Issue #80
David Banach
bit by bit
atom by atom
railings and pews wear
away
sidewalks and carpets
blood stains fade
almost clean memorials
Selma and the Lorraine
markets of Montgomery
Rosa’s bus seat smoothed
shiny
King’s funeral cart
wood still weathered
Birmingham jail cells
nervous finger tracks still
visible
a little less each day molecules carried
off
on children’s fingers
scraped into the very air
we breathe
what is Avogadro’s number for
hope
how many atoms of despair
fill a liter of the air
we need to breathe
how long to lighten
the boot
against the throat
but still the children
come
little fingers one by one
touching
something in them
growing advancing by
accretion
like the seed emerging out
of darkness knowing
it has grown the right
direction
cannot see justice
feel the future
wears away
building a remembering
bit by bit
of what we are together.
missing in the applesauce aisle
at the supermarket
out of the rain
in the aisle where
my applesauce lives
an old man small
sagging socks plaid
shirt baggy pants
staring umbrella
in hand dripping
at his feet looks
and looks and looks
finally turns to see
me waiting: Every
time I come here
something new
is missing.
David Banach is a philosopher and poet in New Hampshire, where he tends chickens, keeps bees, and watches the sky. You can read some of his most recent poetry in Isele Magazine, Hooligan Magazine, Evocations Review, Amethyst Review, and Terse. He also does the Poetrycast podcast for Passengers Journal.
Stephanie V Sears
Gygis alba
This is why I climbed
this lustrous island thrust high
above the assaulting sea.
For though unsettled
in its avian ways,
the bird is paragon.
Fairy Tern vaulting valleys and bays
on messenger winds,
writes syllables of candor
with immaculate quill;
re-writing ruthless cliffs,
it spells freedom.
My gaze seeks night’s
star-scented salve
in those black Diva eyes.
Without nest or burrow,
just a branch for bed,
it purrs under sky.
Soaring beyond survival,
amending its aerial grade,
bidding for angel.
Stephanie V Sears is a French and American ethnologist (Doctorate EHESS, Paris 1993), free-lance journalist, essayist and poet whose poetry recently appeared in Clementine Unbound, The Non-Conformist Magazine, SORTES, Expanded Field, Lunaris, and Egophobia. Her first and second books of poetry: ‘The Strange Travels of Svinhilde Wilson’ (2020, Adelaide Books) and ‘Anaho‘ (2023, Arteidolia Press, NY).
Louise Wilford
At dusk
unravel the cold find the sweet spot where
the world works black wings thrash the air
till the pale sky is a paper lined with notes a wire
of heat tasering your toes a kind of restless fire
curled round your ankle bones crows calling in the night
a feeling brined, preserved in readiness a flight
of starlings, flashing oily black the milk-white moon
air like the thought of Christmas curtains furled too soon
air spiced and pined the sacrificial lips of mistletoe
orange peel and lemon-scent the hillsides richly iced with snow
find the fold where fireside moans against your skin
the tinkling kiss of bells the goldenglow fit yourself in
it smells of hope despite the way the edges grind
like millstones unseen hands will wind
the chill into a ball and unheard voices swiftly race
while unfelt fingers brush the dregs of daytime from your face
Louise Wilford lives and works in Yorkshire, UK. Her work has been widely published, most recently in Allium (July 2024), Epistemic Literary, 805, Heartland Review, River and South, POTB, The Fieldstone Review, and Black Hare Press. She has a Masters in Creative Writing (Distinction, 2020). She is working on a fantasy novel.
William Doreski
Two Cherubs
Two cherubs painted on plaster
in a ruined summer house.
This outdated motif critiques
the close of a feckless year
so criminal that history texts
still unwritten are crumpling
their pages in verbal dismay
at war and corruption expanding
to include the oldest pensioner
and the newborn gladly nursing.
This summer house once belonged
to the estate of the man who devised
Clue and Monopoly, board games
that bored me right through puberty.
In deep snow there’s no evidence
of the formal garden that thrived
through a hundred winters to lilt
back to life each April, grinning
with crabapple blossoms and vines
as thick and tough as pythons.
No evidence but the wrecked
summer house where I shelter
from the northwest wind fumbling
for victims ripe for frostbite.
The cherubs bear between them
a banner no longer legible.
But their faces retain big smiles
against a background of pastel cloud.
Those smiles could sell anything.
The odor of seduction lingers
from drunken parties years ago
when the big house presided
over New England’s simple wealth.
Now converted to condos
the mansion cowers as if caught
naked with the hired help.
I wish I could take these cherubs home
but the plaster would crumble if touched,
leaving me undefended against
even the slightest warp in time.
William Doreski lives in Peterborough, New Hampshire. He has taught at several colleges and universities. His most recent book of poetry is Venus, Jupiter (2023). His essays, poetry, fiction, and reviews have appeared in various journals. .
R.C. Hong
SHARPS & FLATS
I swim through the purple darkness
like a mermaid with no upper body.
A drop of blood pearls at the tip
of a hypodermic needle: the
light at the end of the tunnel.
A spotlight beam falls with a crash
over me like a golden cage.
My red heels stand at the center
of a yellow pool of piss.
I slide down the beams of eighth
notes, the spiraling banisters
of my quivering throat,
like a pill, only much too large;
I choke.
R.C. Hong is a new writer from Rocklin, California.
David Mampel
The Greeting
On the cedar path
of a community garden,
fretful thoughts
blot out the morning sun.
A cold breeze
rattles dry corn stalks
where I pass.
Muttering stops.
I smile
at the flutter
of dead leaves
in winter.
David Mampel is a caregiver, former minister, semi-retired clown and artist. He writes fiction and poetry to bring a little sun to the rainy darkness of the Pacific Northwest. His work has appeared in Copperfield Review Quarterly, The Aurora Journal, The Remington Review and others.
Yuan Changming
Winter Wait
With their most tender touches, snowflakes
Have painted the whole night white
Including the darkest corner in sight
Even within a forgotten dream
Except the plum tree, standing alone there
Under the eastern sky, whose
Flowers are blooming boldly against
The entire season, more vibrant than blood
Yuan Changming edits Poetry Pacific with Allen Yuan in Vancouver. Credits include 12 Pushcart nominations for poetry and 2 for fiction besides appearances in Best of the Best Canadian Poetry (2008-17), BestNewPoemsOnline and 2019 other literary outlets worldwide. A poetry judge at Canada’s 2021 National Magazine Awards, Yuan began writing and publishing fiction in 2022.
McKinley Johnson
A Man of Faith
The Church took that boy
and made him a man
of faith. Drained his
passion for play,
replaced love with
provision; holding
heaven warped his back,
turned his shoulders,
those his son once sat upon,
from seat to shelter.
Collapsed his chest,
did not allow him
the delicacy of
breath. Taught him
to be slow to anger:
showed him how to wait—
refused him
what he was waiting for,
and allowed
the floodwaters
their rise.
McKinley Johnson is a recent graduate from High Point University, and he currently writes and resides in North Carolina. His work has previously been published in Carolina Muse Literary & Arts Journal and Apogee Literary Magazine.
Jamie Brown
On the Banks of the Somne
Looking over your shoulder
in that half-dream state
occasioned by waking before the alarm
then drifting back into the enveloping
dark, to see if death is gaining
on you, wondering if you haven’t
lost a step or two, the unfinished
things begin to wake you, taking
on an importance you never
ascribed to them, the dreams of
childhood suddenly recalled with
a sense of the loss-of-the-self,
and was that your parent calling
or just the echo of their
voice in your own, remembered
as you called your own family into
dinner the night before, before you
struggled into bed, wrestling with sleep.
Jamie Brown earned an MFA from the American University, afterward teaching at George Washington University, Georgetown University, and the Smithsonian Institution. His poetry has been published in over forty literary publications. He was associate editor and editor for three lit mags, & a newspaper’s poetry critic.
Charlotte Porter
Esperanto
[Tajnywspolpracownik] say Miami moles on the solarium TV,
the four of them dressed in clerical regalia. Rooks? asks the gorgeous hyacinth macaw, a rescue bird into chess and daytime shows. No, Crooks I correct like a fussy sommelier, wine steward of labels.
But lettuce watch opera, bird replies in Swinglish patois, diction delightful.
Cozy on the sofa, we listen as forensic experts chat up Oprah.
[Valuable these old zoo birds] to study [Lost Tribe vocabularies]
& birthstones] sold to tourists as [memes of cosmology]. [Long-term markets for man-made gems] guests agree [require poetry,] not defrocked priests, think I, feeling righteous—not that I can sex a macaw. I regard showy Polly as a he happy for hardtack.
Pecking nits w/ wizened eye, the macaw solemnly exhales soffegios in twelves:
amethyst aquamarine diamond garnet pearl peridot opal ruby sky sapphire topaz turquoise Eyeing the tea tray, TeeVee dinner? He queries, and rearranges clipped wings. Fresh watercress I mouth, collective noun, colonial repast crust-free on white. Uppity macaw preens, baits me w/ sartorial dicta: Scrimshank give thanks never wear patent leather pumps sans underpants. Nix brown socks w/ navy suits. Scrimshaw scofflaw. Do-si-do on opposite toe. Cash in hafnium for bitcoin. He’s bluffing as a Wall Street bull, this New World bird, once darling of Old Master oils, pet bird of regents posed w/ conch shells, coralline, and Flemish piles of fruit or stuffed mount tucked away heavenly hyacinth on green velvet trees after the Fall of the Indies. Chagrined I cage my face in both hands, squint past finger bars, nickname the sly bird Ritz. Too cracker macaw replies, smoothing ruffled feathers. Too hotel. Amenhotep better suits my Amen status. Respect please my druthers.
Switching tactics, I daringly recite northern cities of Ceylon:
Pandatherippu, Vavunya Kankesanthurai, Jaffna, Kilinochchi, Puthukkudiyiruppu.
Been there, wherein the best elephants of Asia interjects macaw, grounded flyer,
tiresome liar speaking truth to power, honing beak on cuttlefish bone for do re mi money song… meaning perch atop Liberace’s mirrored grand piano on Dean Martin Drive in Vegas.
Hearing the old bird snicker, seeing his sleek sateen flicker,
I change his name to Candelabra. Call me a cad, my bad. Bummed-out, I’m done carrying the torch. Let drafts rule his fate. |
Published poet and award-winning short fiction author, Charlotte M. Porter lives and writes in an old citrus hamlet in north central Florida.
Jefferson Fortner
Within her domain #2
Magnificat monitors
Proper structures of
Acatalectic haiku—
Condemns use of bizarre sense—
Strained catachresis—
Hypercatalectic nonsense—
Condones haiku in plain sense—
Lines concatenate—
Nothing catalectic.
Her critique of offense—
Hacking up her thoughts—
Expresses catarrhal distain
“. . . [N]ow that you’ve found that life isn’t a farce, but something quite sensible and serious, what further obstacle is there to your happiness?”
-George Bernard Shaw. Arms and the Man. Act III.