Two Poems by Alfonse Battistelli

Central Intelligence

To Nichita

She’s not here.
Among the fireflies; the shriveled, breathing trees.
She’s gone among the office sweets
With their grizzly pale light,
skinning consciousness from my eyes.
I keep my tears close to my chest, like a game of darts
On a Saturday night; piano keys sensing words or a flotation device in a plane.
A loss of oxygen: against
the glow of your tenderness, fierce, forgetting itself
Against the rest.
It catches me strong as a square dancing hawk
or maybe a centipede galloping at a track.
All that, and a molehill of saccharine.


Cheap Perfume

Crown of stars hemmed against my head,
I walk in valleys dead by birds,
Redeemed in time— a ground of light
In kissed replies…
Pecking echoes. Soul of ice cream. Mind of hocus.
Here I am, like all the rest, crayon trails
Upon me now. Imprinted tombs of innocence bent
Afraid and slashed: like zealot flesh
To my grave by acid snails—
Waking up to cheap perfume.

“Central Intelligence” and “Cheap Perfume” first appeared on Vocal.Media.




Alfonse Battistelli is a poet from Columbus, Ohio.  He studied history and linguistics in college.  His poems have appeared in 614 Magazine and Short North Gazette.  He has a calico cat named Greta.

“Opening the Door” by Jennifer Gurney

I have lived in Colorado for 32 years
And while it is one of the most beautiful places
On Earth
I don’t like living so far from my family
A distance that requires
Plane tickets
And days off
And writing sub plans
And planning so far in advance
So we know
Everyone will be home
For a visit

Don’t get me wrong
I’m thrilled to have the wherewithal
To be able to see my family
And now that the pandemic is mostly over
I get to travel much more frequently

But I yearn for the days of my childhood
When everyone lived within
Driving distance for a weekend together
And we could pack a suitcase
Make sandwiches for a picnic supper in the car
And see each other for the weekend
We did that a lot
Probably about every other month
When I was growing up

Except for my family in California
That did require plane tickets
Or a long cross-country road trip
We missed them so in the
In-between times

Like I miss my family now
Spread across the country

In just three days
I will get on a plane
And head to Texas
To see my son and his girlfriend
And the puppies
For five delicious days together

I will be celebrating my
Sixtieth birthday with them
And for that
I am infinitely grateful
Milestones and major life events
Go better with family by your side

I am leaning in to this time
And the hope that I’ll see them again
In two short months
In North Carolina
For my dad’s birthday
When we’ll be together for the first time
In over six years
And the first time truly all together
With Haley there too

When I retire and move to Michigan
My hope is that one day we will be
In driving distance
Maybe if Travis and Haley end up
More in the Midwest,
Where Haley is from
And seeing each other
Can be a bit more often
And definitely more spontaneous

And when I’m retired
There will be no taking time off
And writing sub plans
So even if I need to book a plane ticket
I will have so much more flexibility
And time to travel

And since I’ll be living in Michigan
I won’t need to be traveling home there
Because I’ll already be home

I still have family in
Wisconsin and Ohio
Chicago and Indiana
Aunts and uncles
Cousins
My oldest stepdaughter and her family
I’m very much looking forward
To being a car ride away
From family
In six short years

So in returning home
I will also be returning
To the hope of
More time with family
Even though none live in
Michigan itself

And perhaps with me there
There might be a yen
For my family
To return home again
And I might get to see them
Without getting on a plane
Or in a car
Or on a train
At all
But merely by opening the door




Jennifer Gurney lives in Colorado where she teaches, paints, writes and hikes. Her poetry has appeared in a variety of journals, including Sparks of Calliope, The Ravens Perch, HaikUniverse, Haiku Corner, Cold Moon Journal, Scarlet Dragonfly, and The Haiku Foundation.

Two Poems by Russell Rowland

Elocutionary

When I get out of my bachelor’s bed,
often it’s hours before I speak to anyone,
voice cracking even then from under-use.

Sometimes I forget proprieties
overnight, and dread speaking too candidly—

“Maybe that’s why your daughter doesn’t call.”
“Yours is the only unmown lawn in town.”

The sun passes above, voice acquires
resonance with the hours, and civility reclaims
precedence in social interaction—

“I’m certain you’ll be hearing from her again.”
“I love the dandelions on your lawn.”



Passing Showers

Just now I drove into, as quickly out of,
a downpour—convergence

of heading and anomalous weather.

In my childhood, the sun shone obstinately:
I lived outdoors. Adolescence

seemed endless drizzle—I kept to my room,
no one missed me. Later,
clouds broke and I realized I was an adult.

The inclement marriage at least produced
a rainbow—

which might reassure
the next person caught outside in showers
with no umbrella.

Would I have dared talk to Don in his bed
about passing showers,

as his hospice nurse sat at the kitchen table?




Russell Rowland writes from New Hampshire’s Lakes Region, where he has judged high-school Poetry Out Loud competitions. A seven-time Pushcart Prize nominee, his work appears in Except for Love: New England Poets Inspired by Donald Hall (Encircle Publications), and Covid Spring, Vol. 2 (Hobblebush Books). His latest poetry book, Magnificat, is available from Encircle Publications.

“Bell Down Lay” by Alexander J. Ford

Low now is the sun in the west,
Bruised and cracked, the sky and mast.
Lost are all the songs, and dead
And gone, the men who sang them last.

Here the brutish ship hulls swayed,
Colossal through the navy night,
Lashed and moored, and creaking, weighed
The sable waters on the bight.

There up the hoary river toward
The site where then, a village lay,
Chimney smoke fell on the ford
And travelers from far away

Swung their hats and sang their woes,
Calluses on ev’ry hand
And all around them, endless groves
Of yew and ash safekept the land.

Those selfsame trees which now are gone,
By edict taken for the port
That furnished temples, posts and yon
Did bless the lads at Agincourt.

High hill atop that lonely stead;
Behold the proud, forgotten down
That like a shadowed, thoughtful head
Once donned the dawn sun like a crown.

Yet evening veils that hedged mound
Above the fastness and the gloom;
A blackened fell of upcast ground
That ere was holy, whole, and strewn

With habergeons of ruddy gold,
And jewels, and brittle warworn maille;
With epitaphs that boldly told
Of lips that touched the holy graille.

Alas grown over, underfoot,
Sad sedges hide from strict regard
The bloodwashed mud, and ancient soot,
And crow-picked bones from searching bards.

And although time, and time again
When spring at last was all a-flower,
Up the hill traipsed highland men
To turn those graves to blooming bowers.

Now it seems but one will go.
Odd, the thought, how impolite;
To part the company of those
In town who’ve long since feared to die.

Courtiers-of-the-new, for hire;
Mercantile proclivities
Disparage verse, and brush, and lyre,
All on account of quantity.

Their forbears long laid low beneath
Not spear, nor sword, nor heel, nor bolt,
But put from mind, left on that heath
To fade, by metropolitan folk.

From there to here comes such-a-one;
Hypocrite, türmer, fool, pariah,
To remake what was made undone,
Or, failing that, to raise his pyre.

In either case, his lantern plods;
A will o’ wisp among the trees.
Guilty, then, before both gods
And figures in the temple frieze.

Some winding path, at length, he spies,
Twisting from the foothills, on
And up the barrow, blackbirds cry
From grasping boughs, and shrouding fronds.

Round the earthwork tomb to walk,
The roots of which are iron, and coal,
And bone, where only starlight stalks
Labyrinthian as the Nietzschean soul.

The wood releases windswept leas
And like a standing stone of old,
Upright, one could seem to be
To onlookers, inscrutable.

Abandoned by the waning moon,
Surmounting thus, the temple height;
The precinct, wherefrom thundered doom,
Now kept by meager lantern light.

Poliphilo absent sleep
Within some edifice, now riven,
Sleeplessness prevents the dream
Of Polia, to whom he’s given.

The impetus now lost on him;
Some foreign tongue, the midnight hour,
The rationale for why those men
Atop their dead had raised their tower.

A sextant on the sward there strides,
Stone to stone, and soul to soul
And by his feeble glow he finds
It all but indecipherable.




Alexander J. Ford is an American author and architectural designer. His scholarly writing has appeared in numerous publications, and his architectural drawings were anthologized by the Princeton Architectural Press’s 2019 volume Single-Handedly. For several years, Ford served the archaeological excavation at the Sanctuary of Lykaian Zeus in the central Peloponnesus as the Assistant Field Director for Architecture. He has lectured at the University of London’s Birkbeck College, and taught a design studio at the University of Arizona’s College of Architecture.

Two Poems by Leslie Anne Perry

Was It Murder?

There was no “he said, she said” since she was dead.
It was only “he said.” And he said the gun went off
accidentally while he was cleaning it. He said he didn’t
mean to kill her.

She was a grad assistant with my husband. He had lent
her some books. A police officer came to our apartment.
Said books with my husband’s name in them were
found in her apartment. Wanted to know what we knew
about the boyfriend.

Rumors circulated that she may have been pregnant.
They had been seen leaving a clinic. In response to
a greeting of hey, how ya doing? he said not that great.
Another police officer shared that the boyfriend’s explanation
of how the death occurred was not plausible. The pattern
of brain tissue on the wall told a different story. But nothing
could be proven beyond a reasonable doubt. The boyfriend
was never charged.

Several months later, boyfriend visited us at our apartment.
He was with his new girlfriend, one of my students from
the previous semester. She called me by my first name.
We never got our books back.


Solitary Death

A police officer came to our small apartment.
Not wanting to upset me, they asked if they could
speak to my husband outside. They wanted to know
if we had heard anything the night before—
like banging on a wall, or someone calling for help.

The bathroom in our apartment shared a wall
with the bathroom in the apartment next to ours—
where someone was found dead that morning.
The deceased had vomited a large amount of blood.
Blood was everywhere.

The man lived alone; didn’t have visitors.
Maybe his family lived too far away to visit.
Or perhaps they didn’t have time for visits.
But they had no trouble swooping in and
taking items from his apartment after his death.




Leslie Anne Perry, PhD, is a professor emerita in the Clemmer College of Education at East Tennessee State University, and is the author of 19 self-published poetry books. She met her husband in Fayette, Missouri, in 1954, when she was nine and he was ten. In 2023, they celebrated their 60th wedding anniversary at their home in the Blue Ridge Mountains of Western North Carolina.

Two Poems by Donald Wheelock

One by One

What happens when your myths fail, one by one:
the moon above the mountain’s just the moon,
the end of candle glow can’t come too soon.
Or when you think the day is finally done

another window opens on the view
you’d held as sacrosanct, its history
so full of what you thought was meant to be,
replaced, now, by events dead-drably new?

Or when you knew what happened surely would—
no one could love you that much, or that long—
the world is made of death, and hurt and wrong,
and, daily, evil suffocates your mood.

So why this happiness? Why think this way?
Those myths were hardly worth believing in.
Open your eyes! This moon, it must have been,
today, that drove the myths of youth away.


The Other Mind

A thought appears without my having done
a thing to make it happen, like the first
and every line of verse up to this point…
why does it happen—and in such a burst—
as if another mind wished to anoint
a thought while it is only half begun?

Take note: that other mind does make mistakes;
it likes to start you off on tangents so
divorced from inspiration nothing will
enliven what refuses, still, to grow
and help you gather courage for the kill.
Yes. To fail at times is what it takes.

One mind nudges the other mind in line
to let them both but neither take the lead;
let mind with mind and line with line combine.




Donald Wheelock has published in ThinkAble Muse, The Orchards, Ekphrasis, Blue Unicorn and many other journals welcoming formal poetry. His chapbook, In the Sea of Dreams, is available from Gallery of Readers Press. His first full-length book of poems, It’s Hard Enough to Fly, appeared last September from Kelsay Books. David Robert Books will publish his second book, With Nothing But a Nod, next spring.

Two Poems by Ruth Holzer

In Swansea

Slag heaps on the outskirts,
cranes busy on the docks,
and in front of The Lord Nelson,
a man with crutches
and a grubby cast on his leg
suggests I come with him
and have a drink. Why not
enjoy your life, he says.

Several others loitering there,
emboldened, call out ruder invitations,
though I’m just a traveling person
of fairly decent appearance,
minding my own business on the high street
while buildings rise from the bomb-sites.


Dead Dog

When Don Carmelo’s favorite dog,
a fierce black mongrel,
lay down in the stable courtyard
for the last time, Don Carmelo
spent the day as usual, sitting
outside on a chair he had dragged
from the kitchen, drinking grappa,
spitting in the dust
and cursing his sons-in-law.

The carcass stiffened. Flies gathered
and hummed upon Don Carmelo’s
favorite dog, who’d grown too old
for guarding or herding and was just
a useless mouth that whined to be fed.
Only the donkey in his stall
acted as though something was wrong,
stamping in alarm at the sight of his friend
and braying his loud wakening bray.




Ruth Holzer is the author of eight chapbooks, most recently Home and Away (dancing girl press), Living in Laconia (Gyroscope Press), and Among the Missing (Kelsay Books).  Her poems have appeared in Southern Poetry Review, Blue Unicorn, Slant, and Freshwater, among other journals and anthologies. She has received several Pushcart Prize nominations.

Two Poems by Ali Rowland

Shoe Stall

Friday morning at the market shoe stall.
They were not new, but very nearly –
perhaps models had worn them once, in a much
more glamorous place. Men tumbled them
roughly from a sack onto the wooden
slatted stall, clattering, loose and lonely,
unpaired. Then it was a free-for-all.

Early-birds lined the front row; easy
from there to reach across and pick a lone shoe,
then race to locate its pair. There could be
arguments if someone else had claimed
the other shoe; once a proper scuffle
had scattered us around a semi-circle.
Mostly, it was latecomers who had to fight
for space.

To try on made you vulnerable, unbalanced,
in this turbulent crowd, your own taken-off
shoe could not be put down in case it was
mistaken for the goods.

It was neither kind nor pretty; just like
the shoes, still stiff and brutal in their newness,
and there was the quite unpleasant smell of leather,
cheap plastic, and poverty, the relative kind.

Later, on the bus home with a plastic bag
of loose shoes, more than you needed, there was
a fleeting sense of victory.

Yet I cannot remember any of those shoes.


In Like Flynn

He’s a nice boy, Flynn, the grown-ups approve of him,
he’s swift and decisive, timely, reliable,
he won’t be late for your date. He’ll always smell
fresh from that timely shower, he’ll never hesitate
over that vital first impression,
or falter making the proposal,
or fluff the marriage vows, his buttonhole
fresh and blooming, morning suit so crisp
and creaseless; all these things are most alluring.

Such a promising partner. He’s not going
to miss an opportunity however fast
it races by, he knows his own (near reckless) mind,
and he’s happy to suggest you share
his views, see through his eyes; don’t stop to consider
over-long, and never hesitate
trying too hard to be wise.

You start to wonder if he’s happy
in this state of skating by, though, his own thoughts
slithering and twitching like an over
-stimulated snake? He’s always keenly
taking things on, so they pile up, might fall,
they wobble like the balance of his mind;
thoughts crowd in and each one shouts so loud.

Then one day everything screeches to
a pivoted halt, becomes a crash,
ice scraped up in an instant with a shivering scratch,
a total smash-up of hasty decisions,
later branded rash. Poor Flynn, his epitaph
is bound to be that he just went too fast.
Quick to judge, forthright, quite brash, and only
at the end, still, at last.




Ali Rowland is a poet and author from Northumberland. Her poetry is sometimes about her own mental health disability, and just as often about the world in general. She is assisted in her endeavours by a wonderful husband and a beautiful Border Terrier. Ali won the Hexham Poetry Competition in 2023 and was Runner Up in the Positive Images Poetry Competition. She has been published in Tabula Rasa: Poems by Women (Linen Press): Ten Poems of Kindness Vol. 2 (Candlestick Press), as well as a number of poetry magazines.

Two Poems by Sandy Rochelle

Refuge

The wandering spirit.
The homeless.
The stateless.
The sphinx.
Silent and heroic.
The gasps of joy
That escape
From the child’s mouth
Make yourself at home in me.


The Soul

I thought I only saw my soul while meditating
In a field.
And then as I read Rumi
The lakes appeared–the sky cleared and the
Fish and foul spoke in languages known only
To them.
The fog lifted and the mountains became hallowed.
My soul declared itself to me.




Sandy Rochelle is a widely published and award winning poet, actress and filmmaker. Her work has appeared in publications including: Verse Virtual , Wild Word, Dissident Voice, Haiku Universe, Ekphrastic Review, Spillwords  Press, Black Poppy Magazine, Lothlorien Poetry Journal, Every Day Writer, and others.

Two Poems by Erin Ratigan

Drought

There had been no rain
for months (which felt
bone-deep in their ache),

the soil cavernous,
the grasses turned to hay
the daily harassment of summer
(“Another man died today.”)

After the hundred-somethingth day
I held my hands out
through sky, through sweat,
through the withering
to welcome a distant rumbling
that spoke of a coming storm.

The wind picked up,
whipping my hair into my eyes,
and I prayed,

for I felt her
in that moment––
the cracking electricity
that speaks to the presence
of a Goddess.

Tip tip tip tip
on the concrete
the only sound
in the deafening drought
and the answer to our gasps
for breath, we, like fish
asking for relief
our mouths to the sky
open wide.


Rebel

One October
I was resolved to ride a horse.
His name was Rebel,
a fierce fellow who had earned the name
and an unsavory reputation.
He refused to budge when offered apples
and didn’t care for our softness.

Yet, when I was in the saddle
he walked calmly as a dream,
as if he knew my fear––
they say horses do.
He lived in his might
but it was foreign to me
(as was the vulnerability
of trusting so soon).

He did not owe me anything
but he chose to honor me,
or perhaps humor.
I felt I had not earned it,
for how do we earn an animal’s grace?
I think about him often

and wonder what magic occurred
and inspired a powerful beast
to permit a small woman
rocking passage across a silent field.




Erin Ratigan is a freelance writer and journalist with a focus on longform and narrative news features. Her poetry has appeared in multiple publications including Door is a Jar and POETiCA REViEW, and in the nature anthology Echoes of the Wild. She lives in North Texas.