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Blue Marble Review

Literary Journal for Young Writers

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Alex Walsh

The Cambridge Girl

By Alex Walsh

On sleepless nights, I take to envying

the Cambridge girl: the embodiment,

with her short, metropolitan hair,

striped blazers and scuffed shoes,

of all things literary

which I am not.

She has already made her peace

with the language that soothes me

but cannot sate me, buried

her shameful roots in Austen and

Keats while mine rear lustily

through each letter I write,

for I cannot twist my words

until my will has nothing more to say.

She and her studies flaunt

their joy like a ring,

she as happy in her books

as they are to have discovered

a new mistress, a rising talent

come to lift them from obscurity;

but I do not trust so openly

what I read or what I leave

in my wake, its power too great

to reckon with or claim as my own.

 

 

Alex Walsh studies Math and Literary Arts at Brown University. Her work has previously appeared in Coldnoon, Eunoia Review, Journal of Humanistic Mathematics, and Catalyst, among others.

In The Next Few Months

By Georgia Eugenides

One month from now I’ll
be rushing towards the lake at 5am and riding
in cars with windows rolled down and falling in love
(and consequentially waking up alone.) After the sun
crawls behind the mountaintops like an old woman reaching for death, I’ll be sitting in the parking lot across from the alpenglow and mourning the past the same way that
butterflies secretly mourn for their cocoons.

Two months from now you’ll
be sitting at your desk and studying the Punic Wars;
the detailed battle plans distract you from the fact that your cellphone doesn’t light up with my name anymore. After
you’ve picked a side, (Carthage or Rome,) you’ll lie on your back and convince yourself that
knowledge is more meaningful than love.

Can you picture me when you close your eyes?
Or do my features blur with those belonging to every girl you’ve ever kissed goodnight?

Three months from now I’ll
be working at my first job and sneaking into
cheap concerts on weeknights and worrying
that I’ll never live up to my parents’ expectations. After my mother falls asleep on the couch, I’ll sit with a notebook in my lap—thanking you for the heartbreak—
because I wasn’t able to write about our relationship
until you crushed it under the toe of your
yellow Doc Martins.

Four months from now you’ll
be living out your dreams and
chasing after girls with azul irises and spitting the meaning of life out on the bathroom floor like the seeds of a bitter fruit.

I have dark eyes, dark hair, and freckles scattered across the bridge of my nose.

Five months from now I’ll
be searching for you on the pages of novels
assigned in English class and wondering what it would
feel like to be the most powerful wave on the electromagnetic spectrum. After realizing that life is not a mathematical equation, I’ll understand why
I allowed you to watch me undress in the mid-morning glow,
but pulled your hands back violently
as they reached for my poems.

 

Georgia Eugenides is an eighteen-year-old poet who grew up in Berlin, Germany; Chicago, IL and Princeton, NJ. Her first poem was published when she was nine years old. After spending the previous summer interning at The Paris Review, she decided to submit some of her own work to various publications.

Sea Salt

By Umang Kalra

I became the shore, jagged,

tired scraps of soil spun into

heaps of sand, crumbling

forms, cracked and aching,

waiting for the next wave

of the ocean’s suffocating

embrace – dry land trembles

for the taste of liquid salvation,

every sigh enveloped in

forgetting, every minute spent

naked in the sun’s sordid

heat, spent drowning the sting

of the salty sea in the tide

of welcome ecstasy: I became

the helpless seaside, glaring

open, an endless tapestry of

hollow spaces, barren, waiting

to be filled with the sputtering

waves that seek to swallow me,

all wrapped up in words, lonely

syllables that would have

plainly spelled your crooked

name, if only I’d had eyes

with which to see

 

 

Umang Kalra is an eighteen-year-old museum enthusiast, obsessive reader, procrastinator, airport lover, art nerd, and travel addict. She is currently pursuing an undergraduate degree in History from Trinity College, Dublin.

From the Editor

By Molly Hill

Issue Three is here!  Or four—depending on how you do the math. Because we’ve had a large number of submissions and wanted to get more work up online we slipped in a short summer issue near the end of July.  Now with Fall rolling around we’re officially launching our third of four quarterly issues.

We’ve grown both in size and scope, reading many more submissions for each subsequent issue, and finding new voices here in the U.S. but also across the globe. We continue to seek out additional sources of arts funding and are lucky to be sustained by donors whose generosity allows us to keep on paying our writers and artists. Thank you donors!

Hope you enjoy the beautiful homepage art Autumn Woods, done by Minneapolis artist Chris Howard. We love that her colorful creativity is the first thing you see when you click over to Blue Marble.

Enjoy the Fall issue, and many thanks to all the writers, artists and photographers who keep our inbox overflowing. Keep it going!

Molly Hill

Editor

I arise in the morning torn between a desire to improve the world and a desire to enjoy the world. This makes it hard to plan the day.  E.B. White

A Sonnet From an Earthling

By Ana Maria Finzgar

 

Dear person from Earth,

You are not naturally intrusive, barbaric; you do not unconsciously strive

to extirpate the Universe. It is not in your nature to mindlessly kill. Do not

let greed that is lurking around the corner lure you into not being human.

Be the greatest heliolatrist there ever was; love the earth and pray to the sea.

 

People who live by the dog-eat-dog rule are far more common than they

should be; a paradoxical group of people with rotten hearts and knife-like

tongues. Survival is their primary objective; art does not exist. They are

inchoate, only breathing, eating to exist, not finding pleasure in anything.

 

Cherish morals; eliminate envy. Find out your purpose of existing. Ride a

camel to Egypt. Swim in every ocean, see thirty-one sunsets in twenty days,

buy your mother a flower every day. Gratification and happiness should

 

be the only objective you have. Graduate from an Ivy League school, write a

poem about the universe, do nothing at all and everything at once. And don’t

not listen to anyone (me). You are a blank canvas and you shall paint yourself.

Your fellow Earthling

 

Ana M. Finžgar is a fifteen-year-old from the Mediterranean. This was her first serious attempt at poetry.

Fragmentation

By Ana Maria Finzgar

the taste of cinnamon in my mouth

burned

my tongue raw

(reminded me of christmas cookies)

 

the couch we all sat on every day

watching television to ungodly hours of the morning

made me want to destroy the world

(bad dad-jokes never seemed so good)

 

melancholy never felt more like a harmful illness

and neither did loneliness

partialness has became a routine

 

it all started with a separation

and ended with being stretched over

two continents to the point of breaking

 

Ana M. Finžgar is a fifteen-year-old from the Mediterranean. This was her first serious attempt at poetry.”

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