S C A T T E R – a poem by Marlene M. Tartaglione

 
"When you leave this earth, you will not
be able to take with you
anything that you have received...
Only what you have given."

-- St. Francis of Assisi


S C A T T E R

... Far-flung-- as if, at first strung
from the wind's nail, impaled
on its tempest of time
then freed-- unfurled-- to go
where the Profane
courts-or-collides
with the ethereal Sublime--
either to descend or climb
such stairways, rung by rung.
Above, or Below-- so as to know
those regions where fate
might lure or lead, to then go on
in choice, as both Heart & Voice,
to become, Oneself, the breadth
& scope of an entire driven World.

Marlene M. Tartaglione is an artist whose creativity manifests poetry, children’s literature, visual arts. Her work has appeared in presses nationally & abroad. Ms. Tartaglione has won 4 poetry prizes, her work presented at venues such as the Brooklyn Museum, M.O.M.A, New York Book Fair. Her poem, S C A R E B, has recently been nominated for a 2025 Pushcart Prize. Ms. Tartaglione’s M.B.A. studies were conducted at NYU; Ms. Tartaglione also holds a B.F. A. from the Cooper Union, where she studied with poet/ educator/ scholar, Dr. Brian Swann.

A Prayer – a poem by Prudence T.K. Vasquez

A Prayer

Seconds are history’s dust
seen buoyant in sun-shafts.
We are present, all,
willing or not.
May our particles
be neither dirt, nor glitter,
nor lung-scratching refuse.
but clean silver
even gold,
that we might
reflect. 

Prudence T.K. Vasquez is a poet living and writing in her own quiet Rivendell amidst the misty mountains of southern Appalachia.

Chasing Contentment – a poem by Annelise St. Clair

Chasing Contentment

You elusive thing, you
essential element of the ordered soul,
paragon of the unhindered life—

You are sedentary, yet I must chase you;
selfless, yet you give of yourself only with struggle

with hard struggle

and so quiet I must drown the world’s enfolding noise
to hear you whisper ancient wisdom.

Your modest presence adheres to no trends
and seeks no compensation from your followers.

You could never turn a profit
in these days of endless want.

Would that I could slow
my chase enough
to find you.

Annelise St. Clair is a writer and higher education program manager in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Her poetry has previously appeared in The Harvard Ichthus.

Hair Care – a poem by Margaret Galvin

Hair Care

Luke’s Gospel assures that
Even the hairs of your head are numbered.
I think of my mother,
coppery rivulets of dye pooling in the wrinkles of her face
as the colour ‘took’ under a tin- foil cap.
Visitors at the gate, a hullabaloo of bamping car horns,
my mother ducking her head in a bucket of water,
towels daubed with peroxide, kicked out of sight.
I think of old women, with old men’s faces,
sparse patches of hair thinned with alopecia,
or young women’s heads cropped close before the chemo
and the bald white dome.

God of emergent stubble and frail feathery strands,
have mercy.
God of young girl’s heads streaked cerise and turquoise
keep vigilant when the dye job goes wrong.
God of bob and pixie, of mullet and fade, perm and highlights
look after all those handsome Turkish barbers
who set up in Irish towns, their salons decorated with pictures of Izmir,
the Blue Mosque, the Grand Bazaar.
Protect the black sheen of their hair from all that encroaches to turn it grey.
God of youngsters on work experience
who sweep up the wet, spiky trimmings, deliver on their dreams of better.

Margaret Galvin is an Irish poet and memoir essay writer who lives in Wexford. She has published six collections of poetry and prose, lyrical narrative in style. She was awarded the Francis Ledwidge Poetry Award 2025. Her essays are frequently broadcast on national radio in Ireland, particularly in a programme called ‘Sunday Miscellany.’ She holds a degree and a Masters in Social Care and works as a creative writing facilitator for supported groups in cancer care, enduring mental illness and disability.

Prevailing – a poem by Grant Shimmin

Prevailing 

Tell me, tree, of the wild easterly wind
that scythes up the valley floor towards you
bends you away from its in-your-face blast
freezes you in a state of perpetual flight

Tell me how they speak of it in these parts;
the hushed tones they use to call it prevailing
Despite its worst efforts, I see you still standing
It’s clear to me that something is prevailing here

Grant Shimmin is a South African-born poet who has lived in New Zealand since 2001. His passions are words, humanity, justice, the natural world. He has work published in more than 30 journals worldwide.

Ambition – An Interview – a poem by Gail White

Ambition –  An Interview

What is your great ambition?
Immortal fame. To write the best poems ever.
And when you realized
that was unrealistic?
That never
happened. I just toned it down.
Submitted everywhere. Took part
in competitions. To this day,
every rejection breaks my heart.

What was your first ambition?
To be a saint. My model was Teresa
of Avila. And when you realized
that was unrealistic?
At Easter
I think of it. But holiness
must be an accident, like sin.
There are such beautiful temptations,
and bliss in giving in.

Gail White is a formalist poet, contributing editor to Light Poetry Magazine, cat lover, long-time resident of South Louisiana. Laissez les bon temps rouler!

Grace – a poem by Stephen Lefebure

Grace

Listen to the nothing. You can hear it
In between your heartbeats for so long
That your lungs have centuries to rest.
Understand your death and do not fear it.
Dying is the moment in a song
When the singer has to fill his breast
And a note is waiting. To appear, it
Finds the pitch where feeling will belong.
Where it lands, its frequency, is best
Sung an octave higher than your Spirit.
Listen to the nothing. It is strong
In the blessing given to the blessed.

Poetry by Stephen Lefebure may be found in his own volume, Rocks Full of Sky, and in Wild Song – Poems of the Natural World and Going Down Grand: Poems from the Canyon, two anthologies of nature poetry. His work may also be found in journals like Wilderness, The Literary Review, Chicago Studies, Weber Review, Bombay Review, Carmina Magazine, and Bangalore Review. He lives in Evergreen, Colorado, USA.

Lake Loon – a poem by Marso

Lake Loon

Unsteadily I step onto a dock
where I tie my boat—

stranded ashore.

The darkening lake
mirrors the rising moon,
mysterious and out of reach—
deep sky waters
that curate memories.

A loon calls—

Why do we hear it as mournful?
Perhaps we imagine it
giving voice to our own—
our silence—
a silent gliding
like the loon,
lone upon the watery sky-mirror,
belying a paddling swirl beneath.

Marso writes poetry shaped by years of living within different cultures and by a practice of close attention to ordinary life.

Self-portrait with Sharpening Tool – a poem by David Hanlon

Self-portrait with Sharpening Tool

Am I sculpting this poem to death,
chiselling my life to erosion?
blue chalk streaking lined palms.
A sentence cleaved into one spare image,
last slow breath rolling over the riverbank —
grit in the teeth, the stone worn thin.
Crystalline or pared to fleshless bone?
Simple — or simply less?
I want to embody memory, be more
of all I am left of —
edges worn clean,
limbs tracing air,
fresh breath in tiny sails.

David Hanlon is a poet based in Cardiff, Wales. His work appears in numerous magazines and journals, including Rust & Moth, Anthropocene and trampset. His latest collection, Dawn’s Incision, was published by Icefloe Press. You can follow him on Twitter @davidhanlon13 and Instagram @hanlon6944.