By Vyacheslav Konoval Like snow on the head Anxiety lured the mind, easy naivety prevailed, I know, I was blind exactly, conscience failed. When will the crown of the Kremlin King fall? The black domes of churches meet the sun, on the right, a bloody tile polished to a shine, of a pale castle, listening … Continue reading Like Snow on The Head and Other Poems
Life’s Special Blessings and Other Poems
By LaVern Spencer McCarthy Life’s Special Blessings Originally published in Poetry Society of Texas Book of the Year I do not need a keg of gold, or diamonds in a velvet case. I only crave a mockingbird that leads me to a peaceful place along the reaches of my soul no thief can steal, or … Continue reading Life’s Special Blessings and Other Poems
Blood on the Cat’s Neck and Other Poems
By Drew Pisarra Blood on the Cat’s Neck Originally published in Poydras Review Coughing is the language of death with its hacks, rasps and swallows as distinctly out there as the clickity tock of Xhosa or the sonic singing of whales at sea. Yet what is Death telling us when it speaks so abruptly? Is … Continue reading Blood on the Cat’s Neck and Other Poems
The bittersweet whisper of hope
By Anonymous The butterfly around the flame Ashes of hope everywhere In a room locked in my heart In a room in my mind sealed away These along a rainbow waving its colors on the wall Were all of me in the past days Since I heard from the wind That you were still breathing … Continue reading The bittersweet whisper of hope
Ripples and Other Poems
By Sam Barbee Ripples I bait a hook, dunk it like a kiss. Plunk disperses a concentric splash. Each surge of the lake reminds any visitor the loch measures each splay or lap. What creature will break its water next? Frog hop or ducks’ paddle? Mallards glide confident, and rebuke the clouded origin of turtles … Continue reading Ripples and Other Poems
The alphabet of nature And Other Poems
By Domina Petric The alphabet of nature Agate caught the rainbow in its memory. Beryl hid its heart at the bottom of a lake. Carnelian is as sweet as honey. Citrine is the sun that illuminates Earth at noon. Charoite is a picture of a stormy sky and a setting sun. The winter landscape is … Continue reading The alphabet of nature And Other Poems
Patterns
By S.F. Wright Wednesday evening Almost over; Then Thursday, And Friday. The weekend’s Booze Seems like A faraway Oasis; Yet it will Come, go, Disappoint. Then Tired Sunday, Monday; And the oasis Appears Again. S.F. Wright lives and teaches in New Jersey. His work has appeared in Hobart, X-R-A-Y Literary Magazine, and Elm Leaves Journal, … Continue reading Patterns
Wasted Cut Out Flowers and Other Poems
By Richard LeDue Wasted Cut Out Flowers Lucky to have a blank page again, staring at me with more affection than the lovers who don't know they're lovers, who only wake up naked in their dreams, who usually let the silence buy their drinks, who reminisce about paper airplanes crash landing, only to give flight … Continue reading Wasted Cut Out Flowers and Other Poems
They Don’t Talk Much Anymore
By Ed Ahern Their intimacy speaks in the unsaid. opposition unraised, disagreement stilled, stifled correction or contradiction, permission for those close to rest in the wrong while choke-chaining the harsher truths. Little silent helping things saying that courtesy is an inadequate term to explain the need to hold one another in loving stasis. Ed Ahern … Continue reading They Don’t Talk Much Anymore
