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| Arina Krasnikova |
© Dr. Priyanka Neogi
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| Dr. Priyanka Neogi |
A Literary Journal
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| Arina Krasnikova |
© Dr. Priyanka Neogi
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| Dr. Priyanka Neogi |
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| Lisa from Pexels |
To Live Through
Ruminating on forgotten lines
and joys never lost,
I straighten my spine
to hear the god-wind
and the crickets that persist in the treeline
as the leaves don’t.
Winter is more straightforward to live through.
What remains is worth remaining.
What breathes deserves to be known.
At this vertebrae of my life,
the possibility of locusts worming into my ears,
I let the future of my skin go.
Letting my eyes devour the dusk coating the field,
I smile at the blazing silence of mind.
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| Jade Kleiner |
Jade Kleiner is a writer from New England. Among other places, her poetry can be found in Trampoline and manywor(I)ds, her haiku in Haikuniverse and Cold Moon Journal, and her fiction in Bright Flash Literary Review. She is transgender and has practiced in the Plum Village tradition since 2020.
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| Thom Gonzalez |
© Casey Quinn
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| L'oeil à deux Vanessa et cédric |
The Wolf I Feed at Dusk
At dusk the day gathers its arguments:
sirens, headlines,
a neighbor’s anger
seeping through thin walls.
Inside me, the wolves circle.
One sharp-toothed, bright with outrage,
keeps a ledger of wrongs.
The other moves slowly,
ribs showing,
eyes worn smooth as river stone.
I carry food
without knowing it.
Every word chosen,
every silence kept,
every thought rehearsed
after dark
tilts the bowl.
Tonight, I feed the quieter one.
I give it wind in the trees,
my breath returning to itself,
the memory of a friend’s laugh
breaking a hard hour open.
The fierce wolf watches, offended,
but does not leave.
It never does.
Grief wants a mouth.
Still,
the gentler wolf lifts its head,
not victorious,
only alive,
and for a moment
the world feels less like a wound
and more like a place
I might still learn
to tend.
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| Veronika Andrews |
Among the Columbines
As I emerge
from the last veil of trees,
I pause.
My gaze ascends,
my spine uncoils like a bear
waking from winter’s dream,
to greet the newborn Spring,
her fur silvered
with beads of dawn.
Standing on her hind haunches,
muzzle tuned to the shifting air,
my body follows her call.
My belly bellows,
lungs drawing in a breath
of stone, thaw, and pine,
and the world lifts its face
to meet mine.
Here, I unclasp my hold
on the small, guarded body I cradle.
I unfurl my wings,
vast as a soul remembering,
release them from painful concealment,
shake them wide into the light.
I meet the faces of the remembering ones,
those who know my name.
I give my gratitude,
scatter my sorrows like seeds,
lift my dreams into their keeping.
I pour myself outward
until I am only resonance,
sound and stillness entwined.
The wind stirs my breath,
the sun pours gold like honey into my skin,
the earth steadies my bones,
Spring waters glimmer through my hair.
The world’s weight
loosens its hold upon me.
I am nourished by this holy moment,
by the hummingbird moth
dancing among columbine flowers.
Step by step, nearing the heavens,
I rise, I reach toward realms long forgotten.
Here, perched in peace and sanctuary,
I watch the turning world.
I am home.
© Krystal Gauley
| Krystal Gauley |
Krystal Gauley is a poet and creative nonfiction writer completing an MA in English and Creative Writing. Her work is rooted in landscape, memory, and embodied encounters with nature, exploring emergence, stillness, and personal transformation through breath, presence, and relationships with the natural world.
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| Johannes Plenio |
The path
They tell me that an elephant never forgets.
So, I start the search for that sweet path
leading to your heart
High-rise buildings, narrow streets, and
unforgivable stop lights,
how could I forget those masterpieces?
The shrieking sound, the unforgiven horns,
those biting words,
how could I forget the path?
The water rumbling under the bridge,
a threat to the people who make a living
out of noise, prickle scattered along the way,
make no difference; it’s all in a day's work,
for I am steadfast in the journey, looking,
searching for the pathway to your heart.
My heart still shivers, as the wait is this long,
though I fear not the journey,
I will tag along searching for the long-lost love,
the one who loves me back.
Like a war, persevere, and the trophy in sight,
the dream of the long journey
melts in the snow
I never desist. I won't resist, for the prize is mine,
the journey is mine,
and I hope the day will soon be mine
when the heart of love
will overpower my thoughts and
the winner exclaims,
"The journey is over, the trophy won."
I will have no argument
Because there will be nothing
to argue about.
The taste of victory is sweet.
I have found the path
to my true love, and I am satisfied.
© Dennis Williams
| Dennis Williams |
Dennis Williams is a writer and Poet from Rural St. Catherine, Jamaica. He is looking forward to a good “publish 25”. Dennis is deeply grateful to all the editors of magazines and journals who saw his work, took the time to read and appreciate it, and then included it in their prestigious publications. He would like to give a big shout-out to the editors of Lothlorien Poetry Journal, Academy of the Heart and Mind, Literary Heist, Active Muse, Rundelania Magazine, and Literary Cocktail Magazine for helping him bring his dream to life.
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| Ngân Dương |
ASLEEP LOOKING
My father lying there
asleep, it appeared
he would arise a moment
say, “How are you?”
then go about his day.
For sixteen years, it had been so,
but this day I did know
would never be the same,
no more hugs or smiles,
or kind words.
I knew.
My world would change
in ways I could not know
with repercussions far,
far beyond his leaving.
This would be the last
I would see.
Could I hug him?
I did not know
if I could touch.
In some ways, I’m relieved
not to know
the touch of cold skin,
hardened body
of the man I didn’t know
I loved so much and buried him the next day.
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| Duane L. Herrmann |
With degrees in Education and History, Duane L. Herrmann has work published in print and online, in fifty-plus anthologies, over one hundred other publications (Gonzo Press, Tiny Seed Literary Journal, Page and Spine, etc), plus a sci fi novel, eight collections of poetry, a local history, stories for children, a book on fasting and other works, despite an abusive childhood with dyslexia, ADHD, cyclothymia, an anxiety disorder, a form of Mutism, and now, PTSD.
Arina Krasnikova With Achievement Everyone's eyes are on the light. The light is attracted to the brilliant. Improve life by staying i...