Hineini – a poem by Vivien Drabkin

Hineini

Imagine what it is to be a native plant,
to grow in soil that surrounds like skin,
skin that stretches to fit the rooting,
rooting that touches gold and humus, nourished by that rich sponge.

And there is also a plant that is impossible,
it envies tumbleweed that once had roots
epiphytes are miracles that feed on clouds,
this plant moves from pot to pot by strange hands,
blooms on the shortest day of the year,
drops leaves overnight.

Was there a place in God’s garden
for this stranger and exile
who seeks her home through fire
in that burning bush where nothing else was required?

note: הִנֵּנִיis “Hineini” in Hebrew for “Here I am,” and it expresses a total surrender and willingness to serve.  It was said by Abraham, Moses, and other prophets when called by God.

Vivien Drabkin‘s poetry and fiction have been published in Ekstasis, Washington Square Review, and Guernica–A Magazine of Global Arts and Politics. Her poems seek to explore the sacred through an earthly or quotidian lens with a gaze on objects such as a garden, family home, or baseball. She is inspired by poets such as Elizabeth Bishop and Anne Sexton while also drawing on the beauty of God’s language from Scripture. She currently lives in Austin, Texas, where she teaches high school.

After the Electricity Stops – a poem by Andrea E. Johnson

After the Electricity Stops                                                                                                                                                                                                     

Clad in black plastic with gold-
tone accents, you, my late mid-
century AM-FM radio, have three
capsule-size sliding buttons
and two round knobs on top,
as well as a loose coiled wire
for your antenna. I love you,
AM-FM radio, for your modest
size, like a Kleenex box, your easy
volume control, and how I can move
a red bar in a slender window
from low numbers to high.
I’ve set you, AM-FM radio,
on a dresser in a small bedroom
and keep you tuned to classical
music. Your tone is really quite
decent, like when I sing in the shower.

My little AM-FM radio, I turn
you on and off by your vintage
two-prong plug. When I pull
it from the outlet, you have the curious
idiosyncrasy of a moment’s delay
before the electricity stops, i.e.
a fraction of a second in which
the music still plays …

I wonder, AM-FM radio: is this
how dying will be? In eternity,
how long is a fraction of a second?
Will we continue to hear music?

Dear AM-FM radio, this is what I know
for certain: I saw my Grandma Thomassian
in the middle of the night a few days
after she died. She was in her wool
outfit of rose herringbone, the one
she always wore for something special.

Andrea E. Johnson is retired from a long career in public health. She participates now in several writers groups, both poetry and memoir. Her love of the natural world, music, cultural heritage and history makes its way onto the page. She lives on the edge of the Twin Cities in Lake Elmo, Minnesota.

Seed Pods – a poem by Ellen Jane Powers

Seed Pods
In memory of my brother

As I walk the seawall—
now a desert of barnacles—
seed pods collect in the tidal pool
and last year’s leaves lodge
in the rocks below.

My thoughts turn to leaping
we did as children—
you on the pilings of some wharf,
me on the high tide of bedrock.

The tide consumes the leftovers
of mussel beds, the sea gulping
between the rocks, and I remember
what you said to me that day—

High tide, waves lapping across
the jetty’s end and my feet as I reached
for your hand across the bay
and jumped.

Ellen Jane Powers lives on the North Shore of Boston. Her life and career have taken many twists and turns, and now she’s happily retired from corporate life. She spent 12 years on the editorial review board of a small literary journal from Maine. Her poems have appeared in a variety of journals over the years. She has a collection of poetry, Celestial Navigation (Cherry Grove) and a chapbook, Toward the Beloved (Finishing Line).

The Field That Remembers Names – a poem by Isabella Aleksander

The Field That Remembers Names
There is a field that remembers names
long after the mouths that made them close.
Grass bends at the sound of recognition,
not wind—something slower, more deliberate.
I walk through it carefully,
trying not to say anything that might stay.
The soil is dense with unfinished language,
vowels pressed into root systems,
consonants waiting for rain.
Beneath me, a sentence refuses to end.
I kneel.
Press my ear to the ground.
It hums—low, patient, almost human—
and I realize it already knows mine.

Isabella Aleksander is too often confused with pop culture’s most topical red heads. She used to make the claim that her hair is orange not red. She isn’t creative but sometimes her poems are. Her favorite word is circumlocution.

A Blessing on the Readers – a poem by Tammy Iralu

A Blessing on the Readers

who wrangle with words
like a meteorologist
deciphering the skies
and wind

who contemplate
the page, like a blue heron
peering into the lake’s
luminous mirage

who, like eaters of watermelon,
spit out the bitter seed
and let the sweet flesh
sink in

who trim the page
and fill it with breath
like a sail
catching wind

who repurpose
the cadence of a verse
like a jazz pianist
at the keys

with a heart that beats
under the breath of a line
and startles a life
to song

Tammy Iralu lives in New Mexico with her husband and daughter. She enjoys backpacking, hiking, and breaking bread with family and friends. Her poetry draws on the light-infused landscapes of New Mexico and southwest Colorado. Each year she anticipates the summer monsoons, the changing colors of autumn, and the year-round beautiful skies. Her poetry is published or forthcoming in Friends Journal, The Journal of Radical Wonder, Amethyst Review, Mukoli: The Magazine for Peace, The Ekphrastic Review, Cowley Magazine, The Other Side, and elsewhere.

Here I am – a poem by Patrick T. Reardon

Here I am

Precious ointment, good name.

Day of death is true north. Day of birth is first step.
Feast when possible, mourn always, knowing the future.

The soul-sofa franchise of John of Lent advertises:
Rest your weary spirit-bones, calm the joints and sinews
of your ghosts. Calling all souls, flesh below flesh.

Here I am.

At the gate, Lucy sits in wisdom, watches the coming
and going. Her eyes are lines to life, blind to foolish
offerings.

A start is hope. An end is knowledge. Patience is
better than pride. Anger, a sweet trap.

One-Cent carries the bones of Uncle Eddie into the new
covenant land, fresh designated as real estate, no
longer wilderness, now profitable.

Find the straight inside the crooked. Ponder adversity
like a sacred book. Consider the comfort of the rich and
study closely the balance of weights.

The house of many angles — the cop crowd in the park,
a wall of helmet threat. GirlJane is surrounded by a great
cloud of witnesses, saints and angels, chanting:
Persevere in the race to be run.

The breaking of dry leaves, the crackling of human breath.

House of fools is next door to the wise house. Listen to
the words of Wisdom, deep and full. Hear the foolish song
for what it is. Laugh and go your way.

Here I am.

In the mirror, Long John Oremus sees his six eyes, six ears,
an idol’s visage. Flame fires from his mouth. He sees
every thing, hears every thing until he turns away from
the silver. His unrepentant serpent mother, alive in death,
still rules the side ways of his low brain. The high flies
only as far as the chain.

Hambone steals the unwatched minute from the mother
to write this, guilty beyond the walled siege-proof shtetl.
Beyond here lies every thing.

Skin and sorrow discolor and dry like desert.

They say Denmark Jones should be thrown out into the
darkness. They throw him down a deep well with no
water and only mud. He sinks in the mud. At 26th and
California, his case is pleaded.

Embrace no curse. Good or bad, breathe until not. Good
or bad, face what is. Child of the Century walks in a sea of
myth; he sings a tuneless song about the artist of history.
Take hold. Listen to the death bed visitor about to journey.
Hug hospice angels. Keep quiet.

Here I am.

Lincoln Scarlet avoids the one with heart of nettles.



Patrick T. Reardon, a Chicago Tribune reporter from 1976 to 2009, is the author of seven poetry collections. His latest is Every Marred Thing: A Time in America, the winner of the 2024 Faulkner-Wisdom Prize from the Pirate’s Alley Faulkner Society of New Orleans (Lavender Ink). He is a six-time nominee in poetry for a Pushcart Prize. His poetry has appeared in America, RHINO, Commonweal, Blue Unicorn, After Hours, Autumn Sky, Burningword Literary Journal and other journals.

Five foolish virgins – a poem by Jill Husser-Munro

Five foolish virgins 
Notre Dame Cathedral, Strasbourg


Five foolish virgins teetering
on Tequila

Solomon doing his best
with another hopeless case

prophets making banners
for Green Peace and Amnesty

apostles writing letters
for the protection of bees

Church and Synagogue staring over
the long space between them

suave Lucifer doing a deal
that he’ll never keep

young knights riding out
with a saddlebag of bitcoins

gargoyles gawping greedily
at tourists with ice-creams

And then I saw her

the great goddess
the girl with the hazel eyes

the child in her arms
and a cape to cover all sorrow

running over the cobbles
to the Resto du Coeur.


Note: Les Restos du Cœur are soup kitchens, set up by the French comedian Michel Colucci

Jill Husser-Munro grew up in the north of Scotland and has lived and worked in Strasbourg, France, for over thirty years. Her work has been published in Poetry Scotland, Amethyst Review, The Alchemy Spoon, Wildfire Words, Dreich Magazine and Causeway Magazine.

Rocky Mountain – a poem by Johanna Caton O.S.B.

Rocky Mountain


No possibility of reaching the top
that day—or ever. I was nothing
to it.

I sat in the car, but it was too soft
a shield against the unbearable, in-
human god-thing.

I sat looking up, up the mountain,
longing for blindness. A climber’s
sterner stuff.

A climber would have yearned
to ascend, conquer. I yearned
to flee, or free-

fall to the base of the true God,
to whom I was, oddly, something
worth dying for.

Johanna Caton, O.S.B, is a Benedictine nun of Minster Abbey, in Kent, England. Her poems have appeared in The Christian Century, St Austin Review, Ekphrastic Review, Amethyst Review, One Art, Today’s American Catholic, Fathom, Fare Forward, Windhover, The Catholic Poetry Room, and other publications. She is a Pushcart Prize nominee.

Resolve – a poem by Loralee Clark

Resolve

We go to the shore
see the gulls, maybe
we name them:
herring, black-headed,
laughing, ring-billed;
maybe we throw crusts of
saved bread—offerings
that we may pass, we may
stay, may they love us
despite our arrogance and
destruction.

May they love us though
we make ourselves
thieves in their sanctuary;
polluting the air and water,
the least culpable of us
begging forgiveness
for the most.

This winter they fly
inland, covering rows
of harvested mono-crops
in otherwise barren fields.
Are these small migrations
their reply?

We selfishly claimed
what is theirs,
encroaching on
what we are allowed to borrow
for our lifetimes and they come to us,
proclaim, “Enough.” They come
to step on the soil, bless it
with webbed feet
meant for pushing water,
instead pushing grief.

Their ancestors lost the world once;
they refuse to lose it again.

Loralee Clark‘s fourth poetry book is Neolithic Imaginings: Mythical Explorations of the Unknown (Kelsay Press, 2026). Clark has been nominated for three 2026 Pushcart Prizes. She resides in Virginia; her website is sites.google.com/view/loraleeclark. Her Substack, which focuses on the process of creativity, is nosuchthingasfailure.substack.com.

Today—just me and the road – a poem by Deborah Bussewitz

Today—just me and the road

No deep thoughts,
no letting go.
Just Galician green.

The river winds my route
through abandoned pueblos—
doors closed—
a hush.

Through lush forests
of chestnut trees,
through farmland—
bleating, baaing—
the distant hum of a tractor
accompanying my silent walk.

Today’s stop—Samos.
A retreat in the country.
An abbey awaits.

Tomorrow, a rest day.
Soon Sarria, where masses gather.
Soon the final hundred kilometers.

Today, I keep to the solitude.

Deborah Bussewitz is a retired educator and writer whose poetry traces the inner and outer landscapes of the Camino de Santiago. Her work reflects a deep attention to place, presence, and the evolving journey of the spirit. Her work has appeared in The Healing Muse, Silver Birch Press, and Syracuse Cultural Workers calendars.