Tag Archives: heat

Guest Poet – Jessica Isaacs

Belly of the Whale

It’s the belly of August,
and we’ve spent all our money
on school supplies
and school clothes
and electricity
to beat the heat,

but it could be worse,
I remind myself
as I pass
a weathered,
paint-peeling,
wood-frame house

with all the windows open,
weeds grown up to the eaves,
and twenty cloth diapers
strung out on a line –
oh yes,
it could be worse.

Tortoise

Eve stood, naked in the garden, and
closed her fist around the last soft
bit of fleshy ripe fruit, squeezing the succulent
pulp, forcing the juice of knowledge between
her fingers to drip down her wrist and
forearm to the ground God walked upon – so this
was how it was going to be? Really? An eternity
for a few mere seconds of simply wanting
to know God better? An eternity for simply aching
to see God more intimately? An eternity for breaking
just one of God’s rules, put in place to keep her
in her place, set apart, from him? The punishment
was too extreme, she knew this fully and well, but
hers was a jealous God, and she was smaller and
weaker and slower than he, yet she
would carry this new, separate Eternity
on her back forever, like a Tortoise
shouldering her world, hopeful. And when
Eternity runs out, finally, she whispered
through fruit-scented breath, surely, surely,
would he let her know him, then?

Jessica Isaacs’ poetry has been published in several journals and anthologies, most recently including Cybersoleil, Sugarmule, and Elegant Rage. “Belly of the Whale” and “Tortoise” are poems from her current book-in-progress, deep August. She has presented her poetry at the National and Regional Pop Culture / American Culture Conferences, Scissortail Creative Writing Festivals, Full Circle Bookstore, Woody Guthrie Festivals, and Howlers & Yawpers Creativity Symposiums. She is an English and Humanities Professor at Seminole State College, and makes her home in Prague, Oklahoma with her one husband, two kids, two dogs, four cats, three fish, and a variety of snails.

Old School

Old School

Good Christ, he muttered. Again
this morning, the tricked out
copper Kia was parked
in his accustomed spot.

As he pulled himself and his stuff
out of his battered Volvo,
the students took no notice.
Barely legal and over sexed,
they kept the AC running,
her seat reclined three-
quarters the way down, and he
looming over the stiff gear shift
hovering over her rising heat.
Their mouths open and connected
as they tried to knot their tongues.

The long-tenured English
professor tried not to stare,
so he couldn’t quite make out
where the boy’s hands rested
or did not. He trudged past
their windshield, office
bound, toting his briefcase
stuffed with ungraded papers
on Marvell’s To His Coy Mistress.
His resentment fermented
with each step toward his desk—
a fine and private place.

god particles, Missouri

Sunday morning, a sign
west of St. Louis says JESUS
all uppercase the way
a traveling evangelist says it in three
syllables when he’s working
the crowd up to an altar
call. On one side of the road,
a towering promise
of adult entertainment
in a pleasure dome —
on the other a sign says
next exit eternal life.
The road is lined with lights
flashing a warning that
the whole place could go up in flames
if you’re not careful. And even though
you don’t need to be reminded
after a week of triple digit heat,
the marquee on a Baptist Church
assures you hell is real
and you remember
revivals where a pitchman
who said he worked for God
could beat the whole crowd down
into submission, turn them
at just the right moment
and close the deal,
and you think in the middle
of America you’re in the middle
of a damn tent meeting and you hope
Oklahoma is a little closer to heaven
but you’d bet your life the difference
from one coast to the other is
nowhere near three sigmas,
so you can’t call this a discovery yet.