poetry on mamazine:

Junkie
by Elizabeth Schott

Looking-glass
by Heather Williams Elder

I Am No Mary. You Are No Lamb.
by Jill Crammond Wickham

Three Poems: DisOrder, Some Questions for the Virgin, and Behold
by Maureen Geraghty Rahe

Mis Ojalas*
by Violeta Garcia-Mendoza

Nap
by Kris Underwood

First Spoon
by Odarka Stockert

Fishbowl
by Stephanie Duve

Water Sprite
by Cynthia Bostwick

A Feline Fine, Kitty Kitty Mine
by Cati Porter


11 - 20 of 125
LOGO LOGO LOGO LOGO LOGO LOGO LOGO LOGO

POETRY

*BEST of mamazine.com* House Over the World
by Paul Hostovsky

This morning over breakfast
my daughter tells me her dream
of long division. At first

she's sailing through a math test,
jumbles of numbers swelling and breaking
gently down all around her,
the stalwart rudder of her number 2 pencil
steering her steadfastly through. But then

out of nowhere, a word problem:
The house over the world.
A fraction the shape of an iceberg.
She can't simplify and she can't
tack. She can only

watch as the house turns into our house,
and the dream turns into the nightmare
of our house divided by the world.
The world into our house,
how many times?


Paul Hostovsky's poems appear and disappear widely online and in print, with most recent sightings in Poet Lore, Free Lunch, FRiGG, Visions International, Paper Street, Alimentum, Rock & Sling, and others. Paul works in Boston as an interpreter for the deaf.