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A Poem by Michele Keane-Moore

To My Entangled Quark

Shall we sit a moment

To sip our jasmine tea and enjoy

Being in the same room

At the same table

with its flowered tablecloth?

Sun is spilling over both of us

With its hint of warmth,

Unmasking every wrinkle

In a familiar and slightly rude way.

The new day is upon us

Calling frantically

Like the wrens outside

For us to pay closer attention.

There are so many directions

In which we could go

And maybe should

But there is only now

That we have together

Before distance and time

Pull us apart again.

On the eve of yet

Another birthday,

I would rather forsake

An early arrival

At an unknown destination

For the time I have right

Now here with you.

Michele Keane-Moore is an avid birder and photographer who takes her inspiration from the natural world.  She teaches biology as an adjunct at Western New England University and tries to get outside every day.  


Image courtesy of the author.

a short party for strangers on the Serengeti by Timothy Hudenburg

bore more

bone marrow

lessons now here

plant neither nor


animal either or

lessons here now

nowhere amongst omnivores

creatures just beginning to assert their dominance

T. M. Hudenburg is glad this interesting and unusual (bizarre) piece found a home here.


Image by Mike from Vancouver, Canada, CC BY-SA 2.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0>, via Wikimedia Commons

Awareness: Three Variations on a Theme by Cliff Bernier

0

Imagining

Imagine light unpeeling
like appleskin,
or a cloud of crows
circling,
from a woodland pond
reflecting
trees above
regarding me with wonder,
imagining me.

Awakening

See morning unpeel
like an orange,
loop the merry-
go-round sun and
once
again
churn me
to butter,
spread me thick
on baguette
like marmalade.
See light plink
a backyard pond
in horizons,
swing
and swoop me
like fin-flash
to the moon.
And see my cup
drip with jelly,
toys
toast and figs
sprung
by awakening.

Knowing

Watch days peel off
like grapes,
green as gum
sweet as wine
swift in twilight
twisting
like wings
tableau of stem
branch
and skin
plucking bunches,
knowing me.

Clifford Bernier is the author of three poetry collections; he has been nominated for two Pushcart Prizes and his book The Silent Art won the Gival Press Poetry Award. He appears on harmonica in the Accumulated Dust world music series and is featured on the EP Post-Columbian America. A member of the Washington Writers Collection, he has featured on NPR’s The Poet and the Poem from the Library of Congress and lives in Alexandria, Virginia.


Image by Joe Mabel, CC BY-SA 4.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0>, via Wikimedia Commons

Four Poems by Gregory McGreevey

0

Lightning Bugs

Branched bogs, a curiously quiet
afternoon, rapt, mad with heat.
We keep throwing rocks, despite
the moans, the pleas,
still,
after cursing turns to begging,
until
lightning bugs dot the darkness
and
frogs quiver
and
call out.

Last time the stream ran too
high and alliances were laid bare,
our sinew fraying
in time, tethers becoming water, accepting
consequence, asking questions into the
silent night.

And so, it felt right to heave, to
rebel against the soil itself, to
forget what we had learned.

Being the stagnant water or the
thousands of humming mosquitos flying
weakly to wherever the wind pushed,
we found ourselves no longer able to
return home, we
having forgotten the language of parades
and roadways,
there being something about the grey clay
of eroding riverbanks
that cannot be translated.

Until now this much was obvious, that
the rules never changed,
that we had never left the woods,
never would.

Clink

Carry with you a thousand miles of rusted fence.
Slurry upland and rest
by the prickly
holly nest
grazing on the leeward
of changing hills’
dwindling roots.

It’s shadow, memory,
as shadows are
hiding the face
, avoiding stepdads,
metallic clink,
fork on plate,
amplified in quiet rooms.
In lucid daydreams

the dirty water
fills the potholes
every winter, we
embrace like a
Goodnight kiss, saying,
Does it mean anything if
cows are happy

when the veiny storm clouds
settle above in bulbous purple
expanse,
when this town’s muddy ditches
are just one year
deeper?

Dawn

Many nights, having squeezed
the mud between our fingers, having
spit starry streams toward the constellations,
we asked that Eos would halt
her arc, the amber pestilence
stretched in rusty chrome
across the horizon, we, having
bit off more than we could chew, having
our jaws eat up the frozen marsh
under oil-speckled ice, wishing
to reunite with time,
beatitude delayed,
our gathering echoes,
we,
Odysseus & Penelope standing among the broken
reeds illuminated in neon,
the river below us
bloated with aluminum cans.

Milieu

We make do with brackish tributaries,
rusty crab cages sloshing through
the thick grey chop, or…

The alluvial plane is silent, a
semi-aquatic meadow on the cusp
of billowing smoke and the apparatus of
industrial revolution decay.
An ornament hung on humid reveries we manifest
among sagging willows.

When mud is your milieu, the
nostalgia is warmer, it has
other connotations, as if we
had the luxury to
choose.

Upstream, furnaces burn,
whole economies built on
sweat and Sunday mass.
We hear differently and speak
secretly.
When the shadows that separate
work from worship embrace
our faces.


Gregory McGreevy lives and writes poetry in Baltimore, Maryland. His work has previously been featured in West Trade Review, The Finger Literary Journal, Bourgeon Online, and The Northern Virginia Review, among others.

Image by Michal Klajban, CC BY-SA 4.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0>, via Wikimedia Commons

Two Poems by Chris Biles

0

Etched

protected
and unprotected
parts
make the whole
make the art

pour on the acid
the chemicals
feel the burn
feel the boiling consumption
depletion
destruction

or just watch it

from beneath the quiet balm
of secrecy and lies

protected and unprotected
parts
make up the whole

of the individual
or
on the macro scale:

protected
and unprotected
parts
make the whole
make the art

pour on the acid
the chemicals
feel the burn
feel the boiling consumption
depletion
destruction

or just watch it

from beneath the quiet balm
of privilege

Crossing the Circle

Searching for some worthy memories
a round white man
red in the face from the sun
from the exertion of walking
roomy shorts pulled up over his belly
legs stretching from the two tents
down to tall ribbed socks
emerging from oversized Velcro-ed shoes
Santa Claus on vacation
he leans back
points his fancy camera
at the fearless face of Washington
sitting atop his horse
sword outstretched
pointed
-click-
-click-
on to the next.

McDonald’s cup in hand
slightly crumpled but clean
bright white
with golden arches
“Can I get an egg and cheese
an egg and cheese?”
strained deep voice
blind eyes search
never find
but the finding is in
the other senses
like the taste
of an egg and cheese in the morning
a strawberry milkshake tomorrow.

Matted-haired to match
the fuzz of faux-fur white slippers
in an oversized jacket
of colors unworthy of remembrance
a small woman rocks back and forth
on a bench covered in pigeon poop
clutching her stomach
pain etched into her face
she leans over
spits onto the sidewalk
moves her wet lips
cursing
cursing
to herself
spit drips
she remains bent
eyes closed
rocking.

Unloading
only to reload
then unload again
a road bike with peeling
strips of duct tape along its length
faded
to a nebulous white
baggy clothing
and a baggy beard
jolting with his jaw
as the man with hollow eyes
tells himself
adamantly:
“one door closes,
but another will open”
again
again
again
“one door closes,
but another will open”
“one door closes,
but another will open”
“one door closes,
but another will open.”

Down the escalator
to the metro
running to
and from
I wonder
if it’s a waste of time
to think that walls
can open and close
as doors

Chris Biles currently lives and works in Washington, D.C. She enjoys playing with the light and the dark, and losing herself in music, anything outside, and some words here and there. Published by Neon Door, Bourgeon Online, Exeter Publishing, Evening Street Review, Haunted Waters Press, Yellow Arrow Publishing, Signatures Magazine, FleasOnTheDog, and others. You can find her at www.chrisbiles03.com / Instagram: @marks.in.the.sand


Image by Chris Biles, courtesy of the author.