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| Ron Lach |
the board
a planing blade,
I ride
the barrel
deep and long
prefer a left-hand
break turning
toward my heart
every wave
stripping all
but wide attention
© Amrita Skye Blaine
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| Amrita Skye Blaine |
A Literary Journal
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| Ron Lach |
the board
a planing blade,
I ride
the barrel
deep and long
prefer a left-hand
break turning
toward my heart
every wave
stripping all
but wide attention
© Amrita Skye Blaine
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| Amrita Skye Blaine |
©️ Selma Martin
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| Gabriel González Encarnación |
So We Don’t Sleep
I’m afraid to close my eyes,
O mother,
your eyelashes raise one question after another.
There is a story in your eyes—speak it.
Words yawn on my tongue;
they’ve lived there long enough.
Arise, O rubble,
Come out of me!
Perhaps I could breathe,
with a body freed from shrouds.
Can we tidy the house one last time
before we’re displaced?
Can we photograph it for memory—
Store our laughter, our tears, and our screams—
then leave?
O sea stacked before us
like a shy embrace
in a world not ours,
Can you send our echo to nearby oceans
so a giant whale strikes the occupier’s base?
Can we invent a new alphabet
for fear, for pain, for home,
So the world hears
That gray, continuous sound above us—
Buzzing planes,
Roaring rockets
Above green, above ruin,
Above a gravestone
Scrawled in charcoal on a burnt house,
The trace of a Firebolt?
A thousand times, the eyes sip from the sky
while we search for warmth
to gently carry us to sleep
under our balcony,
a seamless sleep that tickles the stars.
I want… to sleep.
I dreamed of some leader speaking—
do you hear, mother?
I see you laughing, feeding the birds.
I see you playing on the swing of paradise,
Iridescent colors glowing in a rainbow slumber,
Like a bottle shaken—dreams all mixed inside.
O mother, I swear I saw it:
One shroud in Gaza holding
the bodies of three martyrs.
I became a worn, wounded body
groaning with pain.
I want to hear the heartbeat of the sun—
or the heart itself… that sponge
which has grown hard.
That’s how we walk—on feathers—
until we reach the peak of exhaustion
In full daylight and say:
We shall live here.
© Souad Zakaran
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Souad Zakaran is a Moroccan writer, poet, and translator. She graduated with a Bachelor's in French literature and English Linguistics. She worked as a foreign language teacher at a language institute in Casablanca. She currently works as a translator for a local newspaper and has poetry, narrative, and critical contributions in various regional and international literary newspapers and magazines. Her works are featured in several anthologies worldwide, including Poems for Rich, Centenary Project, Oldham Poetry, Well Read, Hooligan Street, and others. Her poem "Weiß" was shortlisted for the Ulrich GRASNICK Lyrikpreis 2025. Her poem “Sauberer Erde” earned third place in the Friedrich Schiller International Poetry Competition 2025.
| James Wheeler |
All Roads Lead Somewhere
All roads lead somewhere.
Even the ones we don’t know we are on.
Even the paths we believe
will lead us to a promised land.
Especially the dead ends.
Back up.
Turn around.
Head in a different direction.
The broad avenue of our youth
becomes a narrow lane in old age,
bringing us back
to the place we started from.
Previously published in Gracious Plenty
© Michael Braswell
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| Michael Braswell |
Michael Braswell has published books on ethics, justice issues, and the spiritual journey, as well as four short story collections. His poems and stories have appeared in several publications, including Foreshadow, Mobius, and Literary Heist. His most recent books are When Jesus Came to the Cracker Barrel (2024) and Gracious Plenty (2025).
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| Pixabay |
Beholden
I am beholden to the bowl in my fridge
where subtly bubbling sourdough gently
rises, awaits baking day a week hence.
It breathes, relying on microbes thriving
in my kitchen, makes me smile, as do
the tiny thoughts that render these times
bearable—the cotton content of my socks,
fair trade beans magicked to bars of dark
heaven, rows of tariff-free salsa, crowding
vintage freezer’s cold, a mighty lungful
enlivening yoga’s child’s pose before bed.
In the vault of night—as in the fridge where
dough sleeps—there must be music beyond
our hearing that sparks what began as dust
into a crusty loaf, a poem or even more.
© Nancy K. Jentsch
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| Nancy K. Jentsch |
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| Anna Pou |
Every time I steep tea,
measuring tea leaves
into the kettle and the
liquor gains an orange blush
I think of Baba sipping
his fragrant flush,
and that image is a prayer
a silent intercession
for his wellbeing, wherever
he is; an invisible orison,
instinctive and natural.
When I place lit candles
on my doorstep at Diwali,
each flame, supple and ardent
is a reminder of a dear one
lost to the shadows.
Simple superstitions, silly habits
sometimes become unuttered
invocations to an unseen power.
Counting stars in the evening sky,
for instance, is my ritual of vespers,
and soft autumnal breezes
my evensong of hushed voices raised in tuneful supplication.
© Ajanta Paul
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| Ajanta Paul, Ph.D. |
Ajanta Paul, Ph.D., is a widely published poet, short story writer, and literary critic who was a former Principal of Women's Christian College, Kolkata. A Pushcart nominee, Ajanta has been published in journals including Capella Biannual Journal, Offcourse, The Statesman, The Wild Word, Atticus Review, and Spadina Literary Review.
| DORÉ, Gustave Lucifer 1866 |
Better to Reign
The Fall of the Rebel Angels
Pieter Breugel the Elder
So Lucifer, that force
that never stops trying
to undo the fabric of creation
never stops trying to break
that divine universe of order
never stoops to obeisance
of its captain and creator.
In the divine plan
in the face of eternity
can his stubborn perversity,
his destructive persistence
be explained?
Numinous envious Lucifer,
once numbered among
the angels above,
who fell from grace
in a paroxysm of envy,
an excess of vitality,
his gigantic wings still
flailing as he fell,
carried by the will of God
to that place below, still spiteful,
still sinning against the light, still
with his cohorts of translated fiends,
burning, glorious, spitting fire,
ready to challenge eternally
God and his works.
By any stretch, a rebellion
from the start
doomed to failure.
Who fights with God?
And for what?
In the dutiful waiting-room
of creation who cares
what's at the core?
Good or bad, light or dark,
the tyranny of the womb remains,
rolling out all things perforce,
pouring out a sea of forms
tireless creator
indifferent to their destinies.
What's really at stake here
in this rebellion of the angels?
In this unnecessary doubling of the frame,
in this Manichean complication?
In our proprietary Christian myth,
we hear the music of God
and the good angels
already celebrating;
the preordained war is over
before it started.
What chance did Lucifer have?
Look at Breugel's painting,
the fall of the rebel angels;
in its premise
in the landscape itself
a foregone conclusion.
God's gentle voluminous angels
go about their business,
abstractedly beating down
the rebellious foe, caught in the act,
a horde of fanciful creatures, mutants,
a hybridized crawling, flying, whirling
patchwork of half-human, half-beast
half-plant, half-assed whatnots
unready for the fray,
looking as frightened as fish
in a dangerous aquarium.
And there is Saint Michael,
leading the fight from on high,
a skinny fantoccio
in drab cutout armor
thoughtfully swatting away
at this colorful garden
of slapdash monstrosities
this cabinet of curios
less suited to fight
than provide amusement
and a light workout for
the Heavenly Host.
Breugel the Elder, Bosch as well
shared a sly and secretive
sense of humor,
a sense of balance
about the Four Last Things.
It shows in their work,
especially this Fall
of the Rebel Angels,
its emphasis on how strange
and silly evil can look
and good dull and detached
in the midst of primal battle;
the two sides
supposedly fighting it out
for the greater glory of God,
His sanitary minions somehow
maintaining His dignity
against a foolish fearful troop
of willful grotesqueries,
a surreal crew
popping out in all directions;
rebel angels limned
not at all as angels
but as stand-ins, placeholders
for humanity or worse,
the whole world gone to a hell
of ingenious contraptions
to better illustrate our vices,
our weaknesses, our failings
and perhaps God's ultimate failure
to keep us safe.
Well, it all ends,
one way or another,
in art, in life,
and leaves us thinking
there's much to be said
for Heaven and Hell.
We like the idea
we have someplace to go
after here, so why not
light-filled and sky-high
billowing or, worse luck,
down in the dark
and tortured cockeyed till
the end of time?
Breugel the Elder and Bosch
painted both kingdoms
to perverse perfection.
There they are,
my blue heaven
with saints and angels
peeping out of a paradise
bizarre as the Tower of Babel
and a hell as full
of crazy dislocations
and false shapes
as a Lenten carnival.
As far as Lucifer's
heroic desperate rebellion
he never had a chance in hell,
so to speak,
his only chance
and as his only chance there he ended.
(First published in Compass Rose Magazine.)
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| Jack D. Harvey |
Ron Lach peeling wave the board a planing blade, I ride the barrel deep and long prefer a left-hand break turning toward my heart eve...