Good Neighbor – a poem by Keith Melton

Good Neighbor

Morning cooler than usual, the dew glistening.
I decide to trespass to get a better look
Ceramic blue and burnt orange
Nicely glazed with fresh violets, marigolds
And geraniums.

There I observe five pots of flowers
On my neighbor’s porch
And the shadow of a passing sun
Casting thin draperies
Of gray across the doorway.

And now I know I must return
And replace the stolen look
With something resembling hospitality.
Neighbor to neighbor
Asking questions, speaking softly, asking

Of the generosity of light, the watering schedule
The ritual of shadow in the windows.
For today I welcome
The chance to cross over, to be curious
To ask of the little miracles of day

The shadows of birds freckled in the grass
The wind naming its likeness.
The artistry of returning friendship.
Asking what can a neighbor possibly know of peace?
Everything it seems, her smile like a rainbow in the sky.

Keith Melton holds a Master’s in City Planning from Georgia Tech and a BA in Economics and International Studies from the American University. His work has appeared in Amethyst Review, Compass Rose, The Galway Review, Big City Lit, Confrontation, Kansas Quarterly, Mississippi Review, The Miscellany, Pure Slush, Monterrey Poetry Review and others.

Sunday Morning – a poem by Anton Getzlaf

Sunday Morning

Night’s last winking star is tinkling out
On songs for strings and xylophone.
It dawdles down the scale
And brings back up a purple sky.

A voice that whispered loving words
As I was half-asleep
Still curls around my ears
And tickles in the cold of still-wet hair.

Today was made with bakers’ conscientious work.
With gentle palms He pressed
And spread the highs and lows.

All I see’s a mass of lacy veils
That’s moving to the church,
And sunlight cracking through the frost
And all I hear’s a cello strain,
Now close enough to silence it could wet its toes,
Yet rising.

Anton Getzlaf is a poet living in Portland, Oregon. He works as a school custodian for a living.

Spiral – a poem by Barbara Hickson

Spiral


A silver spiral, the clean curve
of a hand-crafted earring gaining weight
as each loop orbits the first.
Light lands gently,
lifts it like a sacred symbol, a sigil
that is constant in nature —
the whorls of a shell
the core of a tornado.
I think of a labyrinth on a Scottish shore
its journey of stones marked in the sand,
how the path curled to a cairn,
a feather, seaweed, driftwood
and how I stood
not knowing who made it
or what it meant
content to reach its still spot
feel myself unwind






Barbara Hickson’s poems have appeared in anthologies and journals including Poetry Salzburg Review, London Grip, Channel, Echtrai and Finished Creatures amongst many others. They have also won prizes in major competitions. She has two poetry pamphlets, A Kind of Silence (Maytree Press, 2021) and Only the Shining Hours (Maytree Press, 2024).
Barbara lives in Lancaster, UK, with her husband and is a keen fell-walker, organic gardener and nature conservation volunteer.

Aubade – a poem by Kathleen A Wakefield


Aubade

4:00 a.m., wide awake.
Coffee, toast, a book.

By 5:00, exhausted, poor excuse
for being human.

I slip outside into the last of the cool night air.

A breeze strokes the birch’s
dangling branches into the mane
of a tender beast.

Tell me, why am I on this earth?

I hear my good friend laughing,
what she’d say,
You are here. Simple.
That’s it.

And mostly she’s happy.

The rose petals of the impatiens
flare from the dark.

How long can I stand here praying
and to what?

To have loved,
that is the thing.

The crickets churn like a quiet engine
turning earth toward the day.



Kathleen A Wakefield‘s first book of poetry, Notations on the Visible World (2000), won the 1999 Anhinga Prize for Poetry. Her second book Grip, Give and Sway was published by Silver Birch Press (2016). Her poems have appeared in such journals as the Alaska Quarterly Review, Blue Line, The Georgia Review, Hubbub, HumanaObscura, Image, One, Poetry, Rattle, River Styx, Sewanee Review, Shenandoah, and Visions International. She has taught creative writing at the Eastman School of Music, the University of Rochester, as a poet-in-the-schools, and share poetry through public libraries.

Confession in Gold – a poem by Andrew Senior

Confession in Gold

Once declared a deliverer
from slavery. Once overlaid
the inner sanctuary. On Dura’s plain
brought threat of fire and fury. Still gifted
to the child of Mary.
Perishable, and stones could sing
in praise of kingly glory; and yet
your ways are infallibly sturdy. To descend,
pure as glass, the street, the heavenly city.
Yet still I speak foolishness
to the Almighty.

So arise Lord,
silence my tongue, break my bones,
refine me.

Andrew Senior is a writer of poetry and short literary and speculative fiction, based in Sheffield, UK. His work has appeared in various publications including Ekstasis, Fathom, Crow & Cross Keys and Postbox Magazine. Visit https://andrewseniorwriting.weebly.com/

What I have learned – a poem by Stephen Joffe

What I have learned

always is
as long as right now

forever is the sun’s tall shadow
across one grasp of green yard

it is today.

& i cannot break your promise-

i am told time expands in every direction at once
there is a world where this is the world,
but for every is there is not:

so, in love- do right by both

fall laughing, & land in the shattered mirror of
grace.

swift is not certain

certain is the sun’s tall shadow
held loosely in the copse where children
turn branch to armament;

we are then called home.

surrender yourself,
wager your full heart upon
the game worth losing

as the ocean gambles its fullness
upon the shore,

as the sun stakes its weightlessness
upon the earth.




Stephen Joffe is an award winning actor, musician, writer, and sound designer based in Toronto. He has previously been published as a playwright, songwriter (Birds of Bellwoods, etc.), and poet.

Land – a poem by Jill Husser-Munro

Land 

Crates of ruby rhubarb,
at the city market,
tall stalks of pink and green,

sour soldiers of the spring,
born in lines beyond the village:
light Rhineland soil,

come closer,
step past the conflicts,
mind the fallen,


hear the cherry tree
in its swirling cape of snow,
call us to the garden.

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 and Dreich Magazine.

Anniversary – a poem by Jesse Breite

Anniversary 

Good Friday came and left.
I recalled a few years before
when my sister died.
We lived in a common sadness
that was ordinary and blue.

When we sat together,
light entered from the window.
The beams were undistinguished
but whole in their holy attention
to the detail and clarity of each
human face. Our invisible breath,
our words, rattled around in that
luminous air. The light streamed in
like a river without gravity
that ran through time’s windows.

The entry was triumphant
and lasted the morning while we sat
together, before the light staled.
And it happened like that every day—
no matter how much we lost, no matter
how many times—that lustrous silence
always came back, and our minds
leaved and flowered through the sky
where we dreamed of following.

Jesse Breite’s recent poetry has appeared in Tinderbox Poetry Journal, The Pinch, Terrain, and Rhino. His first full-length poetry collection is forthcoming from Fernwood Press. Jesse teaches high school in Atlanta, Georgia, where he lives with his wife and two kids. More at jessebreite.com.