Tuesday, April 28, 2026

NATIONAL GREAT POETRY READING DAY



"At the tail end of National Poetry Month, April 28th marks the observance of National Great Poetry Reading Day."https://nationaldaycalendar.com/celebrations/national-great-poetry-reading-day-april-28

Wednesday, April 22, 2026

Cynthia Wanders My Neighborhood


Thomas Centolella



with the shock of hospice behind her  

and her ashes scattered on her cherished Pacific.   

She’s flipped the hourglass and stopped it at 29,   

when her hair was still chestnut and waving  

to her waist. And because it’s November and nighttime  

she’s wearing one of those vintage wool coats,  

wide lapels, no buttons or belt, a blue nearly gray  

in the foggy noir light of the streetlamps.   

It’s cold enough she has to hold it tight   

against her body. Too cold for the emerald   

silk teddy, or her long tanned legs in b-ball shorts,  

ready for some serious one-on-one. I’m dying   

to stop my steep climb home, turn around and ask her   

if she’s really here, but Orpheus is in my ear,  

warning me not to make that old mistake.  

It’s about trust, I think. Keep moving  

through the gloom of a spinned myth:  

let those you’ve loved come back   

when they’re ready, when you’re ready,   

as if no one were lost to begin with.

End of the Comedy



Louis Untermeyer
Eleven o’clock, 
and the curtain falls.
The cold wind tears the strands of illusion;
The delicate music is lost

In the blare of home-going crowds
And a midnight paper.

The night has grown martial;
It meets us with blows and disaster.

Even the stars have turned shrapnel,

Fixed in silent explosions.

And here at our door

The moonlight is laid
Like a drawn sword.

Monday, April 20, 2026

NATIONAL POEM IN YOUR POCKET DAY


"During National Poetry Month in April, National Poem in Your Pocket Day shares the way poetry brings joy by simply carrying one in your pocket."https://nationaldaycalendar.com/celebrations/national-poem-in-your-pocket-day-last-thursday-in-april

Friday, April 17, 2026

NATIONAL HAIKU POETRY DAY



"Observed annually on April 17, National Haiku Poetry Day encourages all to try their hand in creativity."

https://nationaldaycalendar.com/celebrations/national-haiku-poetry-day-april-17

Tuesday, April 7, 2026

These Hills


J. Scott Brownlee

What they do not tell you about being a son
is that someday you’ll lift your mother out of necessity

& not know how to answer the deep ache in her

that refuses to leave from the botched surgery
on her four neuromas. They won’t mention the graft

of your skin on her skin you would give if it meant

her nerve cells might repair instead of defeat her
—their synapses flooded by the twice-daily pill

with a lyrical name that has strewn only wreckage

across her psyche for two decades so damaged
Achlys wouldn’t want them. Yes, a body can fade

& fragment in these hills like the green-veined

granite tumoring toward blossom, or a bloody
membrane between weeds & cedars. Hope was

a scalpel once. I could slide it across anything & be

healed completely was a dream she told me
repeats in her REM sleep. How do you

give someone who is burning permission

to vanish? Will she reincarnate as a gull
or the gray wave of foam a rogue hurricane

heaves up the local river with a serene quiet

worse than any crashing? How long have I been
still enough to witness it? This is grief. This is seeing your mother suffer, & a wound made memory.

This is flame transforming: not a prayer but a fire
unquenchable covering our hands, our feet,

the neuromas clinging to our metatarsals

with a persistence so complete we feel no pain
stepping into the mansion in the sky

midnight is preparing. I collect every match

in its kitchen cabinets—scatter them
throughout each inch of this house

& its dry acreage in a dead galaxy

of black hole-filled pastures. I hear
a mockingbird calling her name as I strike

the first one & watch as it consumes the two

closest to it until there is a circuit of fire
connecting my lit skin to hers. Where a son

grieves a mother: a constellation. Where two bodies

meet failure: one crippling brilliance. I brighten 
where she does & darken where she does until

we cool to quartz, feldspar, mica, the bedrock

of this firmament no god could have sculpted
or made more imperfect, which is me holding her.

I speak with the future.
Jane Hirshfield

We sit on our skeletons’ bones. 
We hear with our skeletons’ bones.
We speak of beauty by moving our jaws and our teeth.

The original meaning of Paradise: a place, 
a walled garden. 
Our lives, our stories, this hour inside one.
A staircase from Piranesi. A hummingbird drinking.

Outside it, vanishing species and rivers.
Outside it, Nanjing, Ninevah, Dresden.
Outside it, Gaza, Sudan, Myanmar, Kyiv. Here.

The world starts and ends, starts, ends, ends again,
restarts. 

A kalpa is brief, and wall-less.

Unborn ones, take nothing for granted.
Not nectar, not thirst.

May your lives be uneclipsed, your failures be passing.

May you have your portions of beauty, of grief, 
in a garden whose plants and birds I cannot imagine. 

Wednesday, April 1, 2026

Precious



Kira Tucker

Copper keeps life from my womb; aluminum  fills my pores, silver my teeth. My blood won’t hold iron, so I take it daily. Food brings a sickness I can’t measure under my tongue, only on my waning waist. Some metal belongs in the body. The day a grate raised my skirt on the street, I noticed only one rush of air between ore and whore. The boy who learns to caress his face with a blade will grow into a man I’ll pay to slice my skin with steel. Beauty is no alchemy: it merely means making space for more things that shine. Like the ancient statues men scrapped for daggers. Like powder packed into bullets, their touch so intimateit kills. Like any body in this millennium, I’ll survive in silicon chips after death. Until then, lead me somewhere precious. Guide me with ungloved hands.

Peonies



Danusha Laméris

What are these strangers sitting on the table in their ruffled collars. 

They open, close, open,

emit the scent of cracked pepper and honey. Magenta punctuation marks at which to pause. Pink commas against the green scrub. I would trade ten goats for one whiff of peonies opening in a vase. An ancient proverb says you should not let a woodpecker see you plucking a peony lest it peck out your eyes. We are afraid of happiness. Peonies are to loneliness what wind is to the trees. Are they animal? Mineral? Vegetable? They move as the sun moves. When I brought them home they were dark. Now, a whisper, balletic tulle. They are not diminished even as they turn to smoke. 

Sunday, January 18, 2026

Parting

"Stay and sweet and do not prize,

And the light that shines comes back to my eyes,

As day breaks hard,

It is my heart,

Because of you and I might part.

Stay anywhere else my choice will guide."

The Collector
Season 1
Episode 3

Saturday, December 20, 2025

The Sign as You Exit the Artist’s Colony Says “The Real World”Aliki Barnstone



Quiet is not silence. Silence is absolute like never and forever. Quiet invites attention to cicadas, the warbling vireo on the wire, the cardinal’s whistle as it wings its brightness over the horizon of the Blue Ridge Mountains, then disappears amid the crape myrtles’ baroque blossoms.It almost speaks to me. / Then as Horizons step, I take a photograph of artists chatting on the gravel path that opens to the studio barn silos.The rabbit lets me come close—It waits upon the lawn / It shows the furthest tree—before it leaps into tall grasses, shelter for fireflies.The limestone statue of the cherubic naked boy smiles down at butterflies and bees feeding on zinnia pollen. Good are those who plant flowers to save our pollinators.Yet I mourn. The air conditioning kicks in. I examine the light on the drainage bed of small stone—a narrow beach outside my glass door—and listen to the distance, the highway sounds rising and falling like wind in spring.A quality of loss / Affecting our content, Emily Dickinson wrote.Before bed, sitting beneath the gazebo’s white dome where there’s cell reception, I talk to my love. We’re interrupted by the long train passing by. Is it nostalgia to love the sound of trains? Is it forward-thinking looking back?A fascist is president: infection in the sentence breeds. We can’t help talking about him.The comedian says people can’t think when they’re afraid. Satire makes them laugh, forget their fear, so they can think, a little newer for the term / upon enchanted ground.Every day more evil against the Earth, the hate cult shouting epithets, hoarding their guns. As Trade had suddenly encroached / Upon a Sacrament.When the artists gather for meals, they ask “How was your day?” which means, “Did you travel in your studio?” which translates into resistance beyond the borders of this quiet estate.

News


Before breakfast, we drive into town  
to buy a Star Tribune for my father,  
who usually rides along, but today sleeps late.  
From the passenger seat, you stuff 
my mouth with a saucer peach. For energy


you say, my fog before food well-known.  
The beige flesh tastes like jasmine.  
Honey. A Persian fairy tale.  
In his La-Z-Boy near the big window,  
my father will read a section, nod off, 


wake, read another, all afternoon.  
You and I no longer bother—every day  
the same: people killing, being killed.  
Instead, we cook, clean. We look  
after my father, keep our kids busy. 


At the One-Stop, I take a copy 
off the dwindling stack, set my father’s exact  
change into the cashier’s tattooed hand—  
my daily deadline met. Heading home,  
you spot it first, uphill, in a birch, 


glowing, a blue pilot light. A flaming  
blue arrow shooting toward us. I can’t  
stop, can’t swerve, it strikes our windshield.  
I see it in the rearview mirror glance  
onto the shoulder. Maybe it’s still alive


you pray. Maybe we can put it in a box  
until it’s well. So I reverse, hope it flies away.  
Could I mercy-kill it under a wheel? 
Standing by, we watch a wing flail once,  
an eye shut, the end. Even a little death 


sucks out our air. Where it hit gravel,  
one feather sticks up. Such color!  
Lapis-and-turquoise filigree.  
We kick a shallow grave with our heels,  
and deliver my father the news.

Enter Terror



translated from the Arabic by Sara Elkamel


There is no gift we can unwrap without you. 
You are what we need  
to make out the trees,  
spot an opponent, 
or take a stroll through someone’s heart. 
Without you, no one would read the same sentence  
a second time, breathless, 
before setting the book aside 
to pace from one room to the next. 
And without you, there would be no lines to draw 
under striking lines in the books of poetry and philosophy  
that now rest serenely by your bed, 
after having moved universes;  
after changing worlds. 
Without you, no one would look anyone else in the eye;  
hands would not meet. 
No one would photograph the waves that plow into fences,  
the snow-capped mountain peaks, 
the smiles of children. 
Without you, love stories would suffer a deficiency,  
and without you 
people would not gather on pitch black nights;  
they would not light candles or invent lullabies. 
Without you, no one would ever know  
that stories told in whispers 
are the only way to contend with night.  
They would have tried swords, 
grenades, soaring fences, and surveillance cameras—all this nonsense. 
Without you, libraries would not stop us  
dead in our tracks, 
nor would a flower.  
Rocks would be dull. 
And without you, massacre victims would not remain alive  
to stare us in the eyes. 
O terror, without you, poetry would steer us towards nothing.  
Without you, we could not fathom the abyss that surrounds us: the universe. 
We would never be moved  
by its menacing beauty. 
O terror: You are the singer’s voice  
that travels clearly across the borders  
in the Golan Heights. 
You are the prisoner; strapped, and mighty  
in the morning. 
You are the beloved’s name 
lighting up, suddenly, the screen in our hand. 
There is no gift 
we can unwrap without you.

Thursday, November 20, 2025

As Life Unfolds

Life unfolds,
Until we are old,
Even after however it unfolds differently.
Sometimes more drastic or less.
Life always holds,The attention of the fortold.

#BENOTEWORTHY
#piccadillyinc

Wednesday, November 19, 2025

Looking at My Father


Wendy Xu

It’s the inside which comes out, as I contemplate
him there half in sunlight, weeding diligently
a Midwestern lawn. On my persons, I have only notes
and a drying pen, the memory of onion blossoms
scenting in a window. Reflection is my native medium.
I am never arriving, only speaking briefly on material
conditions between myself and others. My country
inoculates me lovingly, over time. My country grasps me
like desire. I will show you my credentials, which is to say
my vivid description, if you ask. Here we are, my father
and I, never hostile, a small offering: pointless cut flowers
appear on the kitchen table when one finally arrives
into disposable income. Still possible. Am I living? Do I
accept revision as my godhead and savior?
I do and I am, and in the name of my Chinese father now
dragging the tools back inside, brow shining but always
a grin, faithless except to protect whatever I still have time
to become, Amen.
Copyright © 2017

Thursday, November 13, 2025

NGRI

  
By P. Francis

And the cradle rocks underneath the tendril cobweb

A prenatal breath blowing a blood scab in the ebb

Wooden bars rot, a stained velure crib on a floor

Diseased, wroth rats eating spore ergot in the foyer

Cracked glass is strewn on the dank termite planks

As a mother-in-waiting gave thanks to oxygen tanks

Where window crosspieces rust away in the wind

Glare of specious dust debris recites forgot sins

Down halls, light hides and courts a dark armoire

As debrided dolls cry morts, scarred and charred

No screams carry through the trees of slit wrists

As the asylum whispers in the dusk a nice tryst

Suns rise and shine in the cycles of winter frosts

Whether an asylum or clinic draped in black moss

If nobody's seen alive with babies who maybe died

There's no remorse in a ward or morgue gutted inside

Who screams louder, doctors or uncounted thralls

If no one breathes within the red, bleeding walls?

Paint chips float on through the blue womb rooms

While the pin light hides gone eidolons in tombs

Chairs missing legs crumble into whittled pegs

As outlines of dregs fade in the putrid old beds

Weeping deep at the corridor's dank, blank end

Fillies spank the pretend headless doll friends

Fangs of the shrews sharpened like razors in twos

Guarding the black staircase to the basement and loos

Love and sometimes hate spurned a late night date

As some bane aides and profane insane became mates

Nurses surrounded in gowns down in the jail cells

A gestating, waiting lady and baby to quell

Knives and scalpels raise in swift slicing cadence

Ceilings pouring purple drippings of the decedents'

Then comes a drumbeat drip, from the rafters, to bowel

As the death knells of the dispelled whewl and howl

Dirt and rain water pool in a quagmire of fools

In the flooded sick bay of a failed medical school

Revenants soak in the silty filth, loving the blood bath

No reprieve or ever to leave an asylum's shrieve wrath

Happy Halloween!

Tuesday, October 28, 2025

Nature first Green

"Nature’s first green is gold,

Her hardest hue to hold.

Her early leaf’s a flower;

But only so an hour.

Then leaf subsides to leaf.

So Eden sank to grief,

So dawn goes down to day.

Nothing gold can stay."

-Robert Frost

Friday, October 17, 2025

BLACK POETRY DAY



 "On October 17, Black Poetry Day celebrates the powerful voices, past and present, that have shaped and enriched the American cultural landscape."https://www.nationaldaycalendar.com/national-day/black-poetry-day-october-17?utm_source=Iterable&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=15307967&hashed_email=6c23328441e0f46865e8039a24ce7ccf8880f2d7&email=yeremiah%40aol.com

Monday, October 13, 2025

Life

Life can seem ungrateful and not always kind.  Life can pull at your heartstrings and play with your mind.  

Life can be blissful and happy and free. 

Life can put beauty in the things that you see.

Life can place challenges right at your feet.  

Life can make good of the hardships we meet. 

Life can overwhelm you and make your head spin.  

Life can reward those determined to win. 

Life can be hurtful and not always fair.  

Life can surround you with people who care.  

Life clearly does offer its ups and its downs.  

Life can bring you both smiles and frowns. 

Life teaches us to take the good with the bad.  

Life is a mixture of happy and sad.  

SO...Take the life that you have and give it your best.  

Think positive be happy, let God do the rest.  

Take the challenges that life has laid at your feet.  

Take pride and be thankful for each one you meet. 

To yourself give forgiveness, if you stumble and fall.  

Take each day that is dealt you and give it your all..  

Take the love that you're given and return it with care.  

Have faith that when needed it will always be there.

Take time to find the beauty in the things that you see.  

Take life's simple pleasures, let them set your heart free.  

The idea here is simply to even the score.  

As you are met and faced with Life's Tug of War.

https://www.ba-bamail.com/spirituality/these-words-are-all-you-need-to-face-life/

Sunday, October 12, 2025

Caged Bird

The caged bird sings
with a fearful trill
of things unknown
but longed for still
and his tune is heard
on the distant hillf
or the caged birdsings of freedom.

Maya Angelou

Wednesday, October 1, 2025

RANDOM ACTS OF POETRY DAY



"Imagine turning a corner on your daily walk and finding a haiku chalked on the sidewalk, or discovering a short verse tucked into a library book."https://www.nationaldaycalendar.com/national-day/random-acts-of-poetry-day-first-wednesday-of-october?utm_source=Iterable&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=15115120&hashed_email=6c23328441e0f46865e8039a24ce7ccf8880f2d7&email=yeremiah%40aol.com