
Timothy Liu Or so my father said—
the clock on the mantle silenced,
that family Bible
in his hands a weight in the pans
Gaining Darkness
Anita TannerGoing down to the cellar
a child awakens to tendrils
of winter vegetables
that elongate like white worms.
American Christians Visit Mt. Nebo
Lee RobisonWe had only cameras
and yearning, but the wind rasped
stone like a hot tongue
and cameras and yearning
The Miró Exhibit at MoMA*: Dec. 21, 1993
Peter RichardsonThese bodies
look like they were pancake mix
that, when poured on the skillet,
turned out to look sort of human.
Pieta
Nancy Hanks BairdLying on my mother’s bed
listening to tropical rain skitter
across a mottled screen,
I hold my daughter, sprawled in sleep,
She’iiná Yázhí*
Kimberly Hamblin HartAs earth began to shed the snowy clouds of
death and slumber,
as darkness ebbed within the solstice,
you slept in my dark womb,
“I Do Remember How It Smelled Heavenly”: Mormon Aspects of May Swenson’s Poetry
Susan Elizabeth HoweAny discussion of Mormon culture or doctrine in the work of nationally prominent American poet May Swenson must begin with the caveat that Swenson, for virtually all of her adult life, was not a believing…
By Extension
Michael J. NobleHe blisters his hand on the iron she forgot to unplug,
investigates every outlet, detects exactly three more
potential fire hazards, bandages himself
in the prescribed method. She is not a cautious woman.
August
Philip WhiteAhumming stillness. In the orchards up and down the valley
the pith of summer turns slowly to juices. Ripeness:
what my grandmother knows, hunched in her silence.
The Greening
Emma Lou ThaynePluck them out one by one
Melancholy, dearth, unableness
Squeeze out the poisons
Scratch away the sting
Origami Birds
David RockI release my pretty doves
and they ascend like sparks
to disappear. And look
how restless I am,
Properties of Water
Nancy Hanks BairdIn the dark,
a cat will fly on rain-slicked blacktop
like a bat,
hydroplaning, flicking malevolence sideways
out of fluorescent eyes.
Seconds Coming
Casualene MeyerEntering St. John
Population 1440
Leaving St. John
Visit Us Again!
Awake to the Ineffable: Some Would Call It Kundalini
Emma Lou ThayneOut of sleep
Levitation
Stirrups of light
Palms aglow
To Sleep with the Ineffable: Inviting My Sweet Informants
Emma Lou ThayneCheek to pillow I slide my scalp up
away from my ear the way I lifted the mother of pearl stem on the
silver lid
that closed and opened to disappear under itself
The Soon-to-hibernate Bear Addresses His Public
Karl C. SandbergSlow way down.
Get off the freeway.
Park the car.
Stop racing the engine.
“White” of “Pure”: Five Vignettes
Douglas CampbellDialogue 29.4 (Winter 1996): 119–135
The Book of Mormon variously uses “white” and “pure” in the same verse in different editions. This article traces the history of those changes, who was behind them, and why.
Leaving
Stanton Harris HallLeaving you
leaves me wishing that I could hold you
like a small stone in my pocket
Black Moroni
Paul SwensonPainted on the wall behind the seats where choir sings
See the shining figure in a steep green wood
Angel wears a shirtwaist robe, fabric wing as thin as filament
He looks downslope where Joseph kneels, treasure spread in dirt
Life-line
Megan Thayne HeathTonight I wear your dress
like a shell to my most graceless springing.
The brown velvet shimmers with the folds
and the tucks hang like loosely gathered wind,
Silver Footprints
Emma Lou ThayneNeither masculine nor feminine a powerful
androgyny like wind surrounding shoulders
of a crowd, drawing in, along, persuasive as scent.
Alaska Girlhood
R. F. BartholomewEden was a winter
when gods skated the earth.
They’d warm themselves by the fires
that lit the man-high snowbanks
We Dress for Armageddon
Elizabeth Visickfor Shelley Turley
When trouble—an earthquake, a heart—
Comes to town, breaking dams,
Leveling shops, clubs
Kick and Muff
David SeiterI hear the fist-sized heart
cannon in the fog of rhythm
death and future.
From it I take the few things
Shorn
Michael J. NobleLocking the door to the bath,
opens the collar of the shirt,
raises chin, fingers buttons
from their holes, lengthens torso,
molts like a snake.
Passing On, Holiday
David SeiterIt’s Christmas
and our mothers, weary in their memories,
in their good for others (those holiday chores)
keep their feet under them like birds.
Fire in the Water
Stanton Harris HallBarely a man
he stands trembling
water lapping at thighs in cotton white
right arm to the square
Oasis
Linda SillitoeAt dusk, the pool waits in silence,
found by your feet after you rip up
the map. Suddenly in the tangled grasses
and twilight the birds stop calling,
and the trees finger your face.
Desert Bloom
Megan Thayne HeathThere are no maybes in the desert;
you have to be lizard-quick or shrivel and die.
The Rio Grande is muddy from its occasional pause,
here where survival is yes or no.
Stake Mission
R. A. ChristmasTheir place was a junkyard with Joshuas,
and they’d play Mom and Pop
to any delinquent on the desert.
We’d be forever having
Kayenta
Bryan WatermanSummers we paint relocation houses
on the res, beige and grey,
“Navajo white/’ our brushes dripping
Dutch Boy on red Arizona earth.
Moon Phases: Childhood
Dixie Lee Partridgewhen it topped the mountains
the shell of moon laid down
such plenty
all over the fields
Mountain Turn-out: Week After My Father’s Funeral
Dixie Lee PartridgeIn the ghost-smoke of eight thousand feet,
the road back looks deserted.
Below me, a hawk rises,
wings throbbing stillness, and I watch
Father Sky/Mother Earth
Cathy A. Gileadi-SweetI am turning the irrigation water
Into my garden
It’s two in the afternoon
The reddening tomatoes jerk up, widen their eyes
How She Comes
MaryJan MungerLike a storm rowing in. All around tree limbs stagger,
weeds lie flat. Wind and sun like familiars,
canyons nesting in the shadows. Bright feet
never touching down, while the air boils behind her
Fall Is the Wrong Analogy
Lee Robisonthis hesitant collapsing
of a canopy that will billow
in windy spring—
Martyrs
Timothy LiuA brigade of ants marching over torsos
cast in bronze. The mouths that cannot speak
On the Death by Cancer of Someone Too Young
Emma Lou Thaynefor Jeffrey Montague
Your wondering is over.
A radiance has taken you.
Now part of the council of all beings
Woodwork
Ken RainesHe squints and turns the beam around,
swapping it end for end. He runs
his eye down the length of the crown
and sees an overall design
Take These Depositions
Casualene MeyerLet’s talk of griefs,
of wombs,
of epithets.
Straw
Cathy A. Gileadi-SweetThe straw of the cut grain
Gold mounding the hill
On the way down from my house
On the mountain
Birthday Dreaming
Megan Thayne Heath“Watercress Grows Best in Running Water”
Dixie Lee PartridgeDays after his death, I felt him
newly jovial alongside me. And weeks later,
when I again dreamed him young,
handing me a pail of watercress,
Lily Foot
Anita TannerDid I hold the tiny Chinese shoe
or simply gaze at it
encased in museum glass
in the old mining town
Templum: A Place Thought of as Holy
Stanton Harris HallI. The coming
Inside this precise granite
the immensity of the walk comes home
After a Late Night, Waiting
Dixie Lee PartridgeAgain, that rim before sleep:
I tried to pause there—listened
to the mantle clock, the distant
sprung rhythm of a dog barking,
Out of the Night: Childness
Emma Lou ThayneFrom my Mystic Life after near-death accident
More than a state of being
A new being
Suffused in light
Sacrament Hymn
Lee RobisonJesus Deathkiller,
God’s Lifer, Earth Rover, Gift:
Be sure,
in your name and our hope,
From the Land of Nod
Timothy LiuI will go on
loving you, even after
you have stopped loving
anyone. What if
Holy Sonnet for Mother’s Day
Judith B. CurtisNo need to pierce my side with soldier’s sword
Or bleed from every pore as in Gethsemane;
Designed by Thee to shed blood naturally
Cycling with the menstrual moon. Lord,
History
Philip WhiteSmall things:
the smell of
blocks he cut
from pine light
A Prayer Addressed to Lord of Death
Satyam S. MoortyO Yama, God of Death, wield not your arrogant power!
Shield me from your wrath and dark terror.
You well know that you’ll succeed.
Mormontage
Addie Lacoebaptism—
separation anxiety
immergency
Allelujah
Joy K. YoungWhen the semicircle is complete,
each pedestal placed aesthetically
on stage, the girls enter.
Thirty earnest seraphs
Long Distance
Linda SillitoeSo now you sit with a black eye
by a glass wall on the sixteenth floor.
Already I see our talk in paragraphs
I can’t read, topics in the margin,
one clear sentence about clutter.
At Fifty-Five
R. A. ChristmasWas he improving,
or just too tired to sin?
Regardless, it was pretty clear
that where his broken heart and contrite
Alder and Maple in Molting
Stanton Harris HallLeaves
rusted and dry
fall to the earth
Creations: Mississippi
Casualene MeyerAdam, I know,
came from this red clay.
I am ever created
of dust.
Multiply and Replenish
Casualene MeyerAdam’s sperm number
one hundred million per cubic centimeter,
hope he can comply with God’s command.
Sesquicentennial Pioneer Commemoration Speech
Robert W. ReynoldsMy grandpa Walker Reynolds was a pioneer, too, with a Brigham beard.
Mom says he loved pickles, and dancing music.
Last time we saw him, Grandma said, “It’s time to hug goodbye,”
and all I could think is how Grandpa’s
Soft Sculpture
Mary Lythgoe BradfordI sink into a beanbag chair
shaped like a giant ear
but changing shape to fit my rear
Basic Training
Lewis HorneWe were like filings, lifted straight
As though a magnet stiffened up
Our figures like the hair upon
Our closely cropped skulls. But we,
She and He: Alternatives
Lewis Horne—Or on summer evenings as the sky
Draws down its light, prodding the question why
They sit in cast-off wicker furniture,
The kids cross-legged as though the lawn made a shore
Lectures on Death at Chaco Canyon, New Mexico
Pamela Porter HamblinThe ranger stoops to toss a stick away
and points to a narrow hole dug in the mud.
“Snakes,” she says, “are plentiful this year;
there’s some bubonic plague in rodents here.”
On the Fringe — The Singles’ Ward (The Appeal of the Foyer)
Bradford FillmoreThe quick exit—
Space, windows, safety.
Cozy couches and easy
Chairs versus the hard
Widow’s Weeds
Mary Lythgoe BradfordBlack
is the absence of color
to which the eye adjusts.
Black magnifies the face of
the beloved.
Thistle Field
Casualene MeyerSo speaks King Saul:
I want this modest man of war
David, dead.
Snare him with a string
Straight Up
Marilyn Bushman-CarltonShirley is the punch line who holds the joke
while we wait like pieces on a game board
in the line that wanders
from the classrooms, through the halls,
Miguel
Peter RichardsonI meet Miguel
bear hugging him from behind
tense tendons in his neck
rage squeezing out his eyes:
One Method of Hope
Todd Robert PetersenThe only motion here is an old
Dodge pickup leading a coil
of white exhaust across
the horizon—a snow-dusted
Lucifer’s Obit.
Brent D. Corcoran We note, today, the passing
of our most dreared departed—
father of lies, child of perdition,
mother of woes, and friend to sin.
Begotten of the Ash
Bryant H. McGillBorn of the ash,
Bloom of the dust
Fires of the soul,
Colors of rust
Joseph Loved His Women
Mary Lythgoe BradfordJoseph loved his women
beginning with strong Lucy
who prayed him back to health.
He loved his sister Sophronia,
To a Cymbidium Orchid Blooming on December 25th
Michael R. CollingsYou must have burst surprised
thrusting up your single spear
so soon past All
Hallow’s-Eve
Fashion Show
Lewis HorneDid she think, “Depression,”
As banks collapsed,
Men took to the road, farms
Reclaimed and lost?
Ordinary Light
Marilyn Bushman-CarltonOne hour of a particular day,
like a sudden flu it descends upon you
the first time.
You could not have known.
Fact of my life
Linda SillitoeMy job was once threatened if I published a poem.
I lived in another place
but in America and knew my rights.
I let the poem wait. Oh, I read it aloud once
We Write What We Want to Know
Anita TannerI want to know why water has the right of way
where God dwells near zenith or nadir
why you see stars better peripherally
why some people have a fear of trees
My Father Comes to Me
Brent PaceMy father comes to me
his hand scrapes on the door
that he opens to this bedroom where I am still,
not sleeping but waiting for his hair oil scent to reach me.
To a College Friend Killed by a Drunk Driver
Carol Clark OttesenIn those days
we all wanted a man
to cover our shame, the nakedness
of being a woman alone.
A degree yes unless
The Knight came
Drama Queen
Brent PaceThe week they turn off your phone,
I wait in your car while you give quarters
to a pay phone mounted on red brick
at a convenience store.
Night Fires
Brent PaceFamily sentinels, we watch flames grab scrub oak
roughly on the shoulder of our dysphoric mountain,
shiver as three firs’ tired arms collapse in slow motion
silence.
Women are the Keepers of Secrets
Mary Lythgoe BradfordWomen keep the secrets of men
by candlelight and telephone,
growing in their wombs.
A Name and a Blessing
Carol Clark OttesenI raise you my just born daughter
to the Father of All Lights.
He has set a flame in you;
this fire connects you to the trees
the earth and creeping things.
Luke 7:37
Kathryn KimballThe alpha and omega sat at meat.
The woman could not speak. She only knelt
And wept. Translucent tears upon his feet
Flowed like river waters to the Delta.
Courting
Peter RichardsonI. Prayer
Bless us as we try to find
ourselves,
each other.
If the Din of Cities Makes the Moon
M. Shayne BellIf the din of cities makes the moon
shine dimly in the night;
if the touch of concrete and tin
drowns the sound of water;
Dragging Fanny
Paul SwensonHer last hymn in the book—and they’re dragging it.
Behold, her royal army’s old. Band of stragglers,
banners furled, tired voices buckling the pews.
Afterward
Dixie Lee PartridgeOnce on the porch I asked
great-grandfather Porter a question
loudly and he said wait
though he was just sitting still
his face raised to low sun
eyes half-open
Above the Estuary (Before the trail closure through Cascade Preserve)
Dixie Lee PartridgeThe river’s long curve
enters the bay in streak between meadow
and forest—algae green of freshwater,
kelp green of salt.
Metaphysics over lunch
Linda SillitoeEnglish professor and rebel:
Off campus, our sentences race
the tabletop, garbed in wit and color.
By the time food comes, our ideas dance
Caught Gull, Plowing
Derk KoldewynAt five, standing at the edge of the field,
Dad up there on the great green Deere,
I must have been scared he’d leave.
He made me an offer: Catch me a seagull
Companionship
Derk KoldewynWe’d had problems, especially lately:
Just last week I snapped at him
and found myself staring into the outraged eyes
of a former national rugby star, his one fist
Clay
Philip WhiteOn the sill, torsos wrenched out of clay
still bore the sculptor’s mark, the print
of cocked thumb and nail. Tortured, vaguely
female, they shamed us. We crowded in,
The First Christmas Eve at Home
N. Andrew SpackmanThe air above my parents’ roof is cold.
It pushes smoke back down the chimney,
forcing me to turn off the fire alarm
and open both windows.
Practicing at Sunrise
Joy K. YoungIn the morning’s glissando,
Canadian night wrapped tightly
against opaque windows,
she rises. The brick in her bed
Natural Symmetry
Ken RainesThe restaurant juts above the pond,
casting lucent shadows in those moments
that fall still between dinner and dark.
Reflections luminesce against the faces
Night Thunder at the Cabin
Emma Lou ThayneIn thunder at 2 a.m.
I occupy all my lives
my loves hovering holding
rising with me to the wild night
Military Funeral in a High Hills Cemetery
Robert L. JonesAn adulterous generation after all.
We seek a sign, some old tune or rhyme
Like Grandfather’s Clock, even as we stand
Among the tumbling chaos of death and birth
Day Music
Joy K. YoungThe mountain is a redhead
lying on his back
nose and knees pointed
to the sun. His hair
Wild Things
Lisa GarfieldI’ve heard of horses—mustangs mostly—who run wild across Nevada’s
bleak terrain. (They kind of remind me of Uncle Bill, who ran wild, too, last
summer, until Aunt Shirley caught up with him at the border). Horses know
no borders, don’t allow limits, except those imposed by a weariness of
Plain and Simple
Marilyn Bushman-CarltonIt could have been an impossible day.
And then the wind
helping the Gardener’s Eden keep its promise:
the outdoor ornaments
Temple Square — Past and Present
Delbert W. EllsworthPast
Through iron gates shine
Bronze doors never opened—Holiness to the Lord.
Sun, moon, and stars live in granite,
Carved by dead ancestors
Reclamation
Ken RainesThe Oquirrh Mountains form a finger of land
which rests its tip in the Great Salt Lake. Slopes
behind alfalfa gently rise until they stop
where the motion of ancient waves left benches of sand.
Grandma Comes for Me
Emma Lou ThayneOut of Sunday morning dark
My grandma came for me.
Stripped bare to dreaming I saw
Her occupy the fat black leather rocker
Thin Ice
Ken RainesI watch two girls on wheels.
Four neon-green wheels
on each foot. Rollers
Fertility
Carol Clark OttesenOn your twelfth birthday,
the day you found a kinship with the moon and tides,
you sat on the front steps as a great burlap ball
rolled in its place secured and shimmering—
an olive tree.
Naked
Marilyn Bushman-CarltonThey’d come from practice at the gym,
their hair steaming,
and in the flirt and banter
would reach inside my girlfriend’s car
Hop Hornbeam
R. A. ChristmasIn the Sacred Grove
near Palmyra, New York,
there’s hardly a tree
old enough to have been
From Under Ground
Lisa GarfieldFrom under ground
you can hear them stomp,
a chaotic cacophony
amplified by mud and bone,
Planting Day
Quinn WarnickBehind the weathered barn, I crouch
among burlap bags full of this year’s
seed. These kernels promise before
they prove, and I have no choice
Trajectory at the End of Winter
Emma Lou ThayneBack from a walk along the Big Wood River in early May
I am the river alive with spring run-off
one moment rushing to be where the calling calls,
the next a pool reflecting or an eddy at play.
Russell
Philip WhiteYou’d been the one taken out and talked to during stories of Jesus.
On the scuffed pew you stuffed the blessed bread
in your mouth and blew it out, laughing.
So when they found you in blood at the foot of the stairs,
Jesus Lost
Paul SwensonDo you know this picture, asks
the magazine. Yes, I’ve seen
this man before. I’m sure
that clean, bronze brow, those
dark eyes’ intensity surprised
Through a Glass Darkly
E. Leon ChidesterIn their projected restoration, contractors
pulled down aging plywood, discreetly
placed to hide remnants of the stained-glass
window shattered in the fifties by a bevy
Under the Faultline
Philip WhiteThe night before, the earth had jolted us,
A ripple in our sleep till Dad called it
A quake and brought to life the massive plates
Beneath us gnashing the ages. It was
The Basic Tune of the Sparrow
Marilyn Bushman-CarltonOutside the glass that keeps us warm,
the sparrows,
most common of creatures,
of whom the promise is made
The Charity of Silence
Todd Robert PetersenThis is the story of my father’s demise. It wanders when I tell it, and I never know when to bring in the polygamy, so I just do and let matters take care of themselves.…
The By-pass
Lewis HorneIf I looked up the road from the irrigation ditch, I could see the church house bumping stiff and dark against the sunset’s blaze. “The old church house/’ people called it now. “The old churchhouse,”…
Salt Lake Citations
Tim BehrendA friend writes: In a walking excursion last fall through the old block lying between Fifth and Sixth East, Seventh and Eight South—in a narrow alley behind Charon’s Mexican Bakery—I came across a shop of…
Thin Ice
Ken RainesI watch two girls on wheels.
Four neon-green wheels
on each foot. Rollers
Emma’s Anguish
Emma Lou ThayneJoseph, Joseph,
How has the night persuaded you?
What bed but this?
What arms but mine?
Joseph to Emma
Emma Lou ThayneOut of the night of holy election,
Out of the silence, the eloquent silence
Only believing whispers to me:
Follow the guiding of soul-felt selection,
Winter Dies
N. Andrew SpackmanThe full third moon of passing
winter rears up
against an x-ray white orchard.
There are tree skeletons.
Indian Summer
Holly WelkerPah Tempe
Sally StratfordParched
Amy E. JensenIn Riverdale
Linda SillitoeIn a Pueblo Indian Dwelling, Four-Corners
Amy E. JensenAnhedonia
Eugene EnglandNote: The Dialogue Foundation provides the web format of article as a courtesy. Please note that there may be unintentional differences from the printed version. For citational and biographical purposes, please use the printed version…