Some days are uneventful,
Others bustle with delight.
But each day begs one question –
What will dinner be tonight?
Mr. Winick began reading and writing poetry two years ago, at nearly age 65, after concluding a long career as an attorney.
An online journal for small literature
Some days are uneventful,
Others bustle with delight.
But each day begs one question –
What will dinner be tonight?
Mr. Winick began reading and writing poetry two years ago, at nearly age 65, after concluding a long career as an attorney.
We were only ever colors
Turquoise
Yellow
Crimson
Gazing up while fading gray
We say the stars are suns
Our eyes and ears dissolve
We say their light is old
Our hands disintegrate
We momentarily live fully
In the restless pressing
Of our unseen hips on uneven land
Then sleep to wake
And assume the crisp shapes
Of saturated dreams
Kathryn Spratt is a teacher more than she is anything else, but she is also the primary walker of an unruly Brittany Spaniel. Her hobbies include being married and taking pictures of trees.
I remember the night we met,
The clouds were thundering and earth was wet,
My heart skipped a beat,
When you sat near my seat.
Vishal Sharma is a 22 year old student currently preparing for entrance examinations. He likes poetry which speaks; not only to our ears but to our minds and heart. He lives in Chattisgarh,India.
That could be
The title
Of every chapter
From cave to
Luxury mansion
From wheel to
Quantum world
I pick up the transmission
It does not differ
It is completely
Detached from form
Aeon after aeon
Deed after deed
The time
The effort
The accomplishment
They are there
To be rid of
Put down the book
There is no story
To be written
J H Martin is from London, England but has no fixed abode. For more information, please visit: https://acoatforamonkey.wordpress.com/
Finely mincing oaths–
recipes for disaster
on the chopping block
Charles Brand is a teacher and counselor in the Florida Department of Corrections who enjoys using any spare time and inspiration in the service of writing. Holding a master’s degree in western history, Charles is motivated to blend formal and informal skills in creative writing and persuasion to attract readers who want more out of the printed word, regardless of circumstance.
Your ache splits the rays of sunshine
Scatters the light through the clouds
Drenching the days with dreams raining down
Just to rise again with the heat of your heart
In songs of birds, in the flapping of their wings
Your love story carries on—
The beating wind, leaves lush and eager
Spinning through the air to the ground
Softening your path as you search
Thrusting your hands upwards to the hushed sky
You feel him now, a timeless canopy —
In fields you dance with the fireflies
Shelley Smithson is an emerging poet, writing for the love of expressing emotions in the form of images and phrases. She is a psychotherapist in her professional life and loves being in nature with family and friends. She relishes beating her husband at cribbage and likes dark cloudy days as much as the sunshine days of her home town of Elk Rapids, MI.
Granny can’t shell
boiled peanuts no more
but when I strip away the hard shells,
give her my little prizes,
she sure can smack her lips and cry
“Some good!”
I wrote that last week
as she sat at the kitchen table,
toothless and cackling and crazy alive.
Now I crack and peel
my little pile of prizes
for an empty table.
I can’t eat them today without her.
But I still lick my fingers
for that salty tear taste
of some good memories.
Michael Guillebeau has published seven novels and 41 stories, and a few poems.
Sometimes on nice days.
I clear my mind…and use my innermost lens.
Taking mental snapshots of where we landed.
I do this because.
I want you to see with your own eyes.
That you were so very wrong.
I was able to make you proud.
Us proud.
Angela Moore currently works at Yale University in the Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library. She enjoys writing poetry and relaxing with coloring books.
I used to fall
Face first
Now
I don’t even move
There are enough miles
In those dead end towns
And neon streets
To close down
Any parlour
Not of the flesh
But of the mind
This quiet space
This country village
It calms the need for more
No motorbikes
No mopeds
No waking up
On the side of some road
The morning here
Brings fresh air
I steep
I don’t stir
These passing leaves
J H Martin is from London, England but has no fixed abode. For more information, please visit: https://acoatforamonkey.wordpress.com/
Even when the night air’s still
the sky and all that fills it will
not merely be, but twinkle, writhe, and wink.
One such night without a breeze
I camped by a lake enclosed by trees
and, staring at it, knew not what to think:
In the lake, the low and innocent
had seemed to swallow the firmament—
the moon herself and every constellation—
as if each being in the sky
with all its aches, as well as I,
had accepted a humble invitation
by cloning itself, then sent the clone
so the lake would not be so alone.
Alone, unseen, I suddenly stripped and dove
and, holding my breath, diving deeper yet,
I felt, with the darkness and the wet,
a tingle. Call it “universal love.”
When later I was drying in
the moonlight, I observed how my skin
wore a thousand starlit sequins—from the dive—
and, panting, came to realize
a secret of the still night skies:
That stars don’t only twinkle, writhe
and wink, but, with our mindless, blithe
emergences, will breathe, as if alive.
James B. Nicola, a returning contributor, is the author of six collections of poetry, the latest being Fires of Heaven: Poems of Faith and Sense. His decades of working in the theater culminated in the nonfiction book Playing the Audience: The Practical Guide to Live Performance, which won a Choice award.