Saint Boniface – a poem by John Muro

Saint Boniface 
 
Sometimes at night, freed from penance,
I close my eyes and drift towards sleep
Awaiting the slow spirals of stardust 
And droplets of light that emerge from 
Darkness and coalesce to form 
Crenellations above some ornate,
Oriel window, inset with leaded 
Panes of carmine, Pyrenees green 
And chalice yellow. Colors settle 
Then soon abandon glass and dissolve 
Beneath a gilded asp, blending with
Air and into body now rising beyond
The plane of altar, the velvet nest of 
Tabernacle and the furrowed pews 
Worn to the hue of brown harness 
As I watch a younger self cradled 
In prayer and sowed with sorrow 
Waiting on the brighter hope and 
Splendor of sun piercing plumes 
Of incense and illuminating
The arched, stained-glass window 
Depicting a solitary child in a field 
Necklaced by a brook and a gnarled 
Tree twisting up towards heaven, 
Blue leaves dripping, sky still bearing 
The sacred scars of falling stars.
 

A life-long resident of Connecticut, John Muro is a graduate of Trinity College. He has also earned advanced degrees from Wesleyan University and the University of Connecticut. His first volume of poems, “In the Lilac Hour,” was published in October 2020 by Antrim House, and the book is available on Amazon. He has spent most of his professional career serving as an executive and volunteer in the fields of environmental stewardship and conservation.  John currently lives on the Connecticut shoreline with his wife, Debra Ann.

Psalms in Darkness – a poem by Dennis Daly

Psalms in Darkness
 
I.
Down the ethereal ocean, the fall
Unnerved the princes of heaven. Their power
Diminished to deep unsubstantial dust,
A feral den to lodge their pride.
No, they were not ashamed. They trusted
The magnificence of You, You who now
Hide your face, who forgive the darkening
Clouds that veil the molten center,
Who forgive the vanity of words. 
Must you forswear the unforgivable?
 
II.
In song our prayers do not ascend
Your mighty battlement of space
And time. They cringe with incredulity,
They crawl aside to little rooms
Where love becomes mere artifice.
Alone they loll unconsummated,
Futile. Their sorrow too keen, too lavish.
Contrite to a final fault, they sink
Without aspiring to their mission’s courage.
They sink, forever loosed, they sink.
 
III.
One seraph stayed its will,
A spirit lifted high above
The pit of tenuity’s realm,
Encompassed then by urgings,
By loyalty to mulish origins, always
There to issue life’s rules,
Feathered structures drawn to numbers,
Numbers that connect truth to truth,
That resist the coal and brimstone tempest,
Waiting for you, Lord, the face of light.
 
IV.
Rage not against me, shake not my parts,
My bones, Lord, that house
Coursing hate. Free my heart from haunt,
Let my hands calm the world,
The chaos before me. Let my fallen 
Self find joy again in justice.
Let me turn the sly nod, the sneer,
The hungry look. Let me caress
With written words, create a stillness
That fends off fitful noise with beauty.
 
V.
I would be spared. Oh, airy Lord,
Spurned by heaven’s obstinate rule,
Release me from perpetual torture.
Show hell’s mercy, then bridge each gap
I face with liberating reason,
With lust for resplendent beauty.
As I hold my head up, doling out
A knowledge that repeats in many beings
And many places. I bless my equals,
Who worship truth and possibility.
 
VI.
My signature bleeds, multiplies
One hundred times, one thousand times,
Ten million times, an infinite quagmire I sink into.
Mea culpa, Mea culpa, Mea Maximus culpa.
Is one’s blood so sacred? A scratch,
A momentary flow. Nothing more.
Circling me, the red riot of letters
Remembers that written certainty
Grown bigger than the life I’ve lived,
Bigger than the death I’ll die.
 
VII.
Witness all that I have become.
I am torn within a tempest
Torn by beaks of preying birds
Tumbling with me, fiend to fiend.
What dynamo of wind whirls
Me, blends me with faithless things?
My world envisioned into being,
An eternal hell so deserved,
Without doubt my doing, a conjuration
Oppressing me. Yet I ask for nothing.
 
VIII.
Breathers of shadows fly through chambers
Of stalled sentences and grammar that conjures
Each day. Here perceptions and plots
Beget dreams that beget more dreams,
All within the mortal eggshell,
A universe of disquiet and doubt,
An apprehension that solidifies
Belief before blown through
The pinhole toward eternity’s
Blustery beginnings and tepid ends.
 

Dennis Daly has published seven books of poetry and poetic translations. He writes reviews regularly for The Boston Area Small Press and Poetry Scene and on occasion for the Notre Dame Review, Ibbetson Street, Wilderness House, and the Somerville Times. He occasionally reads his poetry at various venues. Please see his blog at dennisfdaly.blogspot.com.

A Minute Before Heaven – a poem by Kathryn de Leon

A MINUTE BEFORE HEAVEN
 
 
I.  
 
Decades ago in college I learned that
all the water on the earth
is the same water
that existed aeons ago
so that Shakespeare could have bathed
or washed his hands in the water
I shower in.
 
Nothing new,
every raindrop a repeat.
In summer we let the sea
throw used waves
at our faces and bare legs
but it’s okay.
 
Even clouds posing
in animal or people shapes
moving regally in the wind
are not originals,
copies or copies of copies,
diluted versions of real clouds
lost long ago.
 
 
 
II.
 
I’m wondering if today’s early-summer sky
is the same sky that offered me my first blue
the day I was born.
Is it a used blue I see today
or does the sky change its blue regularly
like a soiled shirt?
 
Is it the same sky 
that will attend me the day I die
or will a new sky glide in
a minute before Heaven,
take over with a fresh supply of blue
and see me out?
 
 
 

Kathryn de Leon is from Los Angeles, California but has been living in England for ten years. Her poems have appeared in several magazines in the US including Calliope, Aaduna, and Black Fox, and several in the UK including The Blue Nib, Snakeskin, Trouvaille Review, and The High Window where she was the Featured American Poet.

Forming the Universe – a poem by Mary Ellen Shaughan

Forming the Universe
 
 
I am reading about astro-physics and 
listening to books on astro-physics.
I am intrigued; I want to know more.
I stumble over words like 
quark, lepton and boson, 
but the image I get is that 
of a tight-fisted god who, 
more than a kajillion years ago, 
opened one fist, then another, 
much as a farmer might cast seeds,
though in this case particles of matter
were flung out, spewing forth, 
and in the process separating
at the yet incomprehensible speed of light, 
filling the vast empty spaces with stardust,
stardust that became, among other things,
you and me.
 

 

Mary Ellen Shaughan lives in Western Massachusetts with her beagle, Zeke, who sleeps through the printing of dozens of poems and short stories. Her first collection of poetry, Home Grown, is available on Amazon. 

Greet the Day – a poem by Emily Strauss

Greet the Day

Greet the sun

ya-hai-wa
ah-how-wi

face the sun
as it tops the ridge
speak to it

ya-hai-wa
ah-how-wi

say its name
invoke its light
its power
the rays pouring
on your bare head

ya-hai-wa
ah-how-wi

make a chant
a song
bring in the day
the long dawn
turning brighter
over sand or snow

ya-hai-wa
ah-how-wi

over a still lake
saguaro-filled arroyo
down to the salt flats
rounded alfalfa fields
sleeping ranches

ya-hai-wa
ah-how-wi

praise the silent forms
cattle, coyote, deer
brother, sister, setting moon
greet the day

.

Emily Strauss has an M.A. in English, but is self-taught in poetry, which she has written since college. Over 500 of her poems appear in a wide variety of online venues and in anthologies, in the U.S. and abroad. She is a Best of the Net and twice a Pushcart nominee. She is interested in the American West and the narratives of people and places around her. She is a retired teacher living in Oregon.

Ringing of Bells – a poem by Debasis Tripathy

 Ringing of Bells
 
You enter the temple, you ring the brass bell.
The sacred belief to alert God before entering 
his house. No one wants to intrude upon privacy
preserved for him. Who wants to incur the wrath?
The result is a rigour, relentless in ringing―
high-pitched music repeating Aum, Aum, Aum ... 
It is this rigour that I love. The repetition
of an ordinary act producing an extraordinary
acoustical event. Common men & women transforming 
into anthropomorphic forms of the divine. The wonder
of rigour. I search for God sometimes, mostly 
outside of where he regularly resides. When 
I go to a temple, it's here outside, on the steps,
I like the most. I see the divine in the eyes
of seekers, depending on their devotion 
to someone I never got to see. It is logical 
for me to be an atheist or even an agnostic,
but I am a firm believer in shapes & sounds,
sanity & simplicity. I believe because I want 
to be happy. I want my heart to be open 
like my ears, open to the ringing of bells.

Debasis Tripathy works for an IT Company in Bangalore. He also writes – poems and short fiction.  His recent work has been featured in Squawk Back, Collidescope, Turnpike, Adelaide Magazine, Kitaab , Punch Magazine & elsewhere.  Occasionally, he tweets at @d_basis

On Death. – a poem by Riley Bounds

On Death.
 
In the space
where life
either bleeds
through linen
and strings
on tile 
or faces
melt
through tables,
or in the space
where life
simply
leaves,
vagabond
through zodiacal
clouds
and dust,
there’s no place
left for messengers.

Riley Bounds’ work has appeared or is forthcoming in Ekstasis MagazineHeart of Flesh Literary JournalThis Present Former Glory: An Anthology of Honest Spiritual Literature, and Saccharine Poetry, among others.  He is Editor of Solum Literary Press and Solum Journal.  He lives in La Mirada, California.

SCRABBLE© – a poem by Mark J. Mitchell

SCRABBLE©
 
            Brothers, do not make collections of words
—Zen Master Hengchuan (1222-1289)
 
 
 
 
                                    He played on screens
                                    like everyone else.
 
                                    Still, around the house,
                                    in jars that once held fruit
 
                                    preserved from fall, pickled
                                    eggs to last through winter,
 
                                    he kept ancient wooden
                                    tiles, unsorted. From time
 
                                    to time, but every day,
                                    he filled his right hand
 
                                    with letters. Worried them
                                    like rosary beads. Sure
 
                                    that runes would give up
                                    meaning and form themselves
 
                                    into that one, perfect score:
                                    The misplaced name of God.
 
 

Mark J. Mitchell was born in Chicago and grew up in southern California. His latest poetry collection, Roshi San Francisco, was just published by Norfolk Publishing. Starting from Tu Fu  was recently published by Encircle Publications. A new collection is due out in December from Cherry Grove.He is very fond of baseball, Louis Aragon, Miles Davis, Kafka and Dante. He lives in San Francisco with his wife, the activist and documentarian, Joan Juster where he made his marginal living pointing out pretty things. Now, like everyone else, he’s unemployed.He has published 2 novels and three chapbooks and two full length collections so far.

For Love of Fresh-Baked Bread – a story by Darrell Petska

                                                                                                  

 For Love of Fresh-Baked Bread

“You could do more,” the visitor told Wilbur Crane of Crane’s Bakery, a landmark in the city for years.

Wilbur sensed he was dreaming. They were seated at a table in the bakery’s coffee nook, overseen by a black-and-white print of an old man saying grace over bread and a framed portrait of the Crane family: Wilbur, Clara, and their two sons—neither of whom cared to put in the hours the bakery business required.

Dreaming Wilbur squinted through his glasses, trying to make out the visitor’s features, and made a mental note to improve the coffee nook’s lighting.

“You could do more…”

The alarm clock tore Wilbur from his dream and sent him shuffling down to the kitchen to help Clara, who already had bread loaves in the oven.

Around sunrise, Wilbur noticed a man staring at the fresh-baked bread Clara had just set out. The window-shopper then joined another man toting a stuffed plastic bag, as they settled on the steps of the public library.

Twenty-four hours later, the same individual stood before the bakery window, eyeing the fresh loaves glistening in the light. Noting the man’s appearance, Wilbur grabbed a plump Italian loaf and stepped outside.

“I have plenty,” Wilbur said to the man, who accepted the loaf, then hurried across the street to share it with his companion.

The next morning, the man appeared still again, gazing through the window at the fresh-baked loaves. This time, Wilbur motioned him inside: “Take one, and free coffee’s over there.”

The man left, clutching a bread loaf and a cardboard tray with coffees. Wilbur watched the two men settle on the library steps, divide the bread and sip coffee. The scene cheered Wilbur, so much so that an idea came to him: why not give back to the community by donating bread to the homeless shelters?

Clara, the business mind of their operation, reminded Wilbur that their margin remained thin, but when Wilbur recounted his nighttime visitor’s suggestion to “do more”, Clara relented.

“Wilbur, your heart is one big cream puff!” she laughed, kissing him on the forehead. “But who will do the deliveries?”

He found his solution the next time the two men appeared. Wilbur waved them inside and asked them to take a seat in the nook.

The window-shopper introduced himself first: “Conrad.” His companion followed, shyly: “Richie,” eyes lowered toward a plate of cinnamon rolls Wilbur had placed before them.

“That’s me: Wilbur,” he pointed to the family portrait hanging above them. That’s my wife, Clara, who baked these delicious rolls, and those are our two sons. Now, here’s the situation,” he continued, “we could use some help.”

The two men looked at each other. “How do you mean?” Conrad asked.

“There’s an efficiency upstairs, behind our apartment. It sleeps two in a pinch—our boys shared it. There’s a private entrance. You could live there in exchange for helping around the bakery, making deliveries, maybe even a little baking if you’re inclined.”

“It’s a deal,” Conrad said. “’Right, Richie?” The latter nodded agreement.

“Maybe you want to see upstairs first, or talk this over?”

“No, it’s a deal.”

Wilbur confessed to Clara what he had done when he stepped back into the kitchen. Clara left off kneading some dough, began to say something, then sighed. “Wilbur, you amaze me sometimes.”

Conrad and Richie took readily to their new situation. Freshly groomed, and coached by Wilbur and Clara, Conrad helped with maintenance and deliveries while Richie demonstrated an aptitude for baking.

As for Wilbur’s hazy dreams, the visitor returned now and then, always suggesting Wilbur could do more. “What more?” Wilbur always asked, but he never received an answer.

Months passed, then a year. Aided by Richie’s skill in the kitchen, the business became profitable enough that both Conrad and Richie could draw regular salaries.

One morning, while his aches and pains kept him late in his bed, Wilbur had another brainstorm: student interns, with whom they could share their love and knowledge of baking.

Thus began a series of interns, semester after semester, who worked closely with Richie, Clara and Wilbur to learn how to bake, market, and operate a bakery business. Wilbur spent portions of each day seated in the nook, visiting with customers or simply resting—his heart and his back required that he lighten his workload. Nonetheless, he felt great contentment seeing Conrad, Richie, the interns, and Clara doing what they had come to love.

The years stacked one against another like bread loaves on a shelf. On the eve of Wilbur’s 74thbirthday, the dream returned. Eyeing the visitor’s indistinct features, and expecting what he’d hear, Wilbur spoke preemptively: “You are persistent.”

The visitor smiled. “You’ve done well, Wilbur. There’s nothing more you need to do.”

Wilbur sat up straight, straighter than he’d been able to manage for some time. “I’ve done enough?”

The visitor nodded. “Let’s take a walk.” Standing into the additional lighting that Wilbur had installed years back, the visitor’s face finally became clear: though decades younger and brimming with idealism, it was Wilbur’s own!

Seeing himself that way seemed entirely natural. They rose together, glanced about Crane’s Bakery—Richie, Conrad and Clara were already at work—and stepped through the front door.

Wilbur marveled at the blossoming morning—a spectacle he seldom experienced since he usually found himself busy in the kitchen. A brilliant sun had begun to climb the horizon.

“This is glorious!” Wilbur exclaimed, noting how effortlessly his legs moved. His street and the expansive day spread before him, awash with the aroma of fresh-baked bread.

 

Darrell Petska‘s fiction has appeared in Flash Fiction Magazine, Loch Raven Review, Right Hand Pointing, Potato Soup Journal, Boston Literary Magazine and elsewhere (see conservancies.wordpress.com). With 30 years on the academic staff, University of Wisconsin-Madison, 40 years as a father (eight years a grandfather), and longer as a husband, Darrell lives outside Madison, Wisconsin.

Momentariness – a poem by Sanjeev Sethi

Momentariness
 
Decryption from theological texts 
diminishes me. For the most part 
this lifts my beat but during bouts 
of burdensomeness I inquire: Is 
there any force more persuasive 
than Faith?

Sanjeev Sethi is published in over thirty countries. He has more than 1400 poems printed or posted in literary venues around the world. Wrappings in Bespoke, is joint-winner of Full Fat Collection Competition-Deux organized by the Hedgehog Poetry Press UK. It is his fourth book. It will be issued in Jan 2021. He lives in Mumbai, India.