Friday, January 30, 2026

Life Goes On by William Ogden Haynes

Kelly

Life Goes On

In the foothills of the Adirondacks, there is a lush 

glade embraced by the arms of surrounding mountains. 

And in that glade is an abandoned house, the front door 

hanging by a single rusty hinge, its remaining shards 

of window glass aflame with the burgeoning sunrise, 

where a lone spider casts her threads into the light. 

The house sits alone as it has for decades, listening 

to the music of wind and leaves, watching the seasons 

come and go. Some might think that because man has 

left, this place has lost its wonder, but they would be 

wrong. Today, morning fog will rise up from the bed 

of rich soil like smoke from a campfire. The stars will 

still be visible, showing hints of heaven in the partially 

dark sky. Later, the mist will spread aloft, as the sunrise 

burns it away, and dim rays will illuminate gray rocks 

bearded with moss. The stream, gently tousled by a 


breeze, will launch ripples across the surface, leaving 

a snoring silver carp undisturbed at the river bottom. 

And nearby, there is a crack in the sidewalk, uplifted 

by the spreading root of a river oak. Gradually, the 

heavy cement will yield to other roots, producing more 

cracks and opportunities for growth. And then, fragile 

tendrils will unfurl one lime-green leaf at a time, 

painting new life over the gray canvas of old concrete. 


© William Ogden Haynes


William Ogden Haynes

William Ogden Haynes is a poet and author of short fiction from Alabama, born in Michigan. He has published several collections of poetry, and many of his poems and short stories have appeared in literary journals and anthologieshttp://www.williamogdenhaynes.com

Thursday, January 29, 2026

A Jar Marked Dreams by Julie A. Dickson

Katja B 

 A Jar Marked Dreams

For those who lived outside their dreams

Their happiness not meant to be

I keep a jar outside my door

To hold my dreams for me.

The treasures of my soul, I keep

Within the space inside.

The jar marked “dreams” contains my hopes

And feelings that I need to hide.

A private place, for me alone

Daring not to share

The quiet thoughts and words of love

For these are thoughts that make me fear.

If one did peer inside the lid

They’d see an empty jar,

For I keep my dreams with me, Only I know where they are.


© Julie A. Dickson


Julie A. Dickson

Julie A. Dickson has been a poet for over 55 years and a YA fiction writer. She draws from memories, life experiences, nature, and visual art. Her work has been widely published in many journals, including Kind of a Hurricane PressLothlorienEkphrastic Review Feed the Holy, and MasticadoresUSA. Dickson shares her home with two rescued feral cats, Cam and Jojo.

Wednesday, January 28, 2026

For Dave by Maria Giura

 

Image / Arina Krasnikova

For Dave

The picture of health

in our early twenties—

blonde, green-eyed, tall and lean.

Three months ago

diagnosed with lung cancer,

though you never smoked. 

We ran into each other

eight years ago

swimming in the Atlantic. 

We hadn’t seen each other 

in close to twenty years.

Ocean glistened your skin

as I told you I was writing a book,

that whenever I thought of you,

it was fondly. As you told me

about your siblings,  

that your son had his meets 

at the university where I taught.

I remember how numb 

I felt walking back to my towel—

the wave of what-ifs—

though I know we went the paths 

we were supposed to.

 

Everywhere we went, 

the air was clean:

Lambertville, New Hope,

High Point State Park, 

all places I’d never been before.

The two of us on your motorcycle, 

riding into light.  

You—who took over a month

to kiss me, told me

I was worth waiting for—

now gone. 

It’s not so surprising

you died young— 

the good sometimes do— 

that your kids were your life

or that you provided well for them,

not surprising you moved to Monmouth County

like so many our age.

I hope we’ll see each other again one day, 

that I’ll get to where you are,   

where no one marries

or is given in marriage,

where all live like angels

and the air is clean,

where work can’t harm a person, 

and the only thing that matters  

is how well he loved.


Published in If We Still Lived Where I Was Born by Maria Giura
Bordighera Press, New York November 2025. 

© Maria Giura


Maria Giura

Maria Giura, PhD, is the author of two poetry collections published by Bordighera PressIf We Still Lived Where I Was Born (Nov. 2025) and What My Father Taught Meand a memoir, Celibate (Apprentice House Press). An Academy of American Poets winner, Giura teaches writing workshops for Casa Belvedere Cultural Foundation instagram.com/mariagiurawrites/   facebook.com/maria.giura.3975  mariagiura.com



Tuesday, January 27, 2026

Mountain Haiku by Joshua St. Claire

Appalachian Mountains


Mountain Haiku

last warmth 

cumulus clouds billowing 

beyond the Appalachians  

long mountain 

a relentless wind 

shatters the sky 

in the bend 

of the blackbird’s wings 

the Appalachians 

the blue 

of the bare trees 

distant mountains 

slowly grinding down 

the Appalachians 

black vultures 

live wire 

this light 

behind the Appalachians 

tumulus of the sleeping giants 

                                     Appalachians in the distance  

blackthorn blossoms 

the mountain again becomes 

clouds 

dawn striking 

the new mountain 

thunderheads 

upslope fog also the mountain 

just beyond 

long mountain 

dame’s rocket  

how many times can I say the blue in the blue mountain  


© Joshua St. Claire


Joshua St. Claire

Joshua St. Claire is an accountant from a small town in Pennsylvania, working as a financial director for a nonprofit. His haiku and related poetry have been published broadly, including in FrogpondModern HaikuThe Heron’s Nestand Mayfly.



Monday, January 26, 2026

Fractured Fairy Tales by Alex Stolis

RDNE Stock project

Fractured Fairy Tales

Once upon a time, love was a potion with no antidote.

Once upon a time, innocence was enough to rule a kingdom.

Once upon a time, the bad guys always lost.

Once upon a time, we were cowboys and astronauts and ballerinas and secret agents.

Once upon a time, this is our history.

Once upon a time, the Prince never got cancer.

Once upon a time, days were clocked in hours, minutes, secondhand sweeps


not treatments, prognosis, and insurance claims.

Once upon a time, we could Houdini our way out of any danger.

Once upon a time, Cancer was a crab, Pisces was a fish, and Leo was a lion.

Once upon a time, sleep was a refuge, not a side effect.

Once upon a time, we could live forever with the wave of a wand, 

magic words, and faith.

© Alex Stolis


Alex Stolis

Alex Stolis has had poems published in numerous journals. Two full-length collections, Pop. 1280 and John Berryman Died Here, were released by Cyberwit and are available on Amazon. His work has previously appeared or is forthcoming in Piker’s Press, Ekphrastic Review, Louisiana Literature Review, Burningwood Literary Journal, and Star 82 Review. His chapbooks include Postcards from the Knife-Thrower's Wife (released by Louisiana Literature Press in 2024), RIP Winston Smith (released by Alien Buddha Press in 2024), and The Hum of Geometry; The Music of Spheres (released by Bottlecap Press in 2024). He lives in upstate New York with his partner, poet Catherine Arra



Sunday, January 25, 2026

The Land we will dare to conquer by Edilson A. Ferreira

 

Mathew Thomas

The Land we will dare to conquer

When night comes and sleep does not appear,

I ride through unsuspected worlds, 

have memories even from days I did not live, 

perhaps dreams I did not realize. 

The yearning is loose, I have to fill the void, 

must arrive in full to another day waiting for me, 

new challenges, new fights. 

The new day, as always, will be strong and pugnacious, 

unlike me, one day older and not able to hide

on face and soul, marks of misfortune and sorrow, 

unrequited loves, dislikes, and mismatches.  

I will have to show that did not renounce 

the human inheritance, and, with dear fellow ones, 

I lived, loved, and suffered, having watered the road  

even with sweat and tears. 

Always sure that we will reach, at the end of the journey,  

the promised land, where pour abundantly the milk and 

honey, and evil never finds shelter. 

Then, unlike Abraham, who just had a glimpse,  

we will take secure possession. 

Dancing and partying, this day,

we will throw to the skies  

sound and honest, a laughter.  

© Edilson A. Ferreira

Edilson A. Ferreira

Edilson A. Ferreira, 81, is a Brazilian poet who writes in English rather than Portuguese. He has launched two poetry books, Lonely Sailor and Joie de Vivre, and has published 300 works in various international literary journals. Has also been nominated for the Pushcart Prize. He began writing at the age of 67 after retiring from a bank.


Saturday, January 24, 2026

Always Welcome by Kevin Daniel Scheepers

 

Kelly

Always Welcome 

The house was quiet, 

alternating paranoid coughs pierced the silence.

Handmade wall clocks ticked 

through secondhand smoke.

Absentmindedly made a cup of tea 

and the teacup handle broke.

In life like rivers, it's easier to go with the joke

and roll down slippery slopes 

of spectrums beyond colours.

Humour was a flow state, 

we chuckled, vibrating like rudders,

leaving bubbles lighter than air in our wake.

Pushing and shoving and wrestling among brothers,

6 am, bupkis; 6 pm, ruckus,

six of one and half a dozen of the other.

Angel wings flutter, creating a buffer 

to the monsters muttering under the cover.

Into the foundations we fall,

bound by the home of love.

© Kevin Daniel Scheepers

Kevin Daniel Scheepers

Kevin Daniel Scheepers is a 28-year-old man from South Africa. He completed an MSc in Biotechnology in 2023, but always maintained a personal interest in the written arts. His work has previously been published in Audience Askew and Harrow House Journal, and is forthcoming in Brittle Paper and Emergent Literary.



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Life Goes On by William Ogden Haynes

Kelly Life Goes On In the foothills of the Adirondacks, there is a lush  glade embraced by the arms of surrounding mountains.  And in that...