by Jeanne Shannon
Leaves of the honey locust
floating down,
a cold, gold rain.
But still
two green leaves
on the Tree of Heaven.
Hatagoya's Desk
▼
Sunday, December 29, 2019
Wednesday, December 25, 2019
Erotic Slugs
by Eric Fisher Stone
Globs of butter, wet goblins, they rub
mouths lubed on blue lichen,
bellies grinding slow rivers
over humid mud, glugging air,
slugs measured in slimy lust
for dew, hedonist pleasure-monks,
paths slick with carnal lard, joy swelled
in oily organs, jellying hearts
gorged on Earth’s heaping gift.
Globs of butter, wet goblins, they rub
mouths lubed on blue lichen,
bellies grinding slow rivers
over humid mud, glugging air,
slugs measured in slimy lust
for dew, hedonist pleasure-monks,
paths slick with carnal lard, joy swelled
in oily organs, jellying hearts
gorged on Earth’s heaping gift.
Sunday, December 22, 2019
Bushland
by Judith Steele
Trunks of Eucalypts lean towards one another,
whisper with leathery leaves
Young Casuarinas draw black needles
on pale blue sky.
Sturt Peas flame in the dust
Pig Cactus creeps in hollows
Dam water is brown, ducks are brown
between blue-green bushes
and blue-green scent of bushland.
Trunks of Eucalypts lean towards one another,
whisper with leathery leaves
Young Casuarinas draw black needles
on pale blue sky.
Sturt Peas flame in the dust
Pig Cactus creeps in hollows
Dam water is brown, ducks are brown
between blue-green bushes
and blue-green scent of bushland.
Lines
by Carl Mayfield
i.
sandhill cranes too high to see
ii.
willow branch after the sparrow
iii.
horned owl swooping as low as he has to
i.
sandhill cranes too high to see
ii.
willow branch after the sparrow
iii.
horned owl swooping as low as he has to
Upon a Pile of Bear Dung
by Pepper Trail
Chestnut-brown dough of digestion
Polished husks of acorn, torn flesh of apple
Autumn’s abundance tumbled in that barrel of body
The dross left with nonchalance upon the path
All goodness taken in, made a robe of fat against the cold
But not yet ready for sleep, the October bear
Wanders the brambles, finds what she likes everywhere
Ambles to the high point of the year
Grunts, scratches, shits, and eats some more
Chestnut-brown dough of digestion
Polished husks of acorn, torn flesh of apple
Autumn’s abundance tumbled in that barrel of body
The dross left with nonchalance upon the path
All goodness taken in, made a robe of fat against the cold
But not yet ready for sleep, the October bear
Wanders the brambles, finds what she likes everywhere
Ambles to the high point of the year
Grunts, scratches, shits, and eats some more
Wednesday, December 18, 2019
The Day Before
by Summer Koester
A devil's club graveyard all that remains,
bones of a mighty clubbed fortress
reduced to small brown skeletons,
silent, still scaffolds of what once was.
This is how you say madrugada in English–
the coldest, darkest, undead hour
when spirits roam the earth, right before
the first snow:
the rainforest so dry and quiet
bones and shapes, negative space,
the air sucked right out.
A devil's club graveyard all that remains,
bones of a mighty clubbed fortress
reduced to small brown skeletons,
silent, still scaffolds of what once was.
This is how you say madrugada in English–
the coldest, darkest, undead hour
when spirits roam the earth, right before
the first snow:
the rainforest so dry and quiet
bones and shapes, negative space,
the air sucked right out.
Sunday, December 15, 2019
Swan Song
by Wesley D. Sims
A sparse chorus of crickets
telegraphs the news--autumn
arrives on the overnight train.
Forty-degree West wind
plucks brown leaves
from walnut and poplar.
Twilight sifts over the landscape,
dark clouds press a pale orange sky
into the horizon.
A sparse chorus of crickets
telegraphs the news--autumn
arrives on the overnight train.
Forty-degree West wind
plucks brown leaves
from walnut and poplar.
Twilight sifts over the landscape,
dark clouds press a pale orange sky
into the horizon.
I Remember Aleppo
by Terrence Sykes
ancient silk road heirloom
grew upon the left bank
determined Queiq river
steeped landscape
rising field of peppers
powdered ochres
colors changing
seasons ceased
blossoming at dusk
ancient silk road heirloom
grew upon the left bank
determined Queiq river
steeped landscape
rising field of peppers
powdered ochres
colors changing
seasons ceased
blossoming at dusk
Since the storm
by Mathieu Debic
since the storm, new birds
find a home in the strewn leaves.
from the brush, new songs.
shafts of sun penetrate, now,
and mockingbirds dip and swerve.
broken branches dry in the sun.
since the storm, new birds
find a home in the strewn leaves.
from the brush, new songs.
shafts of sun penetrate, now,
and mockingbirds dip and swerve.
broken branches dry in the sun.
Wednesday, December 11, 2019
awakening
by Kat Terban
the slowly creaking dawn
sheds light on an unfurling
green pothos leaf, on the minute
veins where precious sap flows.
crisp sparkling dew
condenses, coalesces,
is drunk by a careful
angulate orbweaver spider;
it breaks open the water’s skin
and sucks the liquid in
while myriad eyes
remain alert for prey.
perched upon that new leaf
tapping its leg-tips, the spider
leaps out toward the sun,
spinner releasing a line
to rappel down, and start
a fresh day’s web.
the slowly creaking dawn
sheds light on an unfurling
green pothos leaf, on the minute
veins where precious sap flows.
crisp sparkling dew
condenses, coalesces,
is drunk by a careful
angulate orbweaver spider;
it breaks open the water’s skin
and sucks the liquid in
while myriad eyes
remain alert for prey.
perched upon that new leaf
tapping its leg-tips, the spider
leaps out toward the sun,
spinner releasing a line
to rappel down, and start
a fresh day’s web.
Sunday, December 8, 2019
The uppermost leaves
by Nandini Maharaj
The branches of the elm tree lean to one side
fanning out with the sun’s rays,
the uppermost leaves, emblazoned in gold.
The leaves below are tightly clustered
giving the appearance of stillness.
When all at once the wind blows and the leaves disperse,
revealing new patches of blue sky.
Then the leaves close in once again,
and all seems still but the uppermost leaves
glistening in the morning light.
The branches of the elm tree lean to one side
fanning out with the sun’s rays,
the uppermost leaves, emblazoned in gold.
The leaves below are tightly clustered
giving the appearance of stillness.
When all at once the wind blows and the leaves disperse,
revealing new patches of blue sky.
Then the leaves close in once again,
and all seems still but the uppermost leaves
glistening in the morning light.
Hardwoods
by Mathieu Debic
Groans in the hardwoods.
Wind stretches timbers, abates;
a blaze, a red shower.
Groans in the hardwoods.
Wind stretches timbers, abates;
a blaze, a red shower.
Wednesday, December 4, 2019
La Fin Sauvage
by John Zedolik
Wild is the roof
atop which reach
the unwanted spindly
stalks and irregular leaves
to an evening deepening
to night that will obliterate
their serrated silhouettes
and grant safety from discerning
eyes that might influence
a call for taming, a cutting
for the cutters upon the seam
of sky and constructed earth,
bold and instinctive on their edge,
left better to occasional sighting
by unconcerned souls who deem
the ridge, the ragged row welcome
wilderness needed among the docile
and down-combed brick-blocks
that certainly would frown up
if they could at the fringe that their
absolute politesse impedes
with wisps and licks that refuse
to lie flat and servile
as the lawns below.
Wild is the roof
atop which reach
the unwanted spindly
stalks and irregular leaves
to an evening deepening
to night that will obliterate
their serrated silhouettes
and grant safety from discerning
eyes that might influence
a call for taming, a cutting
for the cutters upon the seam
of sky and constructed earth,
bold and instinctive on their edge,
left better to occasional sighting
by unconcerned souls who deem
the ridge, the ragged row welcome
wilderness needed among the docile
and down-combed brick-blocks
that certainly would frown up
if they could at the fringe that their
absolute politesse impedes
with wisps and licks that refuse
to lie flat and servile
as the lawns below.
Sunday, December 1, 2019
Lines
by Judith Ann Muse Robinson
Planned community.
Ears up. Eyes wide. Whitetail deer.
C.V.S. ahead.
Planned community.
Ears up. Eyes wide. Whitetail deer.
C.V.S. ahead.
on a corner
by James Bell
a prosperous looking blackbird tries
to precision crack the shell
of a snail
on a corner of the Corlay Road -
interrupted
lifts it in its beak
and flies away from morning sun
a prosperous looking blackbird tries
to precision crack the shell
of a snail
on a corner of the Corlay Road -
interrupted
lifts it in its beak
and flies away from morning sun