Monday, April 4, 2011

Apr. 2011 Poetry Page



“Poetry is ordinary language
raised to the nth power. 
...boned with ideas, ...blooded with emotions,
all held together by the 
delicate, tough skin of words.” 

- Paul Engle

________________________________________


POEM OF THE MONTH


SINGING A POEM 
AT THE WELL-BEING FAIRE
by Patricia Wellingham-Jones

I lay out my chapbooks
on the red velvet cloth, 
move back to examine the effect. 

My ear catches a voice at my shoulder— 
a young girl singing my poem. 
Entranced, I listen. 
Song over, ask her name. 

She thrusts out her hand, 
gives mine a brisk shake, 
announces she’s Lisa, 
eleven years old, sixth grade. 

I say I’m reading at two, 
would she like to sing a poem then? 
Yes! Her eyes shine, her lips curve. 

She leafs through the book. 
I hold up three fingers, 
she nods, dog-ears her choices. 

In the small group I introduce her, 
her voice rises in song: 
three poems she never saw before, 
three different tunes. 

We applaud wildly 
and thank her for singing. 
I ask if she’d like to do it again at three. 

Face beaming, she says yes, 
bends to hug me in my chair. 
Her long brown hair falls over my face.


PATRICIA WELLINGHAM-JONES has a longtime interest in 'healing writing' and the benefits people gain from writing and reading their work together. Her poems, stories and articles are widely published. Her chapbooks include “Don’t Turn Away: Poems About Breast Cancer,” “Voices on the Land,” and “End-Cycle: Poems about Caregiving.” Contact 


~~~~~


JESUS, THE CRUCIFIED
by Nell Berry

Jesus prayed, 
“if it is possible, let this cup pass from me.”
He sweated great drops like blood, 
“but thy will not mine to be.” 

Again He prayed and agonized, 
“Father if it can possibly be,” 
Jesus, the Son of God cried, 
“let this cup pass from me.” 

He heard the sound of footsteps; 
He knew it was His time, 
going forth to meet His captors, 
to suffer for your sin and mine. 

The mock trial His enemy staged, 
GUILTY this sinless Man to find, 
the scourging, torture beyond human endurance, 
the guilt misplaced. IT’S MINE. 

He died on the cross for you and me, 
our sin, our guilt, not His to blame, 
our transgressions nailed to the tree, 
on Calvary He bore our shame. 

Up Golgotha’s Hill, His precious blood drained. 
A crown of thorns crowned our King. 
We glorify and honor, His praises we sing. 

Mary Magdalene went to the tomb. Three days had passed. She found the tomb was empty, 
“Where is He?” she asked. 
Then she saw Jesus, not knowing it was He, 
until He spoke and called her name, “Mary.” 

She reached for His hand, 
“Do not touch me,” he said. 
“I have not yet ascended.” 

HE IS NOT DEAD! 

The stone was rolled away, 
only the grave clothes remained. 
Jesus Christ the Lamb of God, 
Who for sinners slain. 

"HE IS RISEN!" they proclaimed. 
Jesus Messiah, the crucified, 
we praise His holy name.

NELL BERRY resides in West Virginia and has been married to Louis B. Berry for sixty years. She is a mother of four, grandmother of nine and great grandmother of soon to be eleven grandchildren. Her hobbies include cooking, sewing, crocheting and writing. She is a published author of one book, GROWING UP IN MISSOURI AND OTHER SHORT STORIES about her growing up years. She is a Christian who writes all inspirational poetry, song lyrics and short stories. Contact

~~~~~

THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS
by Cathy Quaglia

Alice played the game of “Let’s Pretend”
and gazed in the mirror without end 
to find a world where chessmen screamed 
and flowers quarreled and made a scene. 

Where the silly twins, Tweedledum and Tweedledee 
fearing a giant black crow, ran under a tree. 

Where the dozing Red King dreamt of Alice 
dreaming of the King and her own crown and palace. 

Where Humpty Dumpty unraveled “Jabberwocky” 
and should not have acted quite so cocky. 

Where Lion and Unicorn never won and never lost 
and plum cake sliced itself, of course. 

Where the kind White Knight, the great inventor 
couldn’t ride or invent, but on her way he sent her. 

Where Alice eagerly jumped the last brook to Q-8 
to wear a golden crown and scepter was clearly her fate. 

Where Red Queen and White Queen put her to the final test but Royal Alice was wise, and soon captured the best. 

Alice played the game of “Let’s Pretend” 
and gazed in the mirror without end 
to find her world was a vision borrowed from time 
and life a dream fashioned by the mind.

CATHY QUAGLIA grew up in New York and moved to Killington,Vermont in 1975, establishing Aspen East Ski Shop with her husband, Lee. With the emergence of snowboarding, they started Surf the Earth Snowboards, and continue to run their retail and online stores together. During this time, she was a certified professional ski instructor and resort real estate broker. She has hosted many events at the shop, including book signings with best-selling authors, Linda Greenlaw, Reeve Lindbergh, Karen Lorentz and Wendy Clinch, and The Ski Channel’s movie THE STORY to a large audience at The Summit Lodge in January 2011. She created WATERCOLOR WORDS, a collaboration with fellow Killington Arts Guild member, artist Alice Sciore, combining Cathy’s poems, “ODE TO SKIING,” “REFLECTIONS ON SNOW,” and “MOUNTAIN HOME” with watercolor paintings that Alice created for them, which are now available for sale as art prints. She is working on a book of poetry and images called LIGHT ON LIFE. Contact 

~~~~~

OLD BOOKS
by Edward Rodosek

Sometimes I get weary of the computer
for reading electronic books 
is so unfeeling and so lifeless. 

Then I ransack all my bookshelves 
in my study and elsewhere. 

There my old beloved books 
are waiting for my attention 
as faithful as always. 

Therefore I simply must return to them 
again and again 
as to a favorite cake. 

At first I blow the dust from their hardcovers 
and turn through pages of some books. 
I love the rustling of dry paper 
and its slight yellow tinge. 

Abruptly a well-known title holds me up 
as deeply buried memories 
awaken somewhere in my mind. 

By chance I recollect a fragment forgotten long ago 
and something forced me 
to find it in the book. 

Many of the sentences I know by heart; 
so I don't search for the story anymore. 

I try to find that hidden bridge 
which would return me 
to magic bygone years of my delight 
when I got first excited 
with their eternal beauty.

EDWARD RODOSEK is a Senior College Professor at the University of Ljubljana in Slovenia, European Union. He is married and has one daughter and two grandsons. In addition to his professional work, he also writes fiction. More than a hundred of his short stories and about a dozen of his poems have been published in magazines in the US (including Long Story Short), UK, Australia and India. Recently, he published a collection of short stories in the US entitled “BEYOND PERCEPTION.” Contact 


~~~~~


SPRING AT THE FARM
by James Piatt

New sprouts
Beginning of life: 
Rose buds 
White, red, pink, green. 
Little sprout 
Pushing up from 
Deep rich soil: 
Rich earth 
Anxious to emit 
Nourishment, 
Fruit trees 
Green, pink blossoms 
Beautiful elderly woman 
On her hands 
And knees, 
Gently sifting 
Humid earth, 
Like she has done 
For so many seasons, 
So peaceful 
In her garden of 
Spring delights.

JAMES PIATT earned his BS and MA from California State Polytechnic University, and his doctorate from Brigham Young University. He is retired and spends his summers along the river, reading, writing, and penning poetry. Two relatives, John James Piatt & Sarah Morgan Bryan Piatt, were prolific poets who wrote poetry in the 1800's. Contemporary American Voices (featured poet), Word Catalyst Magazine (featured poet), Apollo’s Lyre, Caper Journal, Vox Poetica, Shadow Poetry Anthology, The Penwood Review, Wilderness House Review, Front Porch Review, A Handful of Stones, Autumn Leaves, and Hanging Moss Journal, have published or will be publishing his poetry. Contact 

~~~~~


ETERNAL
by Virginia Munoz

Ghosts of our struggles
disturb your sleep. 
A faint whimper and 
your head swivels on the pillow. 
In the morning 
the golden nimbus of your fine baby hair, 
standing out straight, 
speaks truth to all: 
haloed toddler 
locked in holy battle with a tyrant, 
receiving mysterious directives from heaven 
like St. Joan of Arc.

VIRGINIA MUNOZ lives in Oregon and has dual degrees in Linguistics and Religious Studies. She writes in the middle of the night while her six kids are asleep or at the kitchen counter when they think she’s preparing dinner. She has been published in the Imperfect Parent. Contact 


~~~~~


THE PATTERN
by Floriana Hall

It’s cut on the bias
It fits together 
Stitches small and even 
Like in a quilt 
One patch is the first step 
Another is learning 
To walk alone 
Choices to make 
One path or the other 
No cracks to fall through 
In the garden of life 
Veering to the right 
Hobbling to the left 
Picking up the pieces 
Misinterpreting some 
Reaching out for others 
Stuck in the middle 
Culture shocks 
Righteous views 
Time to rest 
A masterpiece

FLORIANA HALL is the author of twelve books, six nonfiction and six inspirational poetry books. Her nonfiction book, FRANCIS, NOT THE SAINT has recently been translated into Spanish (FRANCISCO, NO EL SANTO). Her new poetry book SELECT SANDS OF RHYME AND REASON and young children's book SIMPLE PLEASURES are now available at Cyberwit.net and Amazon.com. Floriana teaches poetry at www.LSSWritingSchool.com under YOU, ME, AND POETRY. Contact Website Website



~~~~~



HE'S NOT RELATED TO ME
by Joe DiBuduo

It only comes once a year.
To some a joy and a pleasure,
others think it an unspeakable measure 
What'll it be for you when that time arrives? 

Will you embrace that uncle in expectation 
that he’ll reimburse all of your expenses? 
Or will you shudder in horror 
when he comes calling, 
looking for hidden treasures 
and other things you didn't 
want him to know you owned?

Once a year he is generous to some, but I tell you, 
he's no uncle of mine with his threats and abuse. 
He only claims to be my uncle for what I own. 
He's no blood of mine, and if he has any at all, 
it’s ice cold.

If we don't give him what he wants, he'll send force 
to take what he claims as his own. If we resist, we'll 
find ourselves without anything at all because he has 
the law working for him. 

So fill out that paperwork, 
and give him what he claims as his, 
or be prepared for the worst. 
No one has ever said, "I Love You" 
on any call or letter to our Uncle Sam.


JOE DIBUDUO is a writer who lives in Arizona and graduated from Yavapai College in 2009 in the creative writing program. He has published several short stories and poems online, and has published one nonfiction book. He is presently working on a memoir and novel along with writing a poem a day. Contact


~~~~~



BAD POETRY NIGHT
by Alexandra Hughes

sixteen reasons
to be positive and vote 
pro bono in favor of this poem:

your eighth grade teacher never saw it. 
the meter’s not really too bad – 
and your boyfriend’s family 
will never, ever reference it. 
Not to mention the dozen 

glorious monkeys who proudly 
resound with a timid, squealed 

“Ooh, ooh… aah aah.” 
thank you.

ALEXANDRA HUGHES is a full-time writer and novelist in Atlanta, Georgia. This poem was a crowd-pleaser at a real college “Bad Poetry Night” in 2004. Contact 


~~~~~



TRAVELING A SPRING THRUWAY
by Patricia Crandall

Swarms of trees
nurture infant buds 
soon to mature 
in resplendent array. 
An insatiable eagle 
devours prey 
by the roadside. 
Traveling in the direction 
of New York City 
a farmer carts hay blocks. 
A fiery sun 
warms passengers 
through gray tinted windows 
of the sleek, white 
limousine. 
Atlantic City 
is one hundred seventy five 
miles away!

PATRICIA CRANDALL has three books in print: a thriller, THE DOG MEN, a historical volume, MELROSE: THEN AND NOW, and a poetry book, I PASSED THIS WAY. She is currently working on an adventure/thriller novel and a book of bottle mining adventures. She lives with her husband on a lake in the Grafton Mountains in upstate New York. Contact 

~~~~~



SHAKESPEAREAN BASEBALL SONNET #26
by Michael Ceraolo

Lords of the realm, to who in vassalage
The players for a hundred-plus years were;
For these I send this written embassage
For those unions which did not quite adhere:
One, its own, league, betrayed by it backers
Just when it was on the verge of success;
One that for a few years made more smackers
From the baseball magnates' war of excess;
One with a chief chosen by management!
Until came the time of Marvin Miller,
And with him the end of sentiment;
Someone who for unions was a pillar.
And the lords would then yield and yield and yield
Until it was a level playing field.

AUTHOR’S NOTE: This poem is part of a project called “Baseball a la Shakespeare,” a re-writing of all 154 sonnets and selected soliloquies with baseball themes.

MICHAEL CERAOLO is a fifty-one year old civil servant/poet who is interested in, and writes about the past, present, and future. Contact 

~~~~~


TWO STANZAS ON POETRY
by Joseph Hart

To come up with the something that is art -
Rhythms, rhymes and images and phrases -
The truths that come to those who live apart -
Inconsequential truths - in verse that dazes

The mental senses - like a single tone
Sung by a soprano singing high -
Poetry's a joy when I'm alone -
And I'll keep getting older til I die -

JOSEPH HART became aware of poetry when he read "The Highwayman." His heroes are Keats and Brooke. His happiest publication was a twenty page free verse on sleep in Audience Magazine about a year ago. If he had written the thesis, he would have an MA in Humanities. Contact 

~~~~~


JESUS, MESSIAH
by Nell Berry

When Jesus was born in Judea,
in a stable where cattle are fed, 
There was no room in the inn 
and the manger became His bed. 

When Jesus began His ministry, 
fulfilling the prophetic word, 
He set captives free 
and taught things no one had ever heard. 

After He began to preach, 
His disciples knew Him as Lord, 
They believed He was the Messiah, 
the only begotten Son of God. 

As Jesus’ ministry grew,
the number of believers began to grow. 
His own received Him not, 
His teaching, they did not know.
The Pharisees were afraid of Him, 
He was a threat to their way of life. 
His teaching caused them to feel guilt and shame, 
And they wanted to see him die. 

He healed, saved and delivered, 
this Man Who was called the Christ. 
He didn’t boast or make false claims, 
He was a Man Who could not lie. 

They had seen the miracles He performed, 
giving hope, where none remained. 
Many lives were transformed, 
He healed the sick, the blind and lame. 

In the annals of time, God’s plan was laid, 
for Judas to aid the chief priests and Pharisees 
and lead them to the Son of Man, 
in the sinister plan they made; 
To betray his friend, thirty pieces of silver, 
Judas was paid. 

In the Garden of Gethsemane, Jesus prayed, “Father, if it is possible, Let this cup pass from me.”
Again He prayed, “Let this cup pass from me.” 
And wept in great agony. 

At last, Judas entered the garden, 
Jesus knew His hour had come. 
Judas approached Him and kissed His cheek, 
to indicate He was the One. 
They arrested Jesus like a common thief, 
and led Him away. 

The One Who had no sin, for all our sins to pay. 
He endured the scourging, the torture, 
the stripes on His back, 
His beard was ripped from His dear face, 
and the flesh became bruised and black. 

He was beaten beyond recognition, 
His face swollen, distorted and grotesque. 
“Is this our beloved Messiah?” 
the disciples must have asked. 

“Why is He being beaten so mercilessly? 
What crime has He committed?” 
No one there could give an answer, 
there was no crime He did. 

He came and bore our sin; 
yet by God’s wrath He was crushed; 
wounded for our transgressions; 
His crime was that He loved us. 

Our chastisement was upon Him; 
By His stripes we are healed 
He died to save us from our sin, 
by His love we are sealed.


NELL BERRY resides in West Virginia and has been married to Louis B. Berry for sixty years. She is a mother of four, grandmother of nine and great grandmother of soon to be eleven grandchildren. Her hobbies include cooking, sewing, crocheting and writing. She is a published author of one book, GROWING UP IN MISSOURI AND OTHER SHORT STORIES about her growing up years. She is a Christian who writes all inspirational poetry, song lyrics and short stories. Contact


~~~~~


PORTRAIT OF THE POET
by Patricia Wellingham-Jones

She strides on long legs
into a room, along the road.
Usually looks up 
except when rocks on the lane 
catch her attention. 
Short hair, silver, 
engraved earrings, silver. 
Shirt with left breast pocket 
holds a crumpled tissue, 
camouflage for the loss beneath. 
Back straight, even when hurting, 
eyes hazel, direct to the core 
and a smile that belies the wrinkles 
mapping her face.

PATRICIA WELLINGHAM-JONES has a longtime interest in 'healing writing' and the benefits people gain from writing and reading their work together. Her poems, stories and articles are widely published. Her chapbooks include “Don’t Turn Away: Poems About Breast Cancer,” “Voices on the Land,” and “End-Cycle: Poems about Caregiving.” Contact 



~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~



april celebrity poet

Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
(1807-1882)

nationality: american

Henry Wadsworth Longfellow – Credit: Public Domain


An April Day
(excerpt)

When the warm sun, that brings
Seed-time and harvest, has returned again,
'T is sweet to visit the still wood, where springs
The first flower of the plain.

I love the season well,
When forest glades are teeming with bright forms,
Nor dark and many-folded clouds foretell
The coming-on of storms.

From the earth's loosened mould
The sapling draws its sustenance, and thrives;
Though stricken to the heart with winter's cold,
The drooping tree revives.



Read the entire poem at:  


For the poet’s biography, see:
http://www.poetryfoundation.org/bio/henry-wadsworth-longfellow












Quoted for educational purposes only.
All work the copyright of the respective authors.


_________________________________________



HAPPY POETRY MONTH!





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Saturday, March 5, 2011

Mar. 2011 Poetry Page




“Oh, the music in the air!
An' the joy that's ivrywhere -
the whole blue vault of heaven…
An' the earth…its tender green…
…is Irish on the Seventeenth o' March!” 

-Thomas Augustin Daly



 ________________________________________




POEM OF THE MONTH


IMMIGRATION SONG
by Helen Ditouras


I want to take a small slow boat to Ellis Island
With some coins in my pocket
And nothing but time
I want to purge my mind of family ties
And swallow the tears of this bittersweet rhyme.

Because only then can I begin to imagine
The borders they crossed to make things okay
How my father once said, 
"you've never been hungry"
As I rolled my eyes and he walked away.

I want to feel the shame at Ellis Island
Immigrants filing like herds of sheep
Butchered names and make-shift birthdays
The fine rewards for those who can't speak. 

And when I arrive at Ellis Island
I want to hear the chaos they heard
And see the faces all wrinkled with fear
That desperately cling to kind gestures and words. 

I want to look La Migra in the eye
Because I know my father never could
So scared they'd peel away his passport
And find a poor-boy shepherd 
with his cane of weathered wood.

I want to take a small slow boat to Ellis Island
Because I'm looking for the answer why
Blacks and immigrants built the Motor City
But are still dismissed as foreigners on the sly. 

I want to sing the song of Ellis Island
I need to hold my father's cold hand
And bury my head in my mother's old jacket
And kiss the ground of this melting pot land.


HELEN DITOURAS is an Assistant Professor of English at Schoolcraft College in Livonia, Michigan. Her favorite writers are Philip Roth and Isaac Singer, among others. Along with reading, her other passion is cinema. She studied Film Theory in graduate school and regularly teaches film at Schoolcraft College. Her favorite movie of all time is Wong Kar Wai's IN THE MOOD FOR LOVE. Contact 





~~~~~



A BIRD AT THE END OF WINTER
by Abigail Wyatt

A January bird hopped by
to beg a crumb of bread.
I fed him freely from my plate
and wove for him a bed.

For twigs and leaves other such
I braved the biting rain
to hollow out a nesting place,
then hurried home again.

For many weeks this pretty bird
sang merry in the nest;
secure and cosseted as he,
what signifies a frost?

But when at length the sun rose up
and lingered warm all day,
upon an altered melody,
my songbird flew away.

He did not trouble with farewell,
nor chance to glance behind;
no crumb of kindness there remained
that other birds might hope to find.

And had he not abused my trust,
or had he paused to tell me why,
I might have faith in feathers still
and not suspect the sky.

Now Nature’s set her precedent;
though winter blows no less severe,
a thousand songbirds yet may die
before a one finds succour here.



ABIGAIL WYATT writes for her life in the shadow of Carne Brae in Cornwall. Formerly a teacher of English, she is now a freelance writer whose poetry and short fiction have been published in a wide range of magazines and ezines, both in the United Kingdom and overseas. These have recently included Words with JAM, Word Salad, and Ink, Sweat & Tears; Kohinoor, Phoenix and One Million Stories. Her poetry is also regularly featured in Poetry Cornwall. Abigail is the 'house ' reviewer for Palores Press in Redruth. Her poetry collection, MOTHS IN A JAR, was published in October, 2010. Contact


~~~~~


TIME AND TIDE
by Cathy Quaglia                        

Time and Tide will not wait
for me and surely not for you
for I’ve hoisted the sails
and the Sea is calling.

I do not know what the sea holds for me
but I do know what you do not hold for me
and I must sail now or not at all
for the Sea is calling.

Time and Tide will not wait
for me and surely not for you
for the sails are filling with wind
and my Life is calling.



CATHY QUAGLIA grew up in New York and moved to Killington,Vermont in 1975, establishing Aspen East Ski Shop with her husband, Lee. With the emergence of snowboarding, they started Surf the Earth Snowboards, and continue to run their retail and online stores together. During this time, she was a certified professional ski instructor and resort real estate broker. She has hosted many events at the shop, including book signings with best-selling authors, Linda Greenlaw, Reeve Lindbergh, Karen Lorentz and Wendy Clinch, and The Ski Channel’s movie THE STORY to a large audience at The Summit Lodge in January 2011. She created WATERCOLOR WORDS, a collaboration with fellow Killington Arts Guild member, artist Alice Sciore, combining Cathy’s poems, “ODE TO SKIING,” “REFLECTIONS ON SNOW,” and “MOUNTAIN HOME” with watercolor paintings that Alice created for them, which are now available for sale as art prints. She is working on a book of poetry and images called LIGHT ON LIFE. Contact


~~~~~


IT IS WHAT IT IS 
by Floriana Hall

Vast canyons echo
Reverberating memories
Voices from the past

Chasms of charm and wit
Slide slowly to wither away
Confusion left in the wake

Whispers of love and rapture
Intensify in the loneliness
Of one instead of two

Whistling in the light of day
Jesting in the peak of time
Composed yet complex

Whiffs of smoke encircle
‘Melancholy Baby’ sounds
Contented in the cave

Tenacity like a river
Flows over the cliffs
To a muddled puddle

Silence envelops the walls
Heroic symbol wanes
It is a matter of fact.


FLORIANA HALL is the author of twelve books, six nonfiction and six inspirational poetry books.  Her nonfiction book, FRANCIS, NOT THE SAINT has recently been translated into Spanish (FRANCISCO, NO EL SANTO). Her new poetry book SELECT SANDS OF RHYME AND REASON and young children's book SIMPLE PLEASURES are now available at Cyberwit.net and Amazon.comFloriana teaches poetry at www.LSSWritingSchool.net under YOU, ME, AND POETRY. Contact Website Website


 ~~~~~


EARLY MORNING MARCH 19 
by Maralee Gerke

Alone in a strange house,
everything is quiet
except for the rumbling furnace.
Marooned in silence, I search
but even the dog has disappeared
 
Across town in the hospital
my mother is dying.
Her last breaths tear from her chest,
and all I can think about
is that I would rather be at home with you.

I don’t need to see this dying.
I have died by bits the last two months,
my heart torn, but not broken.
Unshed tears are locked behind my eyes,
and my head hurts from holding them back.

Light spreads across the valley floor
but I feel closed in,
no broad vistas of desert or mountains,
make it hard to breathe.
Soon I’ll be the oldest in my family.
 
I want to feel joy again,
long to dig my fingers into crumbly soil,
hold your healing body to my breast,
forget the pain
and start this day again.



MARALEE GERKE is a poet and gardener from Madras, Oregon. She has published two books of poetry and her poems have appeared in Calyx, Exit 13, Windfall, Avocet, and other poetry journals. Her work can be seen online at Long Story Short, Mu, and Moontown Café. Recently she recorded four poems which can be heard online at oregonpoeticvoices.org. Contact

~~~~~


GRAY AND WARM
by Roger Singer

A winged nymph passes easily
within brushed air.
Lifting my eyes, I am amazed at the
lightness and the chance so little
is so much.

March on eyes of wandering,
the keepsake of tears, the harbor
of liquid hands no ocean can claim;
sad hearts bow down to faces
under the ground.

Shadow moon; a night cruise over
a city of cool faces and full eyes.
Dogs bark at warm greetings
and rusty hinges.

The night has my shadow.
I am consumed in the shade of gray.



ROGER SINGER served as a medical technician at MacDill Air Force Base in Tampa, Florida for three and a half years during the Vietnam era. While stationed at MacDill, he attended evening classes through the University of Tampa. When discharged, he began studies at the University of South Florida and attained his Associate and Bachelor degrees. In 1977, Dr. Singer attained his chiropractic doctorate from Logan College of Chiropractic in St. Louis, Missouri. He has had over 500 poems published in magazines, on the Internet and in books. His poetry has appeared in Westward Quarterly, Black Book Press, Avocet, SP Quill, The Unrorean, Underground Voices, Language & Culture and The Tipton Poetry Journal. Contact 


 ~~~~~


MANAGEMENT
by Gregory Liffick

Suspicious
activity
in the
worker
brain.

A little
too cozy
with
rage and
childish
pursuit.

Memos
passed down
from the
cortex.

Behave
or
face
maturity
training.



GREGORY LIFFICK is an artist, musician, and teacher of special education and college night-school courses from Ontario, California. He has been a poet, he says, for most of his adult life. His online poetry chapbook collection entitled "WATERSHED" is available to print online. Contact Website 


 ~~~~~


NEON
by Reem Khondakar

We waited for the bus
against mud and puddles and
shimmering orange lights,
for bent glass
and broken crystal headlights
a simple neon sign
not too far away
but just far enough
to sigh.



REEM KHONDAKAR was born in England and raised in Chicago, Illinois. She is an eleventh grade high student at the University of Chicago Laboratory Schools. Her poetry has appeared in The Poet’s Art, Write On, and The Acorn. Contact 


~~~~~


SURVIVAL
by Bob McHeffey

inout
breathe
                         “How man how?”
under
the air
tracking
             
                        black wings 
                        black

flying at him
flying
inout
breathing
                        “Ain’t no way”

night breath
white in black

                        “Ain’t no way”

flying
black wings
black
                        “How?”

under the air,
man,
under the air

BOB MCHEFFEY is a writer, high school English teacher and girls basketball coach in suburban Southern California who juggles moderately well. Most of his poems get workshopped through his high school creative writing classes, so they can get practice in looking objectively at the craft of writing. Contact 


 ~~~~~


A TRUE FRIEND
by Joe DiBuduo

An image of a dog
pops into my brain

I see one designed
by Giacometti and

then I see one
designed by god

both assigned
to man intended

to be desired and
designated to be

loved

but instead they’re
forced to fight
forced to kill
forced to breed

what have we done



JOE DIBUDUO is a writer who lives in Arizona and graduated from Yavapai College in 2009 in the creative writing program. He has published several short stories and poems online, and has published one nonfiction book. He is presently working on a memoir and novel along with writing a poem a day. Contact 


  ~~~~~


QUESTIONS
by BRASH

Her expression blinkers his mind
The fast flashing makes it remain
As if he’s seeing it under a strobe
Even as it changes again
Towards the questions he finds
Himself trying to probe.



Humber, Alliah. DROBE. Collection of the Artist, Washington, DC.  
Credit: Alliah Humber

AUTHOR’S NOTE: “QUESTIONS” was inspired by artwork at ARTOMATIC in Washington, DC in 2009 and specifically to artist, Alliah Humber for her work known as "DROBE."


BRASH is known for writing poetry inspired by art, in association with the Washington, DC extravaganza ARTOMATIC, and by invitation to participate in various gallery events, readings, and performances. Her latest work includes creating and performing companion poetry to the book ADDICTION AND ART and the project’s show at Blue Elephant Gallery in Frederick, Maryland.  BRASH will lead workshops at The Writer’s Center in Bethesda, Maryland this year. Hear excerpts from her lyrical collaboration with Daisy Birch for Ahmad Nadimi's “SUITE FOR PEACE.” Read Frederick News Post interviews BRASH for the ADDICTION AND ART SHOW. See her claim to fame under “Notable Artists” on Wikipedia. Contact

~~~~~


WHAT I TOLD THE BIRDS
by John Tzikas

Senile sundrenched snowbirds seek segregated spas
majestic migratory marches materialize meticulously
afraid aviators assimilate astutely
yesterday you yelled
because blackballs became
eagle-eyes



JOHN TZIKAS is a Toronto, Canada based poet, lyricist, and free verse writer with a passion for classic literature and history. His poems have appeared in Long Story Short, Midwest Literary Magazine, Word Salad, Quill's, Ditch Poetry Magazine, Mused- the Bella Online, Hudson View Poetry Digest and Wordbridge Magazine. He has performed readings for more than five years in small coffee house settings, while living in Guelph and Kitchener, Ontario. Contact 

~~~~~


UNEXPECTED
by Patricia Crandall

Two old cats
chase each other
through the house,
awakened by
the minutiae
of spring's arrival.

I throw open shuttered windows,
unlatch storm doors; watch
robins worm in mud
and straw grass.

Oops! Winter's back!


PATRICIA CRANDALL has three books in print: a thriller, THE DOG MEN, a historical volume, MELROSE: THEN AND NOW, and a poetry book, I PASSED THIS WAY. She is currently working on an adventure/thriller novel and a book of bottle mining adventures. She lives with her husband on a lake in the Grafton Mountains in upstate New York. Contact  


 ~~~~~


SPRING DAY
by James Piatt

Early flowers of spring
Oranges vermilions
Yellows and whites
Shining remnants
Of yesterday's drizzle

Silver cumulous clouds
With gray centers
Tightly hug tall mountains
Then swirl and condense
In the afternoon sun

Dreams hover gently
Over green mountains
Laden with
The beginnings
Of new life
Lightening my mind

Marshmallow clouds
Liberating their weight
Of moisture like men
Ridding themselves
Of tiresome burdens

Raindrops falling
Cleansing their minds
From the worries
Of the bitter winters
Of their lives.



JAMES PIATT earned his BS and MA from California State Polytechnic University, and his doctorate from Brigham Young University. He is retired and spends his summers along the river, reading, writing, and penning poetry. Two relatives, John James Piatt & Sarah Morgan Bryan Piatt, were prolific poets who wrote poetry in the 1800's. Contemporary American Voices (featured poet), Word Catalyst Magazine (featured poet), Apollo’s Lyre, Caper Journal, Vox Poetica, Shadow Poetry Anthology, The Penwood Review, Wilderness House Review, Front Porch Review, A Handful of Stones, Autumn Leaves, and Hanging Moss Journal, have published or will be publishing his poetry. Contact 
  

~~~~~



ONE NIGHT, WANDERING DUBLIN 
by John Lander


Near midnight and the sky is pale
as the faces of this city. I walk

through clouds of smoke thick as coughs
of old men standing in doorways

with thin, weathered frames; lupine, mangy 
grins maligned and lathering 
the street’s bare shoulders.

Recently paved thumbprint bruises
bleed to the cracked surface, cobbled

conglomerations; now photographed. In alleyways,
whispers hiss against brick, the rummage of shadows

through rubbish bins, meek yet willing
to turn rabid if approached with haste,

and after a few hours of walking I begin to realize
how much the body does not depend upon its mind.

Muscle movements become involuntary, feet wander
of their own accord, directions are superfluous,

so mapless, I tread on: 
a California gull circling another’s river
and wondering why it feels as though 
I've been here before. 


JOHN LANDER is a writer from Austin, Texas who enjoys reading and writing out of his hammock, but he dislikes mosquito bites. His work has been published in Every Day Poets, Thieves Jargon, and Boston Literary Magazine (although he would like to suggest you continue reading the rest of this issue before navigating elsewhere). Contact





~~~~~~~~~~~~~



march celebrity poet

William Butler Yeats 
(1865 – 1939)

nationality: irish

William Butler Yeats – Credit: Public Domain
source: http://www.basicfamouspeople.com/index.php?aid=333




The Lake Isle of Innisfree

I will arise and go now, and go to Innisfree,
And a small cabin build there, 
of clay and wattles made;
Nine bean-rows will I have there, 
a hive for the honey-bee,
And live alone in the bee-loud glade.

And I shall have some peace there, 
for peace comes dropping slow,
Dropping from the veils of the morning 
to where the cricket sings;
There midnight’s all a glimmer, 
and noon a purple glow,
And evening full of the linnet’s wings.

I will arise and go now, for always night and day
I hear lake water lapping 
with low sounds by the shore;
While I stand on the roadway, 
or on the pavements grey,
I hear it in the deep heart’s core.














Quoted for educational purposes only.
All work the copyright of the respective authors.



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