Sermons- a poem by Philip Kolin

Sermons

The preacher's words winnow the air.
Pray with your eyes closed. Listen to
God singing. Be grateful for birds and breezes.

Humility means never carrying an umbrella.
Storms are temporary; sunshine is inevitable.
Don't let grudges worm into your heart.

Live on the heavenly side of your life.
When angels come, they come with seeds
in their pockets, not money. Time vanishes

in eternity. Tombstones are anchors for memories
of passed souls. When Jesus comes in the clouds to judge, 
he will utter one word to each of us. More? or Less?

Philip Kolin is the Distinguished Professor of English (Emeritus) and Editor Emeritus of the Southern Quarterly at the University of Southern Mississippi. He has published over 40 books, including twelve collections  of poetry and chapbooks. Among his most recent titles are Emmett Till in Different States (Third World Press, 2015), Reaching Forever (Poiema Series, Cascade Books, 2019), Delta Tears (Main Street Rag, 2020), Wholly God’s:Poems (Wind and Water Press, 2021), and Americorona: Poems about the Pandemic (Wipf and Stock, 2021).

Gravel – a poem by Jane Greer

Gravel
 
My prayers drop to the ground like so much gravel,
salting the path on which it seems I travel.
Who made the path before me? Others praying.
Kadosh, kadosh, kadosh I hear them saying.

Jane Greer founded Plains Poetry Journal, an advance guard of the New Formalism movement, in 1981, and edited it until 1993. She is author of the poetry collection Love like a Conflagration (Lambing Press, 2020), and her next collection, The World as We Know It Is Falling Away, will be published this fall, also by Lambing Press. She lives in North Dakota.

Ruth and Imogen: poetry for Ruth Asawa by Anne Whitehouse

Ruth and Imogen

Ruth:

When I married Albert Lanier
and we moved to San Francisco,
it was as if we leapt 
into an entirely new existence
that was nothing like our families.

All my life, I’ve been blessed 
with mentors—my teachers 
in the public schools in Norwalk, 
the Disney cartoonists at Santa Anita,
my teachers at Rohwer and in Milwaukee
and Black Mountain College.

It was the same in San Francisco.
Just when I needed her
and I didn’t know it, 
Imogen showed up.

We met through her son, Rondal,
a photographer hired by Albert’s firm.
By then we’d been in San Francisco 
for over a year. Albert’s hopes of working 
for himself hadn’t panned out, and I’d given 
birth to our twins, Xavier and Aiko.

When Albert praised Rondal’s work,
Rondal replied, “You must meet my mother.”
One afternoon soon after that, the doorbell rang. 
I answered it with a baby on each arm. 
A woman with wispy white hair
stood framed by the doorway, 
bearing a jar of Satsuma plum jam 
made from the fruit of her own tree.

She wore a cotton print dress
and a cable-knit sweater. 
Her black lace-up shoes were sprinkled 
with white construction dust 
from work in the street.
Before she entered my house,
she wiped her shoes with a handkerchief. 

That was how I met Imogen Cunningham.
A Rolleiflex hung from a leather strap
around her neck, its two vertical lenses
like Cyclops’ eyes. That day
she did not take pictures,
but a few months later I wrote to Celia,
my friend in Milwaukee:

A photographer came to photograph
a piece of wire sculpture
and took pictures of the babies.
We saw the proofs last week,
and they are very good.
She has a brief and biting tongue 
and all of her senses are alertly attuned
to react instantaneously.

Although I was 24 and she was 67,
Imogen and I became instant friends.
She championed me when art critics 
labeled me a housewife, and my sculptures 
were dismissed as crafts.

She said my history drew her to me.
One of her closest friends
was a Japanese artist and architect
who’d also been interned at Santa Anita.
She had kept his belongings safe 
for him until after the war. 

Imogen had three sons, including twins.
That was another bond between us.
For years she’d struggled to be artist, 
wife, and mother. Her husband, Roi Partridge, 
couldn’t bear her success. After they married, 
she closed her Seattle studio.

In San Francisco, she made delicate close-ups
of flora and fauna in her backyard garden.
They were exhibited and celebrated,
and her career was relaunched.
While she was in New York 
on assignment for Vanity Fair, 
Roi filed for divorce in Reno. 

Imogen was soured on men and marriage. 
When she learned I was using 
my married name to exhibit my work, 
she was appalled. Albert agreed.
It made no sense, he said, to have 
a French name and an Asian face.

Eventually Albert won Imogen over.
We made an agreement—
for the next three years
she would photograph my work.
In return Albert would make 
renovations to her house.

Imogen’ example helped me 
find my way as an artist and a mother.
She showed me how to transform 
frugality into meaningful elegance. 
She taught me that poverty 
is a state of mind, and you are poor 
only if you dwell on it.  
Her artistic spirit pervaded
every aspect of her existence,
enlivening her sons’ upbringing
and enriching their environment.

We had much in common—
dance, children, and gardens.
Introducing me to his mother,
Albert had said, “She’d rather dance
than eat.” Imogen, too, had a love
of movement. As a photographer,
she used light to create life.
In some of her pictures, my sculptures 
seem to grow and I to diminish.
They surround me, protect me, hide me.
The light strikes them, and I am in the shadows.
In others, I am at work, and they are in progress.
When I touch them, they come to life.

When I met Imogen, she was already old.
I used to amuse myself by imagining
what she was like when she was my age.
Appearances notwithstanding,
she was one of the most passionate 
people I’ve ever known. I look 
at her pictures of me and my work 
and my children, and I see love, 
concentration, pride, joy, astonishment, 
and sensuality. It’s as if I can see myself thinking.
How did she do it? I don’t know.
But I do know that she was fearless 
in the same way that I am.


Imogen:

To photograph some of Ruth’s sculptures,
I used a reverse-negative process 
to create a gelatin silver print,
in which they appear illuminated 
against a black background.
Reversing the process again, 
I printed a positive, where the dark sculptures 
cast shadows against a light backdrop. 

Growing up, I had a scientific bent.
At the University of Washington,
I majored in chemistry and made lantern slides
for the botany department, assembling
a visual catalog of its specimens
in the days before slide projectors.
A sheet of glass was sensitized
with a gelatin silver emulsion.
The plate was exposed to a negative,
resulting in a positive transparency 
valued for its complexity and tonal range.
I appreciated the subtlety of the process
and continued my work in that medium
when I went out on my own. 

I wrote Ruth’s recommendation
for a Guggenheim fellowship:
She is an unfailingly creative person
and an indomitable worker. 
Although young, she has maturity 
and a balance that few achieve.  
The more she undertakes,
the more she accomplishes.

I was certain she’d be selected,
but each time she applied,
she was passed over.
It’s true I was hardly objective.
After twenty years of fruitless efforts,
I confessed to the committee:
I may be too involved in her work
to be a cool observer,
as I have photographed much of the sculpture, 
making it mine as well as hers.

Success and failure
are matters of perspective,
and perspectives change.
When I met Ruth, I recognized
an old soul, despite her youth.
She credited my example,
but I think I learned more from her
than she from me. Her energy
and industry astonished me.
It came from her upbringing
as a farmer’s daughter.
She seemed to draw strength
from the earth up through her body.
She brought life into everything she touched,
and everything she made had a wholeness
and satisfaction to it. I worried 
that her wish to have a large family
and be an artist wouldn’t come true,
but she thrived in the ferment of family life, 
calming disorder and confusion,
radiant in her sense of concentration.
.
In the late 1950s, Ruth and Albert bought
a country property in Guerneville, 
near the Russian River, in Sonoma County,
an area they’d come to know and love 
through Marguerite Wildenhain,
a potter they’d befriended at Black Mountain,
who’d established a ceramics studio
at nearby Pond Farm. The Laniers’ property 
had an underground stream, a redwood grove,
a barn with aluminum siding where they lived,
and a shed where they kept their tools.
Some of my happiest times were my visits
to Guerneville. As old age advanced,
it meant more and more to me. 

Their marriage was a true partnership,
something I never had. Albert was steadfast,
and he had a gift, like Ruth, of inspiring people
to do what they never thought themselves capable of.
When he was renovating their house on Castro Street,
Albert enlisted the help of his two older sons, 
friends, schoolboys, a few union workers, 
odd jobbers, and alcoholics who stashed empties 
on the site that kept turning up for years.

He used recycled and repurposed materials
to transform the house from a two-bedroom
cottage with a loft for a pipe organ into a home 
with light and space for a family of eight, 
where Ruth’s sculptures hung from the ceiling
of the loft, as in a cathedral of art 
whose tall windows looked out to the bay, 
and there was an attic bedroom for the girls
and a dormitory for the boys, suspended
between the workshop-studio and backyard 
garden planted with rose, iris, wisteria, 
bleeding heart, rosemary, and columbine
in one of the sunniest spots in San Francisco.

Their home encouraged a creative family life
to which all contributed. In the summers
Ruth and her children picked apples 
in the orchards near Guerneville 
to pay for their school clothes. 
They labored in their garden,
growing fruits and vegetables. 
Ruth believed in drawing every day. 
“Whether or not you become an artist, 
drawing will make you better at whatever 
you choose to do,” she told her children.

She and her children carved two oversized 
redwood doors for the Castro Street house 
in a wavelike pattern of moving spirals 
that morph into shapes of a human face 
to conceal the doorknobs. Ruth drew 
the meandering design in white chalk, 
and the children helped her to carve 
and burnish it. Once an area was chiseled,
a small torch burned the rough edges smooth, 
raising the grain and softening the contours, 
and then it was cleaned with a wire brush.
Ruth allowed five-year-old Adam,
who was obsessed with bees, to poke 
“bee holes” into the wood. Participation 
was more important than perfection. 

Over the years Albert bought adjacent properties, 
removing the fences that divided their backyards, 
creating a family compound and communal garden. 
A nurturing energy seemed to radiate from their home,
expressed not only in their bountiful harvests 
shared with grateful recipients like me, 
but in their abiding concern for their community.

As a student in the Norwalk public schools,
Ruth took dance, music, and art classes 
taught by working artists. By the time 
her children started school in San Francisco,
that commitment to the arts was gone.
Ruth’s activism focused on arts education. 
She began a workshop in her children’s school
that grew to a city-wide initiative and led
to the founding of a public arts high school.

The exuberant mermaids nursing their babies
in her Ghirardelli Square fountain 
were scorned by the landscape architect.
He would have preferred a phallic tower  
spraying water forty feet high.
For once the male vision didn’t triumph. 
When she designed the fountain
with its gentle mists and looping jets of water,
its sinuous plants and sea creatures,
and delicate webbed tails
of the mermaids and merbabies,
Ruth said she was thinking of children 
and chocolates, and of the Little Mermaid 
in Copenhagen, another city by the sea,
and of wanting her mermaids not to be as lonely.

More enigmatic was the sculpture 
we created together of a young girl
on the cusp of adolescence
with slim flanks and bare breasts.
She has assumed the posture of Venus de Milo.
Her pelvis is tilted, and her weight rests
on her straight right leg,
while her left knee is bent.

We called her “The Hair Skirt,”
because she is wearing a pleated miniskirt
I made of photo-sensitized linen
printed with multiple images 
of my “Phoenix Recumbent,”
a reclining female nude
with flowing blond hair.
Using surgical gauze and plaster, 
Ruth made a life-cast of ten-year-old Addie 
and painted her gray. 
She is not only missing arms,
but a head as well.

Without any arms, Venus de Milo
is helpless to prevent the loose cloth
she wears from slipping past her hips.
In a moment it will fall, 
and her full nakedness will be revealed.

Not so our girl. Her miniskirt 
is secured by an elastic waistband.
Her hem skims the bottom of her butt.
She is both sexy and demure,
seductive and forceful.
Our sculpture created a minor sensation
when it was exhibited
in “U.S.A. in Your Heart.”
Mine was the only photograph
not mounted on a wall—
two women, one older and the other old,
channeling youth, having a bit of fun.


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.

#poem – a poem by Yevgeniya Przhebelskaya

#poem


a poem

a poem 
whispered as a prayer

a poem 
whispered as prayer,
clutched by the fingers of a starry-eyed MFA student

a poem
whispered as a prayer
clutched by the fingers of a starry-eyed MFA student
tapped in cigarette dish of an overcaffeinated adjunct professor 

a poem
whispered as a prayer
clutched by the fingers of a starry-eyed MFA student
tapped in cigarette dish of an overcaffeinated adjunct professor
folded into the Möbius strip of a teaching contract

a poem
whispered as a prayer
clutched by the fingers of a starry-eyed MFA student
tapped in cigarette dish of an overcaffeinated adjunct professor
folded into the Möbius strip of a teaching contract
revived for a year

a poem
whispered as a prayer
clutched by the fingers of a starry-eyed MFA student
tapped in cigarette dish of an overcaffeinated adjunct professor
folded into the Möbius strip of a teaching contract
revived for a year
revived for a year

Yevgeniya Przhebelskaya is a bilingual poet, educator and caregiver. She draws inspiration from the Bible, Russian literature, modern American poetry, and her recent parenting experiences. Yevgeniya’s poems have been published in Amethyst Review, Ekstasis, Trouvaille Review and many other publications, and were nominated for the Pushcart Prize two times. Check out her blog at ypoetry.weebly.com

Soliloquy of the Soul to the Self – a poem by Catherine Gonick

Soliloquy of the Soul to the Self


already a couple of years down the road
	I first notice 
myself through your knowing

realize
I have been looked and listened for
all this time by my companion

I who look and speak
       only through
your mouth and eyes 

and at that moment it is difficult to 
imagine     yet I do

the distance we might walk 
together 

through your growing up
   aging and then dying
your continuing

all the while to want to know 
    when I am holding
your warm hand 

which I can’t feel any more
than myself 

even in the melt of
moments when we two 

twine into one
    inside another

world
and I still
   	wonder

no matter
how deep      our woods
magic    our mountain			

if the day you leave
I will remember

myself before
knowing you

and how I will know
myself after


Catherine Gonick’s poetry has appeared in publications including Soul-Lit, Beltway Poetry Quarterly, Live Encounters, Notre Dame Review, New Verse News, Sukoon, and Forge, and in anthologies including in plein air, Grabbed, and Dead of Winter 2021.  She works in a company that combats the effects of global warming. 

River Hymn – a poem by Michael Sandler

River Hymn



Where I grew up, the river was a concrete trough; 
to the citizens, a profane improvement—
perhaps why I’m drawn to wilder rivers:

their glinting in sunlight and choppy pewter
after a storm; ferrying an intelligence  
of clouds, sinuous, homing to the sea.

Artery between these inland thoughts
and ocean’s vastness—each spill and gush
catholic, dismissive of state, of sect.

Unquenched by civil icons, I have faith
in river water—to wade into… and drink.
Within its surface sky, ripples, the deep—

you can fathom why the ancients worshiped water gods: 
an aqueous caprice fluid/clear/opaque,
now mirroring, now blotting out my face,

raging over banks to flood innocent domains, 
spume of an angry immanence…
Hours later, all languor and veiled current.

Proteus, the alias of a flow I step into.
Even its burble ever-shifting, yet familiar.
A hymn if I’m attentive. A water psalm

recited when I plug my ears and listen
to grotto whispers, a summons 
not skyward, but to a tributary within.

Michael Sandler is the author of a poetry collection, The Lamps of History (FutureCycle Press 2021) that Kirkus Reviews described as a “complex, electric work of erudite poems.” His work has appeared in scores of journals, including recently in Arts & Letters, Literary Imagination, and Smartish Pace. Michael lives near Seattle; his website is www.sandlerpoetry.com.

Dark Night – a poem by Jeffrey Hanson

Dark Night
—for Mark Halliday


We know. He’s a poet who presses flowers: 
Sweet Rhodora and Lady’s Tress—
still white, still nodding. 

And he’s famous for saying: What’s “good 
for the soul is the work of the soul.”
But no poem? No poem. 

The storm knocks his door tonight.
Maples toss the dark wind from their leaves 
while Walden’s waters argue black and white.

Even so, muses must meet between page
and pen to tell us the beautiful thing. 
We know. 

What’s “good for the soul is the work of the soul” 
and a man makes “advances confidently in the 
direction of his dreams.”

But writing the beautiful and the pert is tough 
and the storm pleads the worst of prospects
after all.

And prayer begs when the wrong God rules
and a poem about being without itself is nonsense. 
So tonight, no begging. No God.

A sack of beans and a hoe in the corner are earthly 
nodes that promise possibility. The cabin, the hearth, 
the table and the lamp, the flame and the fire.

We know. To find the thing that must be found
the thing that makes the senses sing, the poet 
must do battle. 

We know he must stick close to possibilities
but raise a sword as well to abet the storm 
that nudges nature to crack itself open, for us.

Jeffrey Hanson received a Ph.D. in English and Creative Writing from Ohio University. He lives with his wife, Marilyn, in Bellingham, Washington. Despite fears, anxieties, and feelings of helplessness, we must remember that the Buddha was correct to say: “All is well.” That knowledge is a gift

Thinking About What is Useless – a poem by George Freek

Thinking About What is Useless (After Mei Yao Chen) 


Things of the night crawl
from their frightening holes,
as snow begins to fall.
Flowers and men are buried
in their earthly graves,
forever to stay that way.
Why we exist is a mystery,
I’ll never solve.
The stars are beacons,
but give little light.
I pour a cup of tea.
Questions without answers
will disappear
with the early morning light.

George Freek‘s poetry has appeared in numerous Journals and Reviews. His poem “Written At Blue Lake” was recently nominated for a Pushcart Prize.

Sunday Morning – a haibun by Keith Polette

Sunday Morning

Bananas slouch in the fruit bowl next to apples that loll like beached buoys.  An aspen tree rattles in the wind.  Sparrows settle in the yard like curled leaves, while the sun, defrocked of clouds, dangles like the bottom of a banjo after being played.  A faint moon, that ventriloquist of light, slowly fades, turning its gaze back to the dark.  

	sunflower burst
	the kettle singing atop
	petals of flame

Down the hill and past the field, as if it had been birthed in gravel, a train unhooks itself from silence and blows its horn, heaving the freight of its two-note chant into the day.  The incense of diesel lingers in the air.  A cicada, out of season, is fixed fast in its genuflection upon a tree.  On the riverbank, turtles, like the beads of a rosary, bask in untamed light.  The porcelain bowl inside the house waits to spill its secrets . . . 

	empty turtle shell
	a hand-carved chalice
	waiting for wine  

If only the spider pulsing in the woodshed web would recite its single sin.  

	beneath the desert 
	a host of red-spotted toads
	ready to rise



Keith Polette has published poems in both print and online journals.  His book of haibun, pilgrimage, received the Haiku Society of America’s Merit Book Award in 2021.

A Little Less to Cut – a poem by Edward Alport

A Little Less to Cut


I know where I will lie,
Down where the hawthorn and the blackthorn
Hide the water and the sea,
And keep the goats at bay.

I may not know how many times
I’ll cut the grass and trim back the hedge.
Every year a little less to cut,
Another patch to weave the mower round,

Another friend of mine, named in stone
Another face who knew me as a kid.
They all wait for me, and to them
I’ll always be the kid, and always was.

I know where I will lie.
Part of the village memory.
A name. A place, ordered in a record book.
‘Wasn’t he the poet?’ That’s what’s left of me.



Edward Alport is a retired teacher and proud Essex Boy. He occupies his time as a poet, gardener and writer for children. He has had poetry, stories and articles published in a variety of webzines and magazines. He sometimes posts snarky micropoems on Twitter as @cross_mouse.