Peter returns to his nets – a poem by Herman Sutter

Peter returns to his nets

Before the sea was solid
it was safe for me

to sink beneath the waves
and rise upon each crest.

My only destiny:
nets and hooks and fingers from

fashioning a day
out of sweat and sun,

scales and blood, and the salt breath
of an evening breeze

thick as my lungs.
But I was free

always`

to find my way and sink
beneath the same
waves

I now have walked
upon.

Herman Sutter is the author of the chapbooks Stations (Wiseblood Books), and The World Before Grace (Wings Press). His work appears in: Saint Anthony Messenger, The Ekphrastic Review, tejascovido, The Langdon Review, The Porch, Benedict XVI Institute, The English Review, The Merton Journal as well as the anthologies: Texas Poetry Calendar (2021) & By the Light of a Neon Moon (Madville Press, 2019). His narrative poem Constance, received the Innisfree prize for Poetry. His latest manuscript, A Theology of Need was long listed for the Sexton prize in poetry.

Prodigal – a poem by Jean Biegun

Prodigal


And so to them I gave a foolish son
the couple with scientific bent

and that woman lit by poetry
a daughter who was starch

The more forward of archangels
asked why …

That they come to inhabit
my labyrinthine heart of course

sample batches of earthy alchemies
stirring dust to sweat to ecstatic dance

mine tunnels through ice mountains
and then melt those same mountains

Thus to see me and sip
my honeyed air


Jean Biegun is retired in California after a lifetime in the Midwest USA. Her poems have appeared in numerous journals and anthologies. She has received two Pushcart nominations and written two poetry collections, Hitchhikers to Eden and Edge Effects (2022 and 2024, Kelsay Books). Recent work is in Third Wednesday, The Scarred Tree: Poetry on Moral Injury, Ekstasis, Unbroken, and Thin Places and Sacred Spaces: A Poetry Anthology (Amethyst Press).

It Is Always This – a poem by J.M. Summers

It Is Always This

It is always this that we
return to. Cold walls that
restrict the heaving waves,
the votive candles that keep
our prayers kindled when we
are gone. A simple altar,
stained glass, the swallows
maintain their own form of
worship. And we, rediscovering
the hush within that is the
imitation of the greater one
without, the unspoken admonishment
which is the only answer
the prayer requires.

J.M. Summers was born and still lives in South Wales. Previous publication credits include Another Country from Gomer Press and various magazines / anthologies. The former editor of a number of small press magazines, he is currently working on his first collection.

The Light She Kindles – a short story by Sarah Rietti

The Light She Kindles

The sun bleeds its final light over Seville, staining the sky in crimson and molten gold. Ana stands at the window, her breath fogging the glass as the winter chill seeps through the stone walls of the estate, uninvited.

It is time.

Her fingers trace the edge of the scarlet brocade draped across the table, its threads glimmering in the fading amber light. Two places set with gilded cutlery, two crystal goblets polished to flawless clarity, two chairs pulled close enough to speak in hushed tones. A picture of marital harmony, staged for an audience of one.

The short winter Fridays are a mercy. Antonio’s trading offices bustle until long after dusk, his return delayed by ledgers and the clink of reales counted behind locked doors. The servants—fewer here than in the mansions along the Guadalquivir—have been dismissed at noon, leaving Ana with only the company of her thoughts.

She lights the fire, watching as flame touches wick, and the candlesticks—small, unadorned, camouflaged amongst peonies and pomegranate centerpieces—awaken with a tremulous light. Shadows pool in the crevices of the wood-paneled walls, softening the room’s sharp edges.

L’hadlik ner shel Shabbat. The words slide from her lips, a blessing she has recited a thousand times, rising from some wellspring in her heart, half-forgotten, half-remembered.

This fire is not the pyre’s devouring roar, nor the Inquisition’s hungry blaze. It is the radiance of divinity and hope. The light that she can bring into her home. Even here, where shadows gather, this small flame is hers.

A tear pricks at the corner of Ana’s eye, but she forces it back, unwilling to let it fall.

Is it enough?

Is the light she kindles each week enough, when her soul shudders beneath the weight of all she hides? When the man of the house—the other half of her—crosses himself devoutly in the privacy of their bedroom? When she raises her children, innocent and pure, to call her ancestors’ faith heresy? When the life she has so carefully woven together rests precariously upon falsehoods too fragile to carry it?

Once, they had promised—young and idealistic, brimming with love—that they would preserve their faith, their heritage. That it would survive, undiluted and unbroken. They had reasoned that a drop of baptismal water could never wash away the essence of what they were.

But time, like water, wears down stone. Not with a single torrent, but like the relentless trickle upon rock—drop after drop, until the stone begins to yield. Even the Tagus changes course.

Some nights, Ana stands at the window, watching shadows pool in the street like spilled ink. She imagines vanishing into them: bundling the children into a cart, bribing a ship’s captain, fleeing to some alley in Fez or Salonika where she might finally breathe. But then little Tomás murmurs in his sleep, his curls matted to his forehead, and her resolve dissipates. To run means being marked a heretic in two worlds. It means not receiving a divorce. A widowhood without end.

Where to go in a life where choice has long since evaporated? How to pray when her dreams have crumbled into dust?

She takes another breath, but the ache inside her tightens, clawing at her chest. It is a wound she cannot name. Outside, the bells of Santa María toll, their iron call smothering the silence. Ana closes her eyes and lets the sound wash over her, a tide of shadows. And in that moment, she wonders: if the lie, at least, is beautiful, should it matter how it feels?

***

Dawn spills pale gold over Seville, washing the city in quiet luminescence. The scent of damp stone drifts through the open lattice. Somewhere in the distance, a vendor calls out the morning’s wares—figs, almonds, saffron fresh from the ports. 

Ana lies motionless. The linen sheets are warm where she has pressed into them. The room is still and dim, save for the faint traces of Antonio’s absence. He has already gone. He always rises before the first light, his footsteps careful as he dresses in the hush of their chamber.  

Lately, he does not wake her.

Ana exhales and forces herself upright. The tide does not wait for readiness. It simply pulls, steady and relentless—and she follows, because what else is there to do?

Sunlight filters in slanted beams, catching the dust motes turning slow, aimless circles. Her world is bathed in gold, yet she moves through it as one who has forgotten how to see color. She should rise. Slide into her house slippers. Smooth down her linen shift. Begin the motions of the day. Instead, she lingers at the threshold of waking, her pulse a quiet thrum beneath the weight of morning.

She knows, somewhere deep in the recesses of her mind, that it is God who has placed her here. (Has He? Or is this her own doing?) She tries to see the design He is threading, to follow the invisible pattern that ties her life together, but when she reaches for it, her hands tremble.

She sees only the underside of the tapestry: knotted threads, frayed edges, places where the weave pulls too tight, a string that could snap if she dares to pull too hard. She wonders—what is she becoming?

Is this disorder part of something beautiful, something greater? Or is she unraveling, thread by thread, into nothing at all?

Ana sighs, reaching for the dressing gown draped over the chair. The fabric is cool against her skin, solid in a way that she no longer feels. It is hard to fight for someone she does not yet know. The woman she is meant to become—is but a ghost, flickering on the edges of her vision, and yet Ana must endure for her. Must turn the days into steppingstones, fragile as they are, that will lead to her.

She has the will to survive. That much, at least, is instinct. But shaping survival into something more—that requires strength she is not sure she has.

The air in the room thickens. The soft hum of the morning seems distant now, a far-off murmur against the whirlpool of her thoughts. She closes her eyes for a moment, feeling the heaviness inside her, the emptiness where certainty should live. 

It’s in that moment, when time itself feels uncertain, that she hears it. A presence, warm and secure, calling her attention without a sound.

When she opens her eyes again, the room has shifted. A woman stands before her. She is taller than Ana, though she knows they are the same height. Straighter, though Ana has never thought of herself as bowed. Her hair is unbound, dark waves falling over her shoulders. The light that burns beneath her skin is not blinding but steady, as if it has known both darkness and endurance. She is whole, even in her brokenness.

She is at peace.

Ana stares, breath caught in her throat. Strange, to know that she has endured.

Then, the woman speaks. “Ana,” she says, her voice soft, resonating deep within Ana’s chest. “I am here.”

Ana’s heart tightens. She had not expected this—not the warmth, not the familiarity, not the way her name sounds like a benediction on the woman’s lips. 

“I know the weight you carry,” the woman continues, her voice steady but weighted, as though it holds years of sorrow in its echo. “You are a part of me I have never let go of. The fear that coils in your chest, the prayers that stick in your throat, the falsehood that tastes like ash on your tongue. The way you carry so much yet find yourself hollow. The space between who you are and what the world demands of you… I know.”

Ana’s hands clench at her sides. “Then tell me why.” Her voice cracks, each word a plea too heavy for her to bear. “Had I foreseen even a fraction of what was to come, I would have yielded before I began.”

The words come in a rush, raw, aching, as though the very act of speaking might tear her apart.

“She was purer, that girl,” Ana whispers. “But she did not understand. She did not know fear, nor silence, nor the weight of a life built upon trembling ground. She thought herself strong.” She exhales sharply. “Can one grow wiser and yet become more lost?

“And if that is so—then what was the purpose? Why suffering if it only drives us from who we long to be? Why cling to a path so treacherous—why risk all—when what remains is so little? When all that lies ahead seems to lead to ruin?”

The words fall into the silence, a question too vast for any simple answer.

Then the woman steps forward, closing the distance between them, and pulls Ana into her arms.

The embrace is gentle, but it carries a strength that Ana cannot resist. She melts into it, surrendering her tension, her grief, her fear. It is like the pulse of a heartbeat she had forgotten she could trust.

Ana’s chest tightens. The floodgates open. She is shaking now, but she does not pull away. She presses her face into the warmth of her future self’s shoulder, letting the tears come. She doesn’t speak, doesn’t need to. For the first time, there is nothing she needs to explain. She is simply held.

When the sobs begin to quiet and Ana’s breath comes in shuddering gasps, her future self pulls back just enough to cradle her face in her hands, delicate fingers brushing the tears away gently.

“I bear your sorrow,” she says softly, her voice a quiet anchor. “I see it. I feel it. Every wound, every crack.”

Ana meets her gaze, red-rimmed and wet with tears. She looks at the woman, seeing now not just her, but something else in her gaze—a strength Ana has never felt within herself.

“But I need you to know something.” The woman holds her gaze with an intensity that reaches deep into Ana’s soul. “You are of value worth enduring for.

“Day by day. Breath by breath.” Her voice carries a quiet certainty. “And you need not see it now. You need not believe me yet.”

She pauses, brushing Ana’s cheek in a gesture that is both gentle and knowing, as if it is a promise she is offering in the space between the words.

“You just have to believe that I am possible.”

Ana’s breath catches, a tremor of something like hope stirring in her chest. The woman’s voice is barely a whisper now. “Keep my image in your mind. Even when the light seems distant. Even when you can’t see it. Just trust that I am waiting for you.”

The words settle into Ana’s skin, like their weight is making a space for something to grow inside her. The path ahead is still shrouded, but there is a new presence in her chest—a small flicker, barely visible but undeniable.

Ana looks at the woman before her, strong and steady, forged from fire, and something shifts in her gaze. For the first time, she doesn’t turn away. She doesn’t close herself off. She meets the woman’s eyes, the wavering light of a future she’s not sure she believes in—but now, she’s willing to reach for it.

Sarah Rietti is a writer who draws inspiration from Jewish traditions and spirituality. Her work explores the intersection of ancient wisdom and contemporary life. When not writing, she teaches high school English and takes nature walks. She lives in Jerusalem.

Let Us Have Faith – a poem by Elisa A. Garza

Let Us Have Faith

Our world is wary. People doubt
a faith unmanifested in our times.
Resurrection stories, prayers
from an old book cannot compete.
Sermons don’t have hashtags.
Thomas doubted, but this world scoffs
until “Christ performs miracle” trends.

They will investigate:
test the wine, the jugs, the water source.
They will interview the servants and guests,
bride and groom. They will compare stories.
They will also ask: Why waste efforts with wine?
Why not cure those with COVID or cancer?
They will ask: What more will you do for us?
Will you heal the planet, clean the oceans?

I will transform your hearts, so you will love
one another as I love you.
Show us this love,
they will demand. Manifest love, and we will believe.



Elisa A. Garza is a poet, editor, and writing teacher. Her full-length collection, Regalos (Lamar University Literary Press), was a finalist for the National Poetry Series. Her chapbook, Between the Light / entre la claridad (Mouthfeel Press), is now in its second edition. Elisa’s sacred poems were recently published in The Ekphrastic Review. Her writing about cancer has appeared in Southern Humanities Review, American Journal of Nursing, and Huizache, who nominated her for the Pushcart Prize. She teaches writing workshops for cancer survivors.

Whether you like it or not – a poem by Kali Higgins

Whether you like it or not 

A quiet rise and fall—life
Flows like the shiny line that follows
the slug down the road, iridescent,
magnificent or miniscule
it keeps going.

And then it stops
(at least in physical form).

Like a cloud of fog
appears on the window
of a cold night,
from the breath of a peering child—
knocking at the door.
Our troubles, our wins,
Our hopes, our dreams,
Our fears and our sorrows,
They faintly leave a mark.
And yet, nothing stays,
and, everything is written.

Kali Higgins writes essays, short stories, and poems about how her everyday experiences as a mother, transracial adoptee, and spiritual seeker intersect with healing. Her work features topics that cover loss, mental health, sexuality, and trauma and how that impacts her relationship to herself and to others. When Kali isn’t writing or being a mom, she is busy with her wellness practice offering astrology readings, yoga classes, and sound healing.

Epiphany – a poem by John Claiborne Isbell

Epiphany


The heart is slowly crushed. Commence
to contemplate the gap there is
from us to God. The difference
is fact, not some hypothesis.

A vision at the edge of sense
fills our bright mind. God does not miss.
All the deceit, all the pretense
we walk in is no path to bliss.

The things we thought we knew were so
are not. Now, like light on a glass,
God touches us. A tremolo

runs through us and it comes to pass
that we are rinsed as clean as snow
in this brief war, in this morass.

John Claiborne Isbell is a writer and now-retired professor currently living in Paris with his wife Margarita. Their son Aibek lives in California with his wife Stephanie. John’s first book of poetry was Allegro (2018); he also publishes literary criticism, for instance An Outline of Romanticism in the West (2022) and Destins de femmes: Thirty French Writers, 1750-1850 (2023), both available free online, and Women Writers in the Romantic Age (forthcoming). John spent thirty-five years playing Ultimate Frisbee and finds it difficult not to dive for catches any more.

Path of Totality – a poem by Stephanie Ross

Path of Totality

moon’s shadow creates
a curved trail across Earth’s surface
an umbra of darkened sky, eerie silence
four Monday minutes of false twilight
122 miles of moon covering sun’s face

immerse in an experience outside yourself
--some scientists say
life’s sustenance devoured by a dragon
--some mythologies say


What does the Theory of Totality say?


path of all life curves at each choice
bending with relationships, entwined experience,
a light nudge at the grocery store
four Monday minutes affect more than you can see
100s of lifetimes of False Self shadowing Original Face

immerse in an experience inside yourself
–-the practices say
life’s sustenance actualized through pattern illumination
–-the teachings say


False Self creates a life eclipsed.
True Self enlightens true life.



*Path of Totality: the area on Earth where the total solar eclipse is visible
*Theory of Totality: a foundational theory of Ren Xue by Yuan Tze



Stephanie Ross is a Ren Xue Yuan Qigong teacher and Vancouver Island poet. She found her writing inspiration during a 3.5-year South Pacific sail with two young children. She’s passionate about her inner world as a lifetime adventure. Her publications include Passionfruit Review, RXA Qiblog, Valiant Scribe, Roses & Wildflowers, and The 2023 Poetry Marathon Anthology. Connect with her: https://www.stephanierossauthor.com
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Defining Enshrinement – a poem by Stephen Mead

Defining Enshrinement 

Belief in love beyond death's dominion gives this drawer lightness
though no sun rays or moon pass.
Imagine ash as pure calcium, silica-sifted
to sheen all the bones horizon-radiant.
Surely these have weathered such blue-flaming transformation,
a rite of passage in an end meant to promise everlasting peace.
That is holiness enough for anyone
omitting the semantics of religion
where some declare such blasphemous
without the body to rise re-atomized
at God's Abracadabra.
Oh foolish nitpickers of apples vs. oranges
even in the face of finality, let tongues lie silent
breath-held in solemnity as if for a host like a lozenge.
Must respect be pictured as coins upon lids to pay the ferryman?
Why not allow these small spaces sliding to shutting
as a blessing of serenity be they rose-quartz, granite or marble?
Stone holds this still quietness as a sacrament
& the sanctified flesh as the pearl grit of sand.
Breath is molecular everywhere
even when apparently there is no air movement
while the chants of monks rise like paper lanterns nearby.
Heaven passes such distances as origami cranes
after the crafty fingers have vanished
with the intricacy of filigree, that silver, then tarnish
mirroring the patterns of becoming nothingness
surely as cotton white mourning clothes sky-delivered by smoke.
That blackness too is a disappearance
while it happens as memory screen-projected
though perhaps no drummer boy of all the five senses
is even there to bear witness
for what ossuary fields should be filled with poppies,
red even for the citizens, the peasants, gone to soldiers everyone
where heads should be tossed back at the very least
as mouths howling to know the least of these unknown,
like an x as a cross for all the unmarked spots.


Stephen Mead is a retired Civil Servant, having worked two decades for three state agencies. Before that his more personally fulfilling career was fifteen years in healthcare. Throughout all these jobs he was able to find time for writing poetry/essays and creating art. Occasionally he even got paid for this work. Currently he is resident artist/curator for The Chroma Museum, artistic renderings of LGBTQI historical figures, organizations and allies predominantly before Stonewall. This is an online site.

With Me – a poem by Felicity Teague

With Me
April 1999

This isn’t like St. Peter’s Church back home
in Winchcombe; I had thought our church quite grand,
but here, in the Basilica in Rome,
my legs are shaking slightly as I stand
inside the entrance. There had been a screen
of scaffolding outside, withholding all
these arches, all this gold-and-silver scene,
these figures from my thoughts. I am so small
and insignificant within this world
of massive saints displayed so high above.
One shows a hefty hand, three fingers curled,
the index pointing outwards to the dove
upon the window, awe-inspiring art,
yet with me, in this space, inside my heart.

Felicity Teague lives in Pittville, a suburb of Cheltenham, UK. She has had inflammatory arthritis since she was 12 yet is able to work from home as a copywriter and copyeditor, with her foremost interests including health and social care. Her poetry features regularly in the Spotlight of The HyperTexts and elsewhere. Her second poetry collection is due out this or next year; other interests include art, film, and photography.