When Gabriel Visits – a poem by Anne Magee Dichele

When Gabriel Visits

Will you be able,
when Gabriel visits,
to quell your questions
as Mary did?

Annunciations happen daily.

So often
Gabriel has been sent
to make this simple request:

God would like to be with you.

It never makes sense,
no details of how or why,
yet Gabriel,
dutiful messenger,

slips through the back door
of your life, unexpected,
offer in hand.

Like the day your sister was dying
and he suggested to have God
sit with you, by her bedside,
if you like.

Too sad and too weary to speak,
you nod

and her dying hours
became, in that moment,
luminous and holy,

the cramped room so heavy
with the breath of love
you knew the invited one
had arrived.

And you knew somehow
all would be well
because
you said
yes.

Anne Magee Dichele serves as Dean of the School of Education at Quinnipiac University. A life-long commitment to daily meditation and spiritual reflection has led to two poetry publications by Antrim House, Waiting for Wisdom and Ankle Deep and Drowning. Two of her poems were recently published in Thin Places & Sacred Spaces by Amethyst Press. Anne lives in New Haven, Connecticut with her dog Seamus Heaney. She is joyous that her wonderful children and granddaughter live nearby.

Bubble Wrap Rosary – a poem by Bruce Morton

Bubble Wrap Rosary


So, I must confess that it was
Wholly with pleasure and devotion
That I watched my granddaughter
Snap, rapt with such intensity,
Joyfully smiling, at each pop.
Methodically she works her way
Through each bead of bubble wrap,
Which I had cut in a strip so precisely
That there would be exactly fifty-nine
Beads. There is no mystery to her
Innocence, nor any meditation in her
Play, no guilt in her distraction. One last
Pop, then there is silence heaven sent.
She looks up at me, no need to repent.

Bruce Morton divides his time between Montana and Arizona. He is the author of Planet Mort (FootHills, 2024) and the chapbook, Olive-drab Khaki Blues, forthcoming from FootHills Publishing. His poems have appeared in numerous online and print venues. He was formerly dean at the Montana State University library.

Compass me about – a poem by Michelle Hasty

Compass me about 

Thou art my hiding place; thou shalt preserve me from trouble;
Thou shalt compass me about with songs of deliverance. - Psalm 32



I’d like a hiding place, please
I don’t say as I sit in a circle
Of fellow faculty members
Most of whom I barely know
We’re passing our talking piece
A green plastic compass
I’m lucky to be last, yet still
Stumble over words I want
To be true not trite
We’re supposed to say how
We feel, what we noticed
Upon approaching the circle
What I feel is that my skin is on
inside out, I don’t say
My feelings are giants, I don’t say
I do tell a diluted truth my emotions
Are many and mixed–fear and
Gratitude for getting to teach
This new class to our newest students
A challenge wanted, wished for,
Now arrives with so many what-ifs–
I tell a hope that there’s an undercurrent of
Peace and trust that all will be well.
Hours later, a revision visited,
What I wish I had said
I have lately felt lost
Like being left in a strange city
With a map that I can’t read,
Possibly for another place so
I can’t get my bearings
But the message I taped above
My office desk declares:
God is where the lost things are
Plus–
Someone just handed me
A compass.

Michelle Hasty is an education professor in Tennessee. Her academic writing has been published in literacy journals, such as Voices from the Middle and The Reading Teacher. Her short story, “Prone to Wander” was published in the Dillydoun Daily Review. Her poem, “Overheard, an offering” was published in Bluebird Word.

a story of things – a poem by Luther Allen

a story of things

… and light
the soil and the Moth
my chin on the fencepost

by the author, 1972



we stitch magic
and say that

this thread, these threads,
warp, weft, color, texture

are the salamanders of truth
and think we are done.

except
the salamander
is just going to be salamander.

if we ignore this and keep
sewing, cross-stitching, dabbling

making truths of ideas that make us
believe without cause, cage us

inside our brittle beliefs, embroider
the blackness, then we become

the benumbed zoo animal

the salamanders
visit on weekends.

***

the air speaks us
and says what is this stone?

what is this moth?
as if saying what is this mind?

until we know
it is pointless to go further.

except
the air
just wants to sing.

if we ignore this stone
we go deaf to all stones.

hold the stone. listen. take it
deep inside because

stars are too hot,
too huge, to hold —

too much like an answer

and too faraway
to hear them sing.

***

the song of stones
dropping through a mind.

a salamander
holding water in place.

a moth
holding air in place.

light. breath.
threads.

ponder. witness.
sing.

love. kindness.
a sort of sweetness.

those truths.
a practice.

Luther Allen writes poems from his mostly unmanaged 10 acres of mountainside near Bellingham, Washington. His academic work centered primarily on biology and geography; he is a retired building designer. He has published two volumes of poetry: The View from Lummi Island and A Spiritual Thread (see https://othermindpress.wordpress.com). His work is included in numerous journals and anthologies. He views writing as his spiritual practice.

The Ubiquity of Candles – a poem by Holly Wells



The Ubiquity of Candles

“…[A] dimly burning wick he will not quench…”
-Isaiah 42:3 NRSV


For a long night of years, she’d thought candles
had given light a bad name. They were always
trembling and flickering and being snuffed out,
their wicks smoldering. Everyone had so many
because they didn’t last long even if

they stayed lit. The deep-down truth
was that most days she felt like a candle—
fragile. Candles, the very ubiquity of them,
reminded her that her light was too frail to merit
mentioning. Her night of years was full

of such thoughts until the hurricane forced
her to pull all-but-forgotten candles out
of bottom drawers. The storm had snapped
the strong-not-fragile light poles, yet here
the candles gleamed when the dark had otherwise

gone untouched. Their dim flames kindled
questions in her mind: What if blown-out candles
didn’t truly go dark? What if their light lingered
at wavelengths beyond her perception? What if
the still-burning light from every candleflame

that had ever quivered would one day re-emerge
into the visible spectrum, but stronger and brighter,
like starlight drawn near? The flames danced
and glimmered until they became tongues of fire
fallen on her and she the wick blazing blue.

A moment later she was herself again, but stronger
and brighter, somehow. Some days
she would seem to smolder, to forget the long
night of years had ended. But the candles,
the very ubiquity of them, would remind her.



Holly Wells‘s fiction and poetry have appeared in The Magazine of History and Fiction, Sehnsucht: The C.S. Lewis Journal, The Windhover, and Sojourners, among others. She lives in Mississippi and has taught English at both the high school and community college levels.

Pardon – a poem by Melanie McCabe

Pardon

The road away lifts like a kite and catches
in a gust of morning. Something small, someone
lost, could ride on that kite and flutter sunward.

My eyes are in the maples – no longer bound
by lid and bone. They are owls that didn’t
blink at the corona of another day.

Light tilts to fill a hollow, to open me
to blue. This pang is at the nerve of each
new feather that prays to the wind.

What saves me is the buoy of air. I am a child
on a shoulder she knows. The road sways
to that old step; it rises to the tug of my string.

Melanie McCabe is the author of four books of poems, most recently the forthcoming All The Signs Were There, which won the Longleaf Press Poetry Prize. Her debut novel Road Longer Than Memory will be out from Oceanview Publishing in June of 2026. Her memoir, His Other Life: Searching For My Father, His First Wife, and Tennessee Williams, won the 2016 University of New Orleans Press Prize.

Balanced Hearts – an essay by Carole Greenfield

Balanced Hearts                                                       

Progress reports are due soon.  My colleagues and I are putting the finishing touches to our narratives with the goal of writing balanced, positive assessments that take into account areas of strength and struggle.  At this time of year, I make my semi-annual suggestion that teachers should play a game which involves reviewing narratives and reading between the lines, discerning what the educator is  trying to say without coming out and saying it.  “X. is an energetic, curious student” really means, “X is a hyperactive kid who never stops asking questions all day long.”  When we write, “Z. sometimes finds it challenging to consider other perspectives,” what we are not saying is, “Z. only thinks about himself and has zero empathy.” The fine art of subtext — how to get across point with a light touch — feather rather than sledgehammer, as it were.

Not that long ago, my husband and I went to an exhibition, “Ancient Nubia Now.”  Standing before a case full of exquisitely carved figurines known as shawabties, I caught the predictably lilting tone of a teacher addressing elementary school-age children.  “Did any of you ever have stuffed animals when you were younger?” (Note: the students in question were all of eight or nine years old, at most.)  “Did you know they weren’t real?”  As the students rather reluctantly nodded, she continued in a joking voice, as if letting them in on a secret, “Did you pretend they were anyway?” At that point, I wanted to throw a copy of The Velveteen Rabbit at her head.

To her (questionable) credit, she was trying to explain the significance of the shawabties in a way that would make sense to modern-day children. Ranging in height from about four to fifteen inches, the statuettes were placed in tombs on behalf of the dead, should they be called upon in the afterlife to perform agricultural duties.  Shawabty, I learned, comes from an Egyptian word meaning “one who answers.”  The afterlife featured prominently in ancient Nubia, much as it did in adjoining ancient Egypt.  According to tradition, at the time of death, the heart of the deceased (carefully removed and preserved in an alabaster pot designed for that specific organ) would be weighed in judgment and “only if the heart was lighter than a feather could they be included in the blessed afterlife.”  Heart scarabs were inscribed with spells from the Book of the Dead, requesting that the heart “testify favorably.”

How will my heart testify at the end of my days?  And to whom will it need to answer? More to the point, how will others testify as to my heart’s favorability?   The way I see myself — both literally and figuratively — is not the way others see me.  The other day I entered the teachers’ room and made a kind of amused grimace to indicate, “I’m dealing with some real craziness here.” One of the aides said, “I’ve never seen that expression on your face before!  You always look so calm and collected.”  I didn’t realize I was such an accomplished actress.  The imposter syndrome is alive and well and living in me, taking a veritable curtain call at the end of each performance (a/k/a doing my daily job).  I wonder how many of the students I work with each day – to say nothing of the adults in the building – feel they are being judged, their merits weighed in the balance, most of the time.

Sometimes my heart feels weighted down by my perceptions of the woes of the world.   Is there a way to live with a lighter heart?   We don’t always know when we are going to die, although some of us are given that gift.  My grandmother was told how much time she had left before she died.  She decided to knit a scarf for as many members of the family as she could, and knitted eight hours a day for months, marking on a piece of paper the number of rows she’d finished so as to keep track of her destination.  She was at peace with her fate, contented with her lot, she enjoyed the company of the staff at the nursing home and the regular visits of family and friends.  It seemed to me that she was freeing her heart of regret, grudges, and longings.  When she died, it was a tranquil death, and she left us with a lightened heart.

Of course, my grandmother was a ballet dancer.  She knew all about feather-light balance.  After all, she could do it on the tips of her toes.

This past week, my new students noticed the old CD player I had in my room.  I’d borrowed it from a colleague as part of the annual language testing we are required to perform.  I hadn’t even thought to use it for music.  It’s been years since I’ve played music on a CD player in my classroom.  But the moment my new students spied it, they immediately said, “Teacher!  Speaker!” and asked if we could dance.

In ancient Nubia, the heart had to be lighter than a feather at the time of passing.  Maybe that’s the way to get there: walk lightly through our lives.  Dance whenever and wherever we can.

Carole Greenfield grew up in Colombia and resides in New England, where she teaches multilingual learners at a public elementary school. Her work has appeared in The Manifest Station, Salvation South, Inscape Magazine and other places.

Breath and Bone – a poem by Jean L. Kreiling

Breath and Bone   


No breath is yours to keep: you take it in,
and then return some to the atmosphere.
The bones that bear your weight and frame your skin
decay a little with each passing year.

But from the breath and bone of each of us
come matchless gifts more durable than stone.
Each self observed—unique, miraculous—
affirms that we are more than breath and bone.


Jean L. Kreiling is the author of four collections of poetry; her work has earned the Able Muse Book Award, the Frost Farm Prize, the Rhina Espaillat Poetry Prize, and the Kim Bridgford Memorial Sonnet Prize, among other honors. A Professor Emeritus of Music at Bridgewater State University, she has published articles on the intersections between music and literature in numerous academic journals. She lives on the coast of Massachusetts.

The Monk a Chair Away – a poem by Jeffrey Essmann

The Monk a Chair Away

He was already there when I
Came in and seemed at first asleep,
But no, he actually was deep
In something hard to classify
(We’ll call it prayer for now;
It doesn’t matter anyhow.
What matters only is its depth…).
He'd come from the infirmary
To sit before the Sacrament,
Hunched over yet an elegant
Embodiment of sanctity
That definition overstepped.

And so I took the chair but one
From him and as I sat before
The Presence, felt some inner shore
Recede from view: it had begun.
Then in the dim and silence heard
A rhythm faint yet undeterred:
His breathing, gentle as a hymn,
So fragile I was rendered awed
To be there in the morning dark
With a beloved patriarch
Who simply wants to sit with God
And I to simply sit with him.

Jeffrey Essmann is an essayist and poet living in New York. His poetry has appeared in numerous magazines and literary journals, among them Dappled Things, the St. Austin Review, Amethyst Review, America Magazine, Pensive Journal, Forma Journal, and The Society of Classical Poets. He is a certified catechist with the Archdiocese of New York, a Benedictine oblate of St. Mary’s Abbey in Morristown, NJ, and editor of The Catholic Poetry Room.

Some People Call Me Mad – a poem by Barbara Lydecker Crane

Some People Call Me Mad


View of Toledo, by El Greco, c.1596-1600, Spain


I’m working in my darkened room,
where highlights painted with lead white
stand out in this, my chosen gloom.
In starkest contrast with the night,
white makes its eerie, chalky gildings
in my midnight work’s design.
At will, I place Toledo buildings
till I surrender . . . light’s no longer mine.
My sky is frenzied and I feel
a part of God with his great power
to curse or bless, to raze or heal
each temple, mosque, and steeple tower.

Barbara Lydecker Crane has won the Kim Bridgford Memorial Sonnet Crown
Contest, the Helen Schaible Sonnet Contest, and was a Finalist for the
Rattle Poetry Prize. Her most recent book is You Will Remember Me
(Able Muse Press); Kelsay Books will soon publish her fifth
collection, Art & Soul.