Image by Samuel Jerónimo, 2024, Palácio Nacional de Mafra, Terreiro Dom João V, Mafra, Portugal

A Selection of Poems

A Conversation

A balloon was in his mouth 
Expanding against his palate 
Pushing the backs of his teeth. 
His friend, 
Whom he had been talking to, 
Seemed apprehensive but not altogether spooked. The balloon continued to grow. 
His mouth was now about halfway open, 
And his friend could see the crown of it in the gap. It was a nice shade of blue. 
Through some worming and pushing 
The balloon managed to get out 
And fell into the hands of the friend. 
He regarded it for a moment; 
Polished it with his sleeve like an apple on a teacher’s desk And popped it with a small pinprick. 
When the noise died down, 
They resumed their conversation. 
The friend felt a strange tension in his throat.

The Lake

Out of
The lake
The big dense bolder pushed and pushed
Stretching the skim top like cellophane
Breaking with a splash.
Settling at a bob,
It revealed itself to be a soft pink flesh
Like a hermit crab in between shells.
Blinking in the moon
Its eyes glazed cold.
“I once saw a bird take off from here,”
It said,
“I saw the effort of its flight.
It strained and rippled in the headwinds
But it has stayed in the air ever since.
It has not come back near me.”
A sigh was then heard across the water as far as it would go.
The night rolled on.
The flesh sucked its teeth
And slinked beneath the surface with a sag.
Geese combed the mud for morsels
Their slimy feet kicking the breeze
Over their downy white bottoms.

The Big Game

I was watching the game
And a man came knocking at the door and
I opened the door and he
Walked right past me and sat on the couch.
He cracked open a beer and
Began to comment so I
Bantered with him.
When the game ended I went up to bed
But when I came down in the morning he was still there
Still cheering
And drinking his beer

Mud

There had been for as long as anyone could remember a short pile of mud in the town square as wide as it was tall simply there one day some children began to feel curious and made a game of it daubing the sides with soil from the surrounding planters and cheering as the pile grew soon the children grew tall and thin and their hands pruned with wet dirt grew long and knotted at last their hair grew gray and they worked more slowly on the last day they clumped on their final handfuls of dirt from the now barren square and fell back onto their bent legs panting the pile was now as tall as the town even stretching just past the spire of the highest building then as the people looked on from their haunches the pile began to quiver like a gas generator and hummed a sharp tone the final still drying layers of mud pulsed in the air at last the top blew open and a sea of yellow wasps sprang forth they cloaked the sky like a sheet thrown up and pulled back over the whole town yet despite the citizens’ fears they did not sting they flew in place like stars in a planetarium and watched the people until the years passed and they began to fall down the people died and more were born many years later a small pile of mud appeared again in the square

Author

  • Grant Pavol is a poet and songwriter from Philadelphia currently based in New York City. His most recent EP, College, was released in January 2025, with three more short releases planned for the course of the year. His primary influences are John Ashbery and The Simpsons.

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Strange Matters is a cooperative magazine of new and unconventional thinking in economics, politics, and culture.