Spared – a poem by Laura Hannett

Spared


Three Japanese beetles cluster on the rose
to patiently strip the leaves to the veins.

A jar of soapy water means
nothing to them. When I pluck them,

they cling meekly to my fingers
with thorny legs, as if I were safe.

One, two, three—I toss them

high, up high, tumbling through an abrupt puzzle
of garden, house and sky.

At the peak of the arc,
each is transfixed against the blue,

remembers it has wings,
and, unthinking, flies.

They believe in nothing—not in me,
an almighty power barely perceived, already forgotten—

not even in being spared: getting cast from the garden
just one dizzying surprise in a day of chaos.

They will eat and mate and eat again—
pests, yet beautiful:

shining, coppery elytra,
pronotum dark, metallic jade.

They are the peacock plume of oil
on gleaming pavement after rain.



A native of Central New York, Laura Hannett is a graduate of Hamilton College and the College of William and Mary. She works as a licensed massage therapist and writes every morning before her family wakes up, under the strict supervision of her cats. Other work can be found or is slated to appear in The Bluebird Word, Last Stanza Poetry Journal, Mania Magazine, Verse-Virtual and Black Bough Poetry.

near Morro Bay – a poem by Isabel Chenot

near Morro Bay


i.
The grey above
is almost resting
on the waves –

across their cresting –
rifted dove.

The columns totter
but their architraves
are white.

Far off, pearled between,
level to sight –
a hand.

Its fingers fissure sand,
divide the water,
rein back daylight.


ii.
My soul is sand:
now, and no memory –

a mirror
out of grit and glister –
each instant's trivial

abrading grains
sift the whole

sea
and sky.
Absorb their pound

and color,
drink immensity.
Hold tide

until my hand
is sheerer
than the moon's veins.


iii.
At dawn
the water and the sky
are seamless,

someone's
fluttering
clothes.

I am so little,
so much younger
than those
elements.

I have to lose
my lone will stuttering
at variance.

I have to empty
like the sand
in the stripped instants
after a wave's
passion –

when gravityless
heaven

prints bright fingers
on earth's
sinking
hand.

Isabel Chenot has loved, memorised, and practised poetry all her remembered life. Some of her poems are collected in The Joseph Tree, available from Wiseblood Books.

A Hard Nut To Crack – a poem by Barry Harris

A Hard Nut To Crack

In the end
I was a hard nut to crack.
The quiet force
of such uninspired history
piled dream debris
inexorably into the ripples
of my cautious wake.

In the beginning
I was soft and pliable clay
as you are now.
Had I known what would
harden and bake me and what
would ultimately break me,
I would have shouted out
an early warning to you.

Waiting for the dammed up
juices to flow,
decades blink.

In the middle
of the night I have wrestled
cryptic messages,
tried to right the riddles
in the morning
but instead kept up
this insane trading down,
swapping creativity for convenience.
I must have more time on my hands
in that other dimension
or all time
or none that can be measured
through a time-bound drip.

I used to think that in the end
God would greet me and say
I never expected you to figure it all out.
But all God said was
It didn’t have to be perfect.
And I cracked wide open.

Barry Harris is editor of the Tipton Poetry Journal and several anthologies published by Brick Street Poetry. He has published one poetry collection, Something At The Center. Married and father of two grown sons, Barry lives in Brownsburg, Indiana and is retired from Eli Lilly and Company. His poetry has appeared in Kentucky Review, Valparaiso Poetry Review, Grey Sparrow, Silk Road Review, Saint Ann‘s Review, San Antonio Review, North Dakota Quarterly, Poetry Pacific, Night Train, Flying Island, Awaken Consciousness, Writers’ Bloc and Red-Headed Stepchild. He graduated a long time ago with a major in English from Ball State University.

Observance – a poem by Jane Blanchard

Observance


Outside the transept of the church
a modest statue stands:
Saint Francis of Assisi holds
a basin in his hands.

Upon the rim there rests a bird
attentive to the man,
and each continues biding time
by some designer’s plan.

The weather through the years has turned
both hair and plumage red,
yet neither creature seems to mind
the state of either head.

Parishioners as well as guests
may note—or not—this spot:
those who pass by without a look
miss seeing quite a lot.


Jane Blanchard of Augusta, Georgia, has recent work in Blue Unicorn, Loch Raven Review, and Scintilla. Her latest collection is Furthermore.

Mary Honychurch – a poem by Julie Sampson

Mary Honychurch
‘The sacred trees in the woods
which they called Nimidas’
(Attrib., St Boniface)


Following the latest storm
many urging sprigs will flourish from the acorns
on Taw bank’s mother tree -
near the place the river winds, where stumps –
so many disappeared firs and oaks
now prostrate amongst brick and ash –
are supplicants for termites, havens
for bats in cracks and fissures, for owl and kingfisher -

but illuminating saplings there are already a plenty
dotted on the bank above the curve of the river
that roots in grassy dips in Middle Down, & Long Ham,
fields splicing the hedges by the henge
hidden in the folds of land between the dozen hedgerows –
- there where the rolling valley
Nymetboghe river ebbs and flows
next where the road laid by the legion ran west
to Nemetotatio – some from oak offsets
planted alongside Den Brook, Shepherd’s Lake
and other streams feeding Taw and Yeo -
there are even saplings near the Holy Well
and in the corner by the blackthorn copse
where the newest lamb totters to bond at his mother’s teat.
Some have drifted east from the newly resurrected grove,
grandly named by greedy sellers, Poet’s Wood.
****

Escaping the car I walk the hedge perimeters –

the path footfalls of the land
from where I come and
will belong again –

look and listen to the trees in meadow’s green sunlit space,
where long-disputed dryads
sparkle in shade’s unfurling leaves -

the white bobs of rabbits, initiates,
disappear -
the copse rustling into hedgerow dusk.

Mary Honeychurch is here.
Disguised in the sweet oak glade
her fair turn of head
her tiny, virtual sandalled feet
her angel avatars silver in the undertow
of the wired world repeating
in river’s glistening mirrors,
the rhizocretions deep planted.

Down in the village the youngest children
singing, jigging home from nursery
glance up distracted from their fidget,
forget an instant their mother’s voice,
green-spun spinning tops, within –

****
Here, according to the testaments
crowing over litigated lands
your father built his gold reserves, then left his bequest-
the aged, the needy, poor people of Bow -

following his death, on quiet days
you tiptoed into church’s interior
gazed at the exquisite floral screen,
the bosses and fern-leaves on the wagon roof,
rood screen’s fruiting vines.

Mary, this is how you came to me
your family threaded by the holy tree –
the sacrifices at dawn, or dusk,
when under the patient oaks
detritus leaf carpet fashioned from the gale
thunder recast you, following the latest storm.

Julie Sampson‘s poetry is widely published and she’s been placed in a variety of competitions. Sampson edited Mary Lady Chudleigh; Selected Poems (Shearsman, 2009). Her collections are: Tessitura (Shearsman, 2014); It Was When It Was When It Was (Dempsey and Windle, 2018) and Fivestones (Lapwing Publications, 2022). See www.juliesampson.com

Trust – a poem by Anderson O’Brien

Trust

Every day I endeavor to pray,
raising my heart and my voice,
beckoning God to come, lift me
out of myself, turn my eyes
toward the horizon of a cerulean sky.

What am I called to do with my life?
I wait for answers—glimmers of God
speaking to me through the wisdom
of my mentors, poetry, lucky coincidences
that often catch me by surprise.

And when I pay attention,
pay close attention, I am called
to abandon myself, to lie down
in sweet grass, to be held
by this tender earth and believe
everything is possible.

Anderson O’Brien lives in Winston-Salem, NC with her devoted husband and two terribly spoiled cats. She has published in Iodine Poetry Journal, The Kentucky Review, Blue Fifth Review, Red River Review and Heavy Bear.

New Moon – a poem by Tani Arness

New Moon
Isaiah 1


Women, soothe yourself with incense and oils.
Do not make burnt offerings;
there is no pleasure in the blood of bulls and rams and goats.
Do not put your trust
in man who has but a breath in his nostrils.
You are tinder and your work a spark.
Your heart, a tongue of fire,
will lick up the straw.

Go into the rocks and bow down.
You do not need a land filled with silver
and gold, horses and chariots . . . .
Rejoice in the new moon festivals; dance.
Delight in your gardens of sacred river valleys;
clasp hands with pagans and praise
the cedars of Lebanon and the oaks of Bashan.

Tani Arness lives in beautiful Albuquerque, NM. She’s been inspired by hours spent stargazing in Northern NM. Tani’s work can be found in Tzimtzum: 5 contemporary poets lend us their hearts, and numerous literary magazines including North American Review, Malpais Review, and Crab Orchard Review. See also: http://www.tani-arness.com.

Fire – a poem by D.B. Goman

Fire

that crack makes
you stop a space between
seconds the body
alert not to bones
taken in arthritic flame
but fire in the box
the glow the ember rare
each time the light
getting in the arc
of a life rising in tongue
to cold air burning
down to ash a morning
silence stoked by need
to keep it lit the fire
aching while there’s still
oxygen you don’t move
listening closely to turn
green wanting seasons
all the colours vented
inside migration the skin
breaking open that loud
crack hot killing cold

in Huron squalls you feel
one crystal born in orbit
out of fire banging
the senses that hunger deep
in storm gusts you
reduced insignificant
absorbed mostly by biggest
nothing only this spark
a vision of universe
merciless you love it
the hurt the predator
the free alive in frozen
lake pretending to be
serene blindness is real
wind and snow making you
see another way death
is there in water expanding
forms the sculpting flame
at fingertips in lungs
in squall and cabin
a fire has to roar hot
or cold the same flame

D.B. Goman aspires to be a professional arm wrestler. On occasion, a bon mot appears on a page, real or on-line.

Transformation – a poem by Mark J. Mitchell


Transformation


There’s tender alchemy to a warm night:
You search for meanings that you never touch
while fireworks battle your soft inner eyes.
Then stars transmit power and your old mind
blazes. You linger outside, question life,
quoting long lost books. Memory’s a knife—
quick, sharp. Open the frayed almanac. Find
out how far money went and just how dry
this land once was. It’s all subtle. Much
stays left unsaid, Your mind glows with new light.

Mark J. Mitchell has been a working poet for 50 years. He’s the author of five full-length collections, and six chapbooks. His latest collection is Something To Be from Pski’s Porch Publishing. A Novel, A Book of Lost Songs will be published in March by Hstria Books. He’s fond of baseball, Louis Aragon, Dante, and his wife, activist Joan Juster. He lives in San Francisco where he points out pretty things.y things.

Inner Journey – a poem by HM Ayres

Inner Journey

Please bring strange things*
on this venture into new territory.

My reflection in the window startles me.
I don’t like what I see.

I have never felt this way before.
I am uncertain what I need.

If it's true what they say,
please bring love, all you have.

Hold me in your heart
through the long dark days.

Point out a blue sky
on a crisp cold day.

Send me a tiny, brightly colored bird
despite the chill in the air.

In the depths of despair
gratitude always helps.

Leave your judgment behind.
Accept me, as I am.

Broken, but healing.
Not the best company.

Laughter lightens every load.
Every smile soothes.

Visit me in my grief.
Your friendship brings me comfort .



*From Initiation Song from the Finders Lodge, Ursula LeGuinn


HM Ayres grew up in Northern New Jersey. She retired and moved to Cape Cod, MA in 2021 after a 43 year career in college student affairs administration. Since retiring Helen has been devoting her time to writing poetry, exploring the Cape conservation areas, bike paths, waterways and beaches and is engaged in several social justice and community volunteer efforts.