Philosophers, knightly armour shining
ride off in search
of the Holy Grail
brimming with answers
to profound questions.
Poets modestly tiptoe
noticing things
a sparkle of dew, a butterfly wing's
shadow, cast as it flies
in the late afternoon.
Philosopher-Poets wonder
if the answers perhaps
lie in the path, in the woods, in the night
in the trail of a snail
escaping the light.
Lois Read, Connecticut, USA
Sunday, 9 March 2014
Sunday, 2 March 2014
Goose Feathers by Gary Every
The telephone rings late at
night
and the beautiful woman I
wish to be in love with
greets me with hello
making my heart go pitter
patter.
Her words are punctuated by
percussive raindrops
going pitter patter on the
rooftop.
as she tells me excitedly she
can hear a flock of geese
flying overhead.
The storm clouds are too
thick
to allow the flock of
migrating birds to be seen
but she holds the phone out
the window
so I can hear them honking.
What is a flock of geese
doing
in the middle of the desert?
What if the clouds part and
reveal nothing,
but the honking continues
is there such a thing as
geese ghosts?
The beautiful girl says good
night
and wishes me pleasant dreams
as the rain slowly stops
and a gentle snow begins to
fall
plummeting far too soft for
either a pitter or a patter,
snow descending and covering
the earth
in a magical blanket
with giant flakes as big as
goose feathers.
Gary Every, Arizona, USA
Sunday, 23 February 2014
haiku by Kenneth B Thompson
Sunday, 19 January 2014
The View from Behind by Sr Anne Higgins
Tapestries look
like battlefields
from the back.
Threads like soldiers
in hand to hand combat -
who is most resilient?
Arms locked,elbows out,
clenched fists of knot
scattered
like small skirmishes
across the expanse.
Who is most flexible?
Stitches quarrel
in overbearing voice,
rush to trenches,
maintain positions.
Colors invade
each others' territory,
singing violent
victories
of light.
All clamor, all struggle,
it faces the wall of faith
while the weaver
and the watcher
work from the front.
Sr Anne Higgins, Maryland, USA
Sunday, 12 January 2014
Reflected Light by Penny Smith
Remember how this winter day gave light
to country fields where frost and snowflakes lay?
It held at bay the terrors of the night.
When phantoms lurk and prowl our inner sight
and blackest thoughts intrude and bar our way,
remember how this winter day gave light.
Its hoarfrost beauty kept the landscape bright,
intending evening darkness to delay...
It held at bay the terrors of the night.
To those who'd choose to flee to calm their fright
there's scant advice to give, except to say
"Remember how this winter day gave light."
Then their unease must give way to delight;
although the sun had seemed to hide away,
it held at bay the terrors of the night.
And should your future self meet such a plight,
to country fields where frost and snowflakes lay?
It held at bay the terrors of the night.
When phantoms lurk and prowl our inner sight
and blackest thoughts intrude and bar our way,
remember how this winter day gave light.
Its hoarfrost beauty kept the landscape bright,
intending evening darkness to delay...
It held at bay the terrors of the night.
To those who'd choose to flee to calm their fright
there's scant advice to give, except to say
"Remember how this winter day gave light."
Then their unease must give way to delight;
although the sun had seemed to hide away,
it held at bay the terrors of the night.
And should your future self meet such a plight,
in each reflective moment, do, I pray,
remember how this winter day gave light;
it held at bay the terrors of the night.
it held at bay the terrors of the night.
Penny Smith, Havant, UK
Sunday, 5 January 2014
Daily Diary by Michael Keshigian
All day,
every day,
through the
night
while you
sleep,
dust floats
upon airy parchment
to silently
describe the moment
and soon
another page
is complete.
Early, when
it’s quiet,
the faint
sound
you think you
hear
is a streak
of sunlight
that sings
the chilly
dawn breeze
into a
story.
Even snowfall
covers
a page of
barren countryside
with white
ink,
transforming
blank to verse,
rain erases
most mistakes.
On a bright
day
you may catch
hand shadows
swirling fair
weather fonts
into words
in front of
the sun,
creating a
gust
that inspires
leaves and twigs
to
choreograph the landscape.
When the
inkwell runs dry,
the rattling
pen resounds
a thunderous
clap
and the dark
hand pulls
Michael Keshigian, USA
Sunday, 15 December 2013
Ponderance by Chris Crittenden
comes that late exhale of day
which marks the sun’s ritual loss.
effusions tint the Earth fiery
even as she shuns the sky dome’s paling.
trees reach from intent shadow,
audacious as wicker calyxes,
entrancing the scleral moon.
in conjugal aeries, wind-combed clouds
march in rolling dresses,
or equally drawn-out suits.
if, now, a winter rabbit
ghosted from a pod of shorn birch,
with fur so wise it married
a humble snowdrift,
who would see?
Chris Crittenden, Maine, USA
which marks the sun’s ritual loss.
effusions tint the Earth fiery
even as she shuns the sky dome’s paling.
trees reach from intent shadow,
audacious as wicker calyxes,
entrancing the scleral moon.
in conjugal aeries, wind-combed clouds
march in rolling dresses,
or equally drawn-out suits.
if, now, a winter rabbit
ghosted from a pod of shorn birch,
with fur so wise it married
a humble snowdrift,
who would see?
Chris Crittenden, Maine, USA
Thursday, 28 November 2013
Replanting the Great Caldonian Forest by Simon Kewin
In those days, Scots Pines lawned the Highlands
The Mesolithic Marten that ran through the branches
Could see both seas and never leave the touching leaves
Of giant cathedralling trees, shepherding their green,
Endless, restless hush, that rustled with death and life
>
The Mesolithic Marten that ran through the branches
Could see both seas and never leave the touching leaves
Of giant cathedralling trees, shepherding their green,
Endless, restless hush, that rustled with death and life
>
With only island peaks visible above the flood
The Cairngorm Archipelago, the Cuillin Ridge Atoll
Until, in that first great clearance of the land,
By axe and ovine tooth, numberless trees fell one by one
Strewn like jackstraws, the devil playing at dominoes
>
The Cairngorm Archipelago, the Cuillin Ridge Atoll
Until, in that first great clearance of the land,
By axe and ovine tooth, numberless trees fell one by one
Strewn like jackstraws, the devil playing at dominoes
>
Not that the mountains noticed the denudation
To them all living things are just fluff and dust
Titanic, elemental, their minds on bigger matters,
They grind each other's gradients, clash with the clouds,
Try to overtower the moon and pierce the sun
>
To them all living things are just fluff and dust
Titanic, elemental, their minds on bigger matters,
They grind each other's gradients, clash with the clouds,
Try to overtower the moon and pierce the sun
>
But sitting here on Sgurr an Airgid
It seems a shame all those trees are gone
And time that something was done
So I finish my apple and hurl the core,
Packed with its seeds, onto some fertile ground
And think to myself
That at least it's begun.
It seems a shame all those trees are gone
And time that something was done
So I finish my apple and hurl the core,
Packed with its seeds, onto some fertile ground
And think to myself
That at least it's begun.
Simon Kewin, UK
Friday, 22 November 2013
Brotecito / Little Seedling by Amelia Modrak
Brotecito
Crece, mi brotecito, crece,
Antes de que cambie el clima,
Antes de que lo hayamos
alterado
De una forma irreversible.
Conviértete en fronde joven,
Y luego en bosques frondosos,
Inunda la Tierra de verde
Y absorbe todo el carbón;
Ese carbón tóxico que
respiro,
Esa nube caliente, hija del
egoÃsmo,
Ese veneno invisible
Que asesina nuestro destino.
Crece, mi brotecito, crece,
Antes de que cambie el clima,
Antes de que lo hayamos
alterado
De una forma irreversible.
***
Little seedling
Grow, my little seedling,
grow,
Before the climate changes,
Before we have altered it
In an irreversible way.
Become young foliage,
And then luxuriant woods,
Cover The Earth with green
and absorb all of the carbon;
That toxic carbon I breathe,
That hot cloud, daughter of
egotism,
That invisible poison
which assassinates our fate.
Grow, my little seedling,
grow,
Before the climate changes,
Before we have altered it
In an irreversible way.
Amelia Modrak, Edinburgh, UK
Sunday, 17 November 2013
Japan Washes Ashore in Oregon by Catherine McGuire
I.
Two years later, debris scuttles onto the shingle:
fishing boats, brass bowl, a temple gate,
scrap wood, a window frame, shop sign –
there's no closure to some wounds.
Buried in black and beige sand drifts:
someone's smashed mirror, holding
fractured clouds, broken sky.
II.
Unseen, uninvited, radiation floats
then burrows. The
vast currents
that trawl the sea
leave long, invisible streamers.
The truth leaks more slowly
than cesium, plutonium, tritium.
Data, well buried. Don't connect
neighbor's cancer,
the slowly dying trees, those shriveled,
Cerebrus-headed sunflowers.
Don't think about hungry ghosts
devouring flesh and leaf
in the night.
Catherine McGuire, OR, USA
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