Nothing we see is color – a poem by George Cassidy Payne

Nothing we see is color 

Cezanne said that 
but no one believed him 

        All we really see 
            is light 
valiantly massacred
 
the mineral-laden earth 
with its zillions of herbal veins 
and carnivorous flowers 

           mere pinpoints of light 
reverberations of molecular light
 
adorned with ornaments 
of human bones 

George Cassidy Payne is a poet from Rochester, New York (U.S.). His work has been included in such publications as the Hazmat Review, MORIA Poetry Journal, Chronogram Magazine,  Allegro Poetry Journal, Kalliope, Ampersand Literary Review, The Angle at St. John Fisher College and 3:16 Journal. George’s blogs, essays and letters have appeared in Nonviolence Magazine, the Fellowship of Reconciliation, Pace e Bene, USA Today, The Wall Street Journal, The Atlantic, the Havana Times, the South China Morning Post, The Buffalo News and more.

Ciarán of Clonmacnoise – a poem by Richard Manly Heiman

Ciarán of Clonmacnoise

Take my little cow--
the dun one.
Lead her over the hills
the green shower hills        hills
where even the high king
never 
ever 
goes. Take her
as an offering
of bone and rhyme.
Take her
as a tanned bard.

My cow is a sacrifice
of milk and leather.
Her hide is 
wearable whey.
Her tongue is 
vellum.
Her bones fill my skin 
with stories.
She is 
a dazzling beast
with her own story--

I give my 
milk
to the cloistered.
I give my dun 
hide
to the Lebor na hUidre.
I give my 
skull
to the western sea.
I fill the sky
with marrow,
and with psalms.

Richard Manly Heiman lives in the pines of the Sierra Nevada. He works as an English teacher and writes when the kids are at recess. Richard has been published by Rattle, Sonic Boom, Spiritus (Johns Hopkins U.), and elsewhere. His URL is poetrick.com.

At the Poet’s Last Reading – a poem by Anne Whitehouse

At the Poet's Last Reading

	In memory of Mark Strand

In his poems, the drama is elemental:
There was no pain. It had gone.
There were no secrets. There was nothing to say.
The shade scattered its ashes.
The body was yours, but you were not there.
The air shivered against its skin.
The dark leaned into its eyes.
But you were not there.

Those poems light as air
that used to want to fly away 
are now trapped between the covers
of a book three inches thick
and hundreds of pages.

Thoughtfully taking in 
its heft and size, 
the poet balanced the volume
in his open palm, allowing
himself the comment,
“Not bad for a life’s work.”

I was waiting for him to sign
the copy he was holding.
He didn’t notice me at all.
He was looking at the young man
ahead of me about to leave, 
as if he were willing 
some youthful part of himself
to plant its seed in him
and go forward into 
that new life. 

I remember
the moment so clearly,
as if I could actually observe
the flight of one soul
into another, and the youth,
radiating his own glow,
unsuspecting. 

The poet 
was lean as a razor,
his once-handsome features 
craggy as a rock face.
I thought “ill,” but not
“dying.” Yet in two months
he was dead. 

Anne Whitehouse is the author of six poetry collections Meteor Shower (2016) is her second collection from Dos Madres Press, following The Refrain in 2012. She is the author of a novel, Fall Love, as well as short stories, essays, features, and reviews. She was born and raised in Birmingham, Alabama, and lives in New York City. You can listen to her lecture, “Longfellow, Poe, and the Little Longfellow War” here.

Hope – a poem by Francine Witte

Hope


The night is soft with sleepy leaves
and the ghost of a gauzy curtain. 

There is satin in the way you float
into dreams, your arms open and open

again. The hissing sound you heard
all day has finally stopped. Everything

put outside with the trash, sitting at
the curb, it is fizzled and over, until

tomorrow when it all returns, 
baby-new, plump as a berry

whole as the same old promise
of another, better day. 


Francine Witte’s poetry and fiction have appeared in Smokelong Quarterly, Wigleaf, Mid-American Review, and Passages North. Her latest books are Dressed All Wrong for This (Blue Light Press,) The Way of the Wind (AdHoc fiction,) and The Theory of Flesh (Kelsay Books.) Her chapbook, The Cake, The Smoke, The Moon (flash fiction) will be published by ELJ in Fall 2021. She is flash fiction editor for Flash Boulevard and The South Florida Poetry Journal. She lives in NYC.

Noticing – a poem by Sara Sutler-Cohen

Noticing.

The subtle similarities that strike you not as odd but so familiar they go unnoticed. 

And you are at once grounded and have taken flight, hovering above the dirt floor. Enough for security and fear to wrench your spirit. 

So you pay attention because a slippage of curiosity might cost you a soul’s eternity for what it’s worth. 

What is it worth, a soul? 

The darkness swallows cliffs of olive trees, the tips of their leaves scraping at the breeze. 

The sea laps at softened pebbles – or is it worn shards of glass? – and the echo reaches you, half a mile out. 

You are breathing. 

Breathe in the change, subtly visceral or viscerally subtle; you get to choose now because you hold the wheel, you hold the map, you hold the destiny.

Your destiny. 

And then there is the truth that lies beyond the pale. 

You listen for it, the regret, the pride, the woe, the joy. It’s just memory, which is confusing in its madness. 

Forgive it all. Forgive yourself. Forgive the past. Forgive them. Forgive. 

And we’re back. 

Notice.

Sara Sutler-Cohen is an artist and writer living in the Andalucia region of Spain. She is from the East Bay, CA, and has published memoirs, short stories, poetry, prose, and academic writing over the years. She is the Program Director of Human Services at CSU Global. Find out more at http://www.sarasutlercohen.com

Nephilim – a poem by Louise Mather

Nephilim


A calyx of home-spun lavender,
a sacred rose wrested
of its thorns;
in their palms they sat
by the willow tree - until
the world ended.

Beneath secrets and bones,
a delicate creature
born or ripped
with spiralling time.
Hair not skin or a tail
of a beast or

a Nephilim
from the faded cascade;
in that other reality
by the floating water stream under;
the sun years away –
twined up with gold.

Louise Mather is a writer from Northern England and founding editor of Acropolis Journal. Her work is published or forthcoming in magazines such as Fly on the Wall Press, Crow & Cross Keys, Nymphs, Streetcake Magazine, Feral and Dust Poetry Magazine. She writes about endometriosis, fatigue and mental health. Twitter @lm2020uk 

Seeing is Believing – a poem by Bernard Pearson

Seeing is Believing

 
When you look at the sky
And see absolutely nothing,
God's a bit like that.
 
Gradually you make out
Birds gliding high above,
Seeing the world as it is
Not, how we think it should be,
God’s a bit like that
 
You notice clouds,
That may or may not bring rain,
God’s a bit like that.
 
Then you are made aware of the sun
But can not look directly at it,
Because of its brightness,
God’s a bit like that.
 
And when night comes
It is black, and once again
You can see nothing at all,
Yet you know on another night,
Perhaps the next night
You will see the moon,
And her apostles the stars
Lighting the way,
God’s a bit like that.
 
© Bernard Pearson
 

Bernard Pearson’s work  appears in many publications, including; Aesthetica MagazineThe Edinburgh Review, Crossways, Patchwork, FourxFour, The Gentian.  In 2017 a selection of his poetry In Free Fall was published by Leaf by Leaf  Press. In 2019  he won second prize in The Aurora Prize for Writing for his poem ‘Manor Farm’.

Living – flash fiction by Laura Stamps

Living

Lucinda enters the dimly lit church and kneels in a pew. Her parish is open twenty-four hours for Adoration on Thursdays. It’s her favorite time of the week, a private time for private prayer. After reciting her rosary, she slips out of the pew and stops in front of the statue of St. Jude to light one of the votive candles before she leaves. Looking up at the huge statue of her Patron Saint, she remembers how he protected her as a child, helped her escape the stranger who tried to pull her into his car one day after school. She survived, thanks to the saint. How he helped her escape her abusive college boyfriend. And she survived. How he helped her endure fifteen years of marriage to an alcoholic. And she survived. “Thank you for protecting me, St. Jude,” she whispers to the statue. “But I’m tired. Tired of surviving. Tired of taking care of needy people. Tired of doing for others and never for myself. I want more. I want to live. Surviving isn’t living. Teach me how to live well.” As she lights one of the votive candles for this prayer, her cell phone beeps in her purse. It’s a text from her sister, Paula. A distress message. The only kind she receives from her sister. It seems Paula’s babysitter quit, and she needs Lucinda to come over right now and babysit for her. It’s no wonder Paula can’t keep a babysitter. Her children are little monsters. Even so, Lucinda always comes when summoned. Paula is her only sister. What can she do? Beneath the serene face of the saint, Lucinda’s gaze rests on the flickering votives. All those candles. All those prayers. Always answered. After a while Lucinda makes the sign of the cross. Then she turns off her cell phone. She opens the big glass door of the church and steps out into the delicious heat of a summer afternoon.  

Laura Stamps is the author of several poetry and fiction books: The Year of the Cat, In the Garden, Cat Daze, Tuning Out, and more. Winner of the Muses Prize. Recipient of a Pulitzer Prize nomination and 7 Pushcart Prize nominations. Mom of 5 cats. Twitter: @LauraStamps16. Website:www.laurastampspoetry.blogspot.com   

First Word – a poem by Joanne Durham

First Word


We waited – 
through coos 
and babbles, 
pebbles the tides 
tossed from his lips,

waited 
for a sound
we could proudly 
proclaim
as papa, 

for something 
akin to boo
as blueberries 
purpled 
his chin.

Finally, as sun 
startled 
his drowsy eyes,
he said ite. 
With outstretched arms 

he chased beacons 
bouncing across the ceiling,
wobbled 
into the shared space 
of language,

and first, 
there was light


Joanne Durham is a retired educator living on the North Carolina coast, with the ocean as her backyard. She was a finalist for the 2021 NC Poetry Society’s Laureate Award and the NC State Poetry Contest. Her publications and background can be found at https://www.joannedurham.com/.