J.L. Moultrie
Pop Music or False Sense of Well-Being
We drove to the beach after the house fire I sang in the
back seat afterwards my sister said I was good but the
sight of water only magnified my grief I still leapt in the
river I remember the cool blast of air in the hotel lobby
my nephew was afraid of the elevator so we ran upstairs
the fire left a gaping aperture in the ceiling what is this
place that calls me with no name?
Atonement
We were evicted in the spring excavated myself at
expanded seams wore masks long after Halloween
passed I didn’t want to enter the night but we did
and trekked to my aunt’s house to bathe for hot water
eluded our faucets none of my angst resulted in catharsis
I bummed a ride from strangers in middle school the
metal detectors beeped as we passed through these
intervals warped me as driftwood states of mind caught
like branches in vines distended shadows bloom tomb
adjacent moments like tense twine
High school was left unattended stealing tissue from library
stalls caused shame that tasted like mulberries the staff refused
to ask questions each day of summer scalding water rode city
buses until being hoarded into classes the teenage laughter
crass our lives a brief searching gaze
Ideation Spell
The path tolled beneath my skin against
silent factories revelation provided no
amnesty my ancestry pined for rain’s break
resisted taking shape as long as I was
able on the cusp of knowing the tender
myth of forgetting shame opaque at best
I couldn’t fake being human much more
Epitaph
Shelter of the past my birth a gilding
of my mother’s throat remembering the
cobalt mornings her waking me up to
pee in a cup my sense of safety standing
water those summers I spent as a boy
some foreign force keeping me alive staring
at the sky the clouds are in mourning I’m able to
look in the mirror
at brown illusory eyes trusting only
what’s not seen I could not glean much
from the pain she hardly spoke and read thick
romance novels we live in a hovel
staying sane was reading green eggs and ham I find
being who I am stifling I’m wearing shorts
running in the balmy summer the sharp flowers of the field
drew blood but I don’t feel it
the rain keeps me inside only love
can pry the doors open only love
J.L. Moultrie is a native Detroiter, poet and fiction writer who communicates his craft through words. He fell in love with literature after encountering James Baldwin, Hart Crane and many others. He considers himself a modern, abstract expressionist.