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Experience, a Duplex[1]
How do we capture experience? Trap words in a jar and seal it tight? Words trapped in a jar and sealed up tight are muzzled, silenced and never heard. I don’t want to be silent, not heard. Let my shouts echo across canyons. Sounds – even whispers – echo canyons. The message can alter the landscape. Now we witness the altered landscape. What we once knew no longer applies. The world before no longer applies. The clocks have all melted – time is merged. The clocks h
Jennifer Dotson
Mar 27, 20251 min read


Thistle do nicely
Above, Scotch mist rises,
blue, slow and creamy.
Thistle, guardian against invaders...
Hugh Findlay
Mar 27, 20251 min read


GENUS ASCLEPIAS
Do you know me?
You’ve seen me now and then
I perfume the air, blossoms clustered... thus
Michael F. Bemis
Mar 27, 20251 min read


Inside the Hive
Capture for me in vivid and moving verse The essence of a summer day, distilled Down to the happiness in a honeybee’s dance. Sing for me in lyrical ecstasy of that conga line Of advancing tesserae moving together In this living mosaic of a hive. Let me feel the unbound and jumping joy In bursting white and red blooms, Of pistil peeking, tender and trembling, From deep within a flower’s core, The passion of the beating wing, Pathos in each antenna’s twitch. Note with me th
Doug Tanoury
Mar 27, 20251 min read


The Silent Oak
In twilight's grasp, the oak stands tall and proud,
Its branches whisper secrets to the breeze...
Rajendra prasad Gupta
Mar 27, 20251 min read




Coming Back
His feet touch earth, and the soil recalls his heft, every step
a soft murmur of unwilling return. The sky unmoved...
David M. Alper
Mar 27, 20251 min read




A Georgic for Turning
Mown hay to the sun after rain. Otherwise you’ll find it in the middle leaves of bales, the mold that sickens them, that cures them. The tangle of things, the horse thistle in trumpet vine, Arabian roan doubled-over, retching, dying in a municipal park. The non-local stertor of its death. Where the rain doesn’t fall, it slashes across the plane of plains where ungulates look like windblown sticks in a field, inviting us to believe any recombinant number of impossible facts. C
Cal Freeman
Feb 28, 20251 min read


Hummingbird Heart:
I did not like to be held as a child trapped in my mother's lap. Her arms constricting, every fidget of my body. Nowhere for my head to go, except the shallow blanket of flesh and bone cradling her hummingbird heart. It beat like a windstorm. It shifted And could gush like molasses or spit like lighting and no matter what I could not move just lay there eyes wide open, feeling everything a child shouldn’t It did not mean I did not love her I just hated thinking, that’s al
Grace E Wagner
Feb 28, 20252 min read


Not the End of the World
“Unhand her, vagabond,” was my one line in the school play. I had the part of the cop, a minor role compared to Beth Levine’s, the heroine, or Billy Wiesenkopf’s the vagabond. Still, I took my part seriously. So although he forgot to take her hand, right on cue I yelled, “Unhand her, vagabond,” and it struck me and everyone else that my line made no sense. Then I knew: this is the kind of mistake that will end the world. A question of bad timing will hang in the air like
Paul Hostovsky
Feb 28, 20252 min read


Boom Fires of the Skies
High above Locarno’s port with outside eyes to east at midnight: fires of the skies come speak to me in staccato forks flashed seconds apart. All people down, radio silence around, except for sonic summer booms that trail up to five beats past of lightening strobes in code to lake black heights. A Norse god’s gift to pinch the south. I doze to rolling burst and durm, and wake upfreshed before the dawn. July-November 2021 Lake Maggiore, Switzerland Rob Bunzel lives in
Robert H. Bunzel
Feb 28, 20251 min read


Who We Are is Who We Were
Porch light haloed in moths, house leaking into the night. Inside, my father drinks, dark rum cleaving memory from throat, I take it all back. We do what we have to, to stay alive. John Pring is an author and poet based in the UK. His work has been featured in The Passionfruit Review, MONO, Oroboro, Dolorem Ipsum, Letter Review, Qu Literary, Banyan Review, Tomahawk Creek Review, Cathexis Northwest Press, Rising Phoenix Review, and others.
John Pring
Feb 28, 20251 min read


First Light
Bodies heavy with rifles, we gorged on meat, fresh from the river and yellow fields, just boys learning to carry death on our tongues, marrow to spit back into the world, pale bones leaving the throat like a prayer. John Pring is an author and poet based in the UK. His work has been featured in The Passionfruit Review, MONO, Oroboro, Dolorem Ipsum, Letter Review, Qu Literary, Banyan Review, Tomahawk Creek Review, Cathexis Northwest Press, Rising Phoenix Review, and othe
John Pring
Feb 28, 20251 min read


Fated Nebulae
Like supernovae artists,
clouds disperse behemoth art,
James Ph. Kotsybar
Jan 18, 20251 min read


Message In A Spacecraft
Look out, Ophiuchus, Voyager’s near! Earth has randomly shot some gold your way. We hope our sounds and music suit your ear and you’ll get back to us without delay. The complete instructions are included for how to hook it up to get your tunes. Note that, if depiction seems deluded, we tried to use the simplest of runes. We showed ourselves as naked, but, in fact, much of the time, we really do wear clothes, and we omitted fingernails, for tact, since claws convey predation,
James Ph. Kotsybar
Jan 18, 20251 min read


PASTORAL SYMPHONY
five thousand feet above Sing Sing, you talk
of your father, how thieves left him to die
John Barton
Jan 18, 20251 min read


Circle in the Square
Figures sprawl around the fountain, stretching out
Like cracks across gray stones,
Benjamin Nardolilli
Jan 18, 20251 min read


With the Fire of the Altar
A city with no factories smolders in the afternoon,
Above it, a dome of exhaust rises without a train
Benjamin Nardolilli
Jan 18, 20251 min read


Honey Mushroom, Armillaria melee
Golden brown parasols clustered
near oak stumps, as if an artist
Joan Mazza
Jan 18, 20251 min read
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