Monday, February 16, 2026

A Lone World by Sushant Thapa

Pixabay

A Lone World 


A lone world 

Will lose friends by the porch. 


Glances of affection 

Will turn to desert sands. 


The evening will be devoid of stars, 

How unnatural will be the sky. 


Nights that turn to walls 

Will grow teeth 


There will be cheerless freedom walks, 

I will not meet you once more. 


A lone world, 

Will rule its freedom. 


It will tear the banners of protest, 

And fear humanity’s last redemption. 


Evening is at the climax, 

Wounded is the night. 


Rhythm is lost,  

Caricature is a foul mirror.

 

A lone world 

Celebrates cheerlessness. 


© Sushant Thapa


Sushant Thapa

Sushant Thapa is a Nepalese poet who holds an M.A. in English from Jawaharlal Nehru University in New Delhi, India, with nine books of English poems and one short story collection to his credit. His poems are published at The Kathmandu Post, Trouvaille Review, Lothlorien Poetry Journal, Outlook India, Corporeal Lit Mag, Feed the Holy, Masticadores USAIndian Review, etc. He is an English lecturer in Biratnagar, Nepal


Sunday, February 15, 2026

Pesach by Mykyta Ryzhykh

Daniel Reche

Pesach

Pesach of a severed silent vein

Whose blood flowed through the ditch of world (hi)story?

Hі! – tree branches waving

Hee hee! – the roots of the legs laugh and we are not able to move

Meanwhile the bone of a severed branch crunches underfoot

It crunches somewhere in the chest so that I want to break the insides

Fragments of the pain of water and silent stones weave a wreath

Wreaths are usually put on the heads of Jesus brides ukrainian girls

Wreaths are often placed near the graves in the cemetery

And at night in a bed floating in black cast iron

I dream of flowers without graves

During the sand of time the grass underfoot dries out

Therefore instead of grass in wreaths we braid tears

Grass is our home grass is glass

After death I would like to become grass

After death I would like to become glass

After death I would like to be without legs

After all every new day is a small escape for refugees.

I know that my pupils will no longer see a children’s collage

I always knew that one day my college would be smashed

I knew that one day they would kill us all and prayed that I would die beautifully

Unfortunately I did not die although what are the reasons for living

I teach my (eyes?) pupils not to see

I teach my fictional acquaintances to forget

I teach my legs to sleep and dreams to crumble

However time devours all its bad students anyway

I can’t do anything

I can’t even write

After all what is silent poetry capable of talking 

Аbout today other than war?


Originally published on Orbis 


© Mykyta Ryzhykh

Mykyta Ryzhykh

Mykyta Ryzhykh, an author from Ukraine, now lives in Tromsø, Norway. He was nominated for a Pushcart Prize in 2023 and 2024. He’s published in many literary magazines іn Ukrainian and English: Tipton Poetry JournalStone Poetry JournalNeologism Poetry JournalShot Glass JournalQLRSThe CrankChronogramThe AntonymMonterey Poetry ReviewFive Fleas Itchy Poetry, and many others.


Saturday, February 14, 2026

The Wait by Supatra Sen

Rakibul alam khan

The Wait

At dawn she would rush to the river

Then to the temple the market and others

The whole day she would be at work

Cooking, washing, sewing, mending, cleaning

Every dirt and grime

And then from nowhere

The flute would play 

A lingering note

A melody to make one forget all

Even existence…

She would rush out

Run to the river

To seek the elusive

The player

The creator…

The sky would paint itself 

In a thousand hues

The river adorn

A rainbow palette 

The trees would come to life

Swaying rustling whispering

A divine fragrance of unknown forest flowers

The river gently would embrace the shores

Balancing two ends in a wondrous curve

And she would sit and wait

Work undone

Duties forgotten

For what 

For whom

She didn’t know…

The eternal wait

A lifetime of waiting…

 © Supatra Sen

Supatra Sen, Ph.D.

Supatra Sen, Ph.D., alumnus of Presidency College and Ph.D. University of Calcutta is an Associate Professor with 125 academic publications in Botany and Environment. She is the founder and Chief Editor of an ISSN peer-reviewed multi-disciplinary journal ‘Harvest’. She has two poetry anthologies, ‘My Autumn Sonata’ and ‘Sojourns in Autumn’.



Friday, February 13, 2026

A Haloed Moon by Don Brandis

 

Thắng-Nhật Trần

A Haloed Moon

A harvest moon this time, bold as a rooster’s crow

showing what we’d watched growing, nurturing

but not harvesting, as a mostly 

but not entirely an imperfect witness

surrounding it as a halo, diffusing its light 

blurring, scattering, distorting its clarity 

softening, mythologizing what would be 

just what it is and us seeing it so.

Voices of ice particles in the upper atmosphere

as fog haloes approach headlights

in the night.  Can we just see, without reflection?

Stonehouse, in his mountain hut,

regards us as he does his books of sutras

long unread that have become home to silverfish. 

He’s become a source of sutras, no longer 

needs their texts as he would have us do.

Anyone can do this, he says.

When we feel his eye upon us 

not just across 7 centuries 

but in the timeless Now,

we look away.   © Don Brandis

Don Brandis

Don Brandis lives quietly outside Seattle, reading and writing poems when they show up.  He has a degree in philosophy and a long fascination with Zen.  Some of his poems have appeared in Amethyst ReviewBlack Moon MagazineBlue UnicornLast Leaves, and elsewhere.  A book of his poems, called Paper Birds (Unsolicited Press, 2021), is available.  He hasn’t read your poems either, unless he did so without knowing they were yours.  

Thursday, February 12, 2026

Let’s Meet in This Place by Arvilla Fee

 

Image / Daniel & Hannah Snipes

Let’s Meet in This Place

there’s no room for perfection,

as none of us will ever reach that

pinnacle upon which we place impossible

desires; so, let’s meet, shall we, somewhere

in the middle, somewhere that allows your molecules

and mine to exist, if not in harmony, then in tolerance

and grace—let’s clasp each other’s hands, hands

that heal and never harm, always pulling up rather

than tearing down; and it’s in this place you and I

shall change the world, shall tip it on its axis,

making future relationships that are born of kindness and steeped in love. 

© Arvilla Fee


Arvilla Fee

Arvilla Fee, from Dayton, Ohio, has been published in numerous presses, and her poetry books, The Human SideThis is Life, and Mosaic: A Million Little Pieces are available on AmazonArvilla’s life advice: Never travel without snacks. To learn more, visit her website and her new magazine: https://soulpoetry7.com/

Wednesday, February 11, 2026

Dusk Prayer by Yongbo Ma

 

Quang Nguyen Vinh

Dusk Prayer

Life ultimately depends on forgiveness and forgetting,  

without strength enough to love your enemies,  

you must learn to pardon. Even the fiercest hatred  

drowns in time’s wasteland, collapses into a heap of causes,  

its form is unrecognizable,  

intense love and hate both drain life’s essence,  

diminish dignity—for the soul has its own purpose,  

unknown even to you.  

As years pass, love and hatred become others’ dramas,  

you retreat further into the role of spectator,

human activities drift like distant winter fields,  

you have your own questions, others bear  

no true connection, at most, they are footnotes  

in life’s textbook, references in margins.  

You linger more within your own territory,  

your solitude is a house shielding the world,  

a cliff jutting farthest into the sea,

its gabled roof, tiled in red,

its front door bolted, back door aglow,  

snow falls in its attic, and the cellar serves as a lab  

where stifled ghosts sprout from tubers,  

the laughter of countless children is hidden in the garden.  

Your slowness mirrors the stillness within,  

a single word sustains you for days,  

few external events pierce your veil—  

tides absorbed by countless tiny caverns,  

your curiosity is limited to just one old telescope, 

when you rise from your depths to peer through it  

on storm clouds surging into being at the horizon.

To lose your way is to return home,  

at last, you forgive yourself.


© ¥ongbo Ma


Yongbo Ma

Ma Yongbo was born in 1964, holds a Ph.D., is a representative of Chinese avant-garde poetry, and is a leading scholar in Anglo-American poetry. He is the founder of polyphonic writing and objectified poetics. He is also the first translator to introduce British and American postmodern poetry into Chinese.


He has published over eighty original works and translations since 1986, including 9 poetry collections. He focused on translating and teaching Anglo-American poetry and prose, including the work of Dickinson, Whitman, Stevens, Pound, Amy Lowell, Williams, and Ashbery. He published a complete translation of Moby Dick, which has sold over 600,000 copies. The Collected Poems of Ma Yongbo (four volumes, Eastern Publishing Centre, 2024), comprising 1178 poems, celebrates 40 years of writing poetry.




Tuesday, February 10, 2026

Angela (Prose Senryu) by Selma Martin

Mahmoud Alaydi

Angela (Prose Senryu)

Drowsy and heavy, drowsy and heavy like a field of clover in the sunshine in hot July, with the bees going round and about and the butterflies too, Angela stilled in a dreamy languor on the sofa— always she went back to those fields down in cool Macondo where she jumped the brook when it was small like her little girl legs. And to the mountains to escape the present reality of the heat in Tigo's beloved Santiago.

She closed her eyes and stretched like a cat, and at that moment, the curtains must have parted; the noon wind marched in, lugging a hint of tar from the hot concrete of Main Street, tickling her nostrils, transporting her back to physical reality. She sat up precariously, pushed away from the sofa, and dragged her feet to the kitchen, looking older-- drowsy, and heavy and older.

she came to his town
a green, strong-stemmed sunflower
and the roses leered

©️ Selma Martin

Selma Martin

Selma Martin is a retired English teacher with 20 years of experience teaching ESL to children. She believes in people’s goodness and in finding balance in simple living. She lives in Japan with her husband of 35 years. In 2018, Selma participated in a networking course that culminated in a final lesson to publish a story on Amazon. She completed the course and self-published her short story, "Wanted: Husband/Handyman," in 2019. Later, collaborating with peers from that course, she published "Wanted: Husband/Handyman" in "Once Upon A Story: A Short Fiction Anthology." Selma has published stories on Medium for many years, in MasticadoresUSAThe Poetorium at StarlightShort Fiction BreakLit eZine, and Spillwords. In July 2023, she published her debut poetry collection, In the Shadow of Rainbows (Experiments in Fiction). You can find Selma as selmawrites on Instagram and Twitter, and on her website, selmamartin.com.

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A Lone World by Sushant Thapa

Pixabay A Lone World  A lone world  Will lose friends by the porch.  Glances of affection  Will turn to desert sands.  The evening will be d...