NEW POETRY

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Hello, my name is Hello.
Yes, it rhymes with yellow,
mellow, Jell-O. You know.
I don’t talk much, I just drink.
Put me in a taxi, call me Buddy,
take me anywhere. I don’t care.
Home is the bottom of a bottle,
the last drop a farewell kiss
before I blast into space,
my veins full of rocket fuel.
Can you turn down the heat?
My tongue’s a rag dipped in oil.
What do you say, candle?
You are my only friend
in this dark room.
My words are an old car
that won’t start. A clunk here,
a sputter there. I need a tune-up,
a shot of WD-40 for the rusty hinge
of my mouth. I walk these streets
a ghost, invisible to everyone.
Don’t pretend you know me.
You don’t know my name.

James Croal Jackson is a Filipino-American poet working in film production. His latest chapbook is A God You Believed In (Pinhole Poetry, 2023). Recent poems are in ITERANT, Stirring, and The Indianapolis Review. He edits The Mantle Poetry from Nashville, Tennessee. (jamescroaljackson.com)

