<br>

Saturday, December 31, 2022

Repairing Light

by David Chorlton
 
Next week the men will come
to mend the sky.
Early one morning they will pull up
in their trucks and climb
on ladders to begin
chipping away the clouds
and come back down to unload
the material for holding off
the rain. Here doesn’t feel like here
today with hours
of a misty curtain drawn
across the mountain. Soon there will be
feet on heaven’s light
and scraping to remove the darkness
that accumulates on days
like this. Expect a moment soon
to look straight up for a brief view
through eternity
and the passage into space begins
when mission control announces
it is time to follow hummingbirds
to their mystical beginnings.
It won’t be long
before each broken shingle
is replaced with a blue
so clear and startling the desert
glows beneath it.
For a few days there will be
footsteps above and the hammers
tapping down the nails
that hold earth and air together, that
when the sun goes down
turn into stars.

Wednesday, December 28, 2022

LInes

by Douglas J. Lanzo

blood moon
illumined slice
of sandstone peak

Lines

by A. J. Anwar

country road
a rare cochoa lands gently
and disappears

Lines
by Lavana Kray



Sunday, December 25, 2022

Joy

by Carl Mayfield

the child 
lights up
when the tree does

Friday, December 23, 2022

Sonnet to Poseidon

 by Anne Gruner

How do we harm thee? Let me count the ways.
We choke you with our deadly greenhouse gases,
and change your water to deadly carbonic acid.
For shellfish and corals, it is the end of days,
as warming skies set seven seas ablaze. 
Into your great expanse we discharge masses 
of waste and plastics, killing all that passes 
and forming zones of algal death in bays.

Heads bowed, we pray you make us wise,
as no denial brings us absolution
for turning our backs as steaming seas still rise.
We seek your ecological affusion
to no longer ignore the ocean's cries,
as we sail close to the winds of aquatic extinction.

Thursday, December 22, 2022

Wednesday, December 21, 2022

Documentary

 by J.R. Solonche
 
The CEO of Interface,
the world’s biggest maker of commercial carpet,
has had an epiphany. 
 
“A spear thrust into my chest,”
he says as he was reading E. O. Wilson
on the extinction of species, who called it, “the death of birth.”
 
And now what?
Now this:
pull out that spear which has done its work
 
in the chest of the CEO of Interface,
the world’s biggest maker of commercial carpet.
Then wipe it clean
 
and thrust that spear into the chest of the next CEO,
and then pull it out and wipe it clean
and thrust it into the chest
 
of the CEO after that,
and then wipe it clean and thrust it
into the chest of the next one and the next CEO after that.
 
Then keep thrusting that spear.
Keep thrusting and thrusting that epiphanal spear.
Name it “The Death of Birth.”

Sunday, December 18, 2022

Holy Road

by Bruce Morton

Through shadow and light, U.S. 191 wends
As we pilgrims steer through the canyon,
Driving against current as the Gallatin 
Flows down, recrossing, cross-stitching

Together this gorgeous cleft, tempting eyes
To cheat the road—the rush of cold water
By or over House Rock bids welcome
As it froths farewell, rock cliffs spire, aglow,

Blue, dark water conjures the Mediterranean
From Spanish Creek, flowing from nowhere
To Hyde Creek, peer up at the Storm Castle,
Baptist Camp anticipates Hellroaring Creek,

On up to Greek Creek, Big Sky, where the rich
Pour their excrement and disdain into the river
Where algae blooms, a perennial bouquet, then
320 Ranch tourist buckaroos roughing it in style.

Comes Black Butte. Then, there it is, Yellowstone.
Earth fumes and bison chew on the sight of us,
Pawing the earth, enduring yet in spite of us.
It is a holy road—lean shoulders, white crosses.

Ghosts Of Fog

by Ceri Marriott

Trees and fields wrapped in fog,
Floating ghosts of other worlds
Cross the road and stop and stare.

Drought-denuded silence speaks their ill,
Limbs stiff and seeming out of joint
Half glimpsed in looming shadows.

Spectres of the present and the past,
Of an ever more disastrous future,
Lost spirits in a human world.

And the fog hangs there.

Friday, December 16, 2022

Three Polaroids
Josse Desvouges

Berries of Soløyvatnet

Clouds moving in near Tromsø

Mound near Tromsø



 

Wednesday, December 14, 2022

Lines

by Deborah A. Bennett

first autumn frost -
the dark under the porch
still green

but black seeds
keep on growing -
autumn dusk

Autobiography

 by Timothy Resau
 
Do not move at midnight
without the voice of desire …
remain fastened — rusted—
a lock upon a wet chain,
waiting for the leaves to come bury me.

Trees Over People

by Anne Gruner
 
Green and leafy, a silver maple
leans over the side of the house.
It could fall on my bedroom
as I sleep. No matter—it would be
a fitting counterblow for all slain trees.
One day a sonic boom shakes the house.
I am fine, but the roof is not.
Silver's roots, too weak to hold onto life,
have given way. Its limbs invade  the attic—
shingles slashed, gutters smashed.

I study Silver's neighbors—a copse of three, older,
taller, white oaks—verdant, fulsome, upright,
on the front of the house, and closer.
Silver's fallen image sticks in my mind's eye.
The roofer presses for a decision.
They say trees communicate and support each other,
sharing nutrients, water, and even warning—
using an underground fungal internet.
The three oaks comprise hundreds of years of life.
Together for decades, they are a family.

My temples throb with the dirge of the chain saw
as it ravages their majestic beauty,
top to bottom, piece by piece,
leaves fluttering downward,
handsome hardwood flung aside,
too many rings to count.
Perfectly healthy.
I turn away, sickened.

At last hewn to the bottoms of their trunks,
the venerable oak clan reveals its dark secret:
hollow channels of death ascending each,
unknown to me, but for the silver maple.

Together now in the empyrean,
the four stand over me once again.

Sunday, December 11, 2022

Gray Wolf

 by Royal Rhodes

"Every wolf's...howl/ Raises
 from Hell a human soul."
        -- William Blake

The herders grazing massive flocks around
the Yellowstone protest the wolf's return,
claiming it is now a killing ground.
Defenders of the elk and deer in turn
revile the wolf, as if machines of death,
with glowing, demon yellow eyes at night,
the hounds of hell, with blood upon their breath,
as if some evil power made them bite.
The wolf, from whom our dogs descend,
so docile and obedient, who lick
the stingy hand that feeds them, in the end
is fear of those we torture, beat, and kick.
The darker image we adore
and knit our noxious dreams with twisted lore.

Incubation

by Elizabeth Weir

Through a sunrise window,
a snapping turtle digs among
purple petunias, baggy-trousered back legs 
churning soft dirt, huge carapace 

flattening flowers, her need, urgent.
The cavity, deep enough, she drops in 
leathery eggs the size of ping-pong balls,
pedals her nest closed and leaves the sun

to do its work nursing the darkness 
summer-long in dirt’s warm womb. 
Then, one October day, a thought,
an inkling, an opening in the silence —

clawing upwards with penny-sized might,
something new and tender climbs into the light. 

Wednesday, December 7, 2022

daily dally

by Geoffrey Aitken 
 
news media tells me
of the heat
around the globe
 
intense
in world leaders
 
and our lawmakers
whose frustrations
in defense of justice
fumes
 
enough almost, to start fires

The Purging
~ the conflagration of nature

by Royal Rhodes
     
They burn at night
the hostage land,
the brushwood bunched
on the open prairie,
committing an act
of civic arson.
Dripping torches
swung in arcs
spewing liquid
make oily ribbons
ascend like rockets
into the starred sky.
They strip the cover
from the earth, matted
with winter debris.
The inferno's agents
in yellow jumpsuits
walk no-man's land 
with terrorist gestures..
Rabbits frantic
with singed skin
dart in confused
circles, and death
licks blood
in lambent flames.
When "the world is coal,"
just contrite ashes,
and your flesh incense,
I can see only
the thirsty fire,
and the burning hot house,
the burning, the burning.

Lines

by David Josephsohn

awoke to the smell
forests burning — that’s alright
gas prices are down

Sunday, December 4, 2022

Missing Wilderness

by Jamie Seibel 
 
Notice the untouched stone
along a twilight shore. 
 
How its winding path leads
to non-human tracks. 
 
We must recall the touch
of flesh on stamen. 
 
A glimpse of wild bloom
before the gardener returns. 

Hamlet's choice

by Ceri Marriott

To eat or not to eat,
That is the question. 

No, to heat or not to heat,
That is the question.

Or rather, to eat or to heat,
That is the real question.

Flown

by Darrell Petska

That venerable philharmonic
fading forever into darkness—

nightingale’s flute
thrush’s piccolo
quail’s oboe

So long their symphonies
have raised dawn’s curtain

lark’s violin
goose’s cello
cuckoo’s clarinet

their voices now migrating
to archival recordings

woodpecker’s drumming
crane’s trumpeting
crow’s bassooning

silent stand stork and pelican
remembering lost brethren:

passenger pigeon, dusky sparrow
carolina parakeet, heath hen
ivory-billed woodpecker, great auk…

silence swelling
for the somber swan’s finale

Saturday, December 3, 2022

Benefits of Higher Education

by Gerry Sloan

The waitress brings our beer.
It shimmies in the glasses
because one table leg
is shorter than the others.
The waitress makes repartee
to sweeten her tip. Jules reminds us
he has a PhD by informing us it is
French and repartay not reparteee.
Outside the dusk slowly subsides
to darkness. Meanwhile Stan confesses
the only thing useful he learned
in graduate school was to sprinkle
salt on the coaster so his beer glass
wouldn't stick.