Istanbul
Honnah Patnode
Honnah Patnode
my friends all say nobody knows how many people
live in this city, it’s so crowded, it’s so busy, the streets
are so full, so full of people, so full of friendly dogs
and cats that all the people feed, so full of tea the color
of fox’s blood, so full of simit and börek and kokoreç
and ayran (which, truthfully, my sugar-crazed tastebuds
can’t quite comprehend), so full of half-ruins you shouldn’t
call ruins because they are half-built right into new buildings and
so unsurprising everyone en route to everywhere ignores them, so full
of moustached men and rhyming conjugations, so full of
“geliyorum! biliyorum! seviyorum!,” and songs of daily conversation,
so full of poetry in every stream of consciousness on cobbled
streets, so full of golden-amber honeydrop sunbeams and
suspended in a moment or a hundred years in hues and shapes of
Byzantine mosaics or Ottoman minarets, so full of metro lines zipping
like thoughts between neurons to here and there and back again when
the sky goes dark and the bridges light up, so full I could not possibly
eat another bite but they are bringing me another plate, so full of lovely
pleasantries that now curl cat-like and pounce on the tip of my tongue
with no English equivalents (kolay gelsin! hayırlı uğurlu olsun!
and my favorite, iyi ki varsın!), so full of masses uncounted or so
my friends tell me—Istanbul, are you the fullest of cities? For
when I am with you, drawn deep to ornate prayer chambers
of culture long gone, culture right now, culture to come, I am
so full, so full, so full. Dopdolu, dopdolu, dopdolu İstanbul’um.
O kadar sevdim ki ben seni.
Honnah Patnode
“Bütün insanlar suçlu değildir ama
Bütün hayvanlar masumdur.” —Şanışer, “Susamam”
“All people are not guilty, but
All animals are innocent.”
Dear God,
I pray I always have the kind of heart
that hurts to see a street dog’s ribcage poking
up and out, a second shivering body cowering
under a threadbare blanket too thin for winter.
I pray I always have the crumbs to spare
and the merciful spirit to spare them
for the broken-winged bird with darting eyes
who fights for his place at my feet.
I pray that though he cannot understand my words,
the sweet black cat who howls and hisses
will know I find him darling, I wouldn’t harm him
the way I suspect someone else may have before.
I pray my hands stretch out with palms
full of abundant yellow gentleness like spring pollen
to spread with thoughtless, delighted generosity
to the rejected, the untouched, the yearning.
Dear God,
I pray I always have the kindness of heart
that loves to love these overlooked beloveds.
Honnah Patnode is a 25-year-old writer from Kalamazoo, Michigan. She studied communication, management, and creative writing at Eastern Michigan University. Her writing career began in grade school when she operated a small library of handwritten stories out of her classroom desk. She has been previously published by JLB Creatives Publishing on smashwords.com with a short story and two novellas. Her current focus revolves around poetry and prose poetry. More of her work can be found at iquixotic.wordpress.com.