Archaic Torso of Apollo After Rilke He has no head. He has no eyes to pin us with his godhead. But his torso is itself a gaze in which there grows from inside, like a covered lamp, a fire. Without that rising surge, divinity would not ravish you, nor would a lip trace the gentle curve of thigh and hip to the shadowed center of fertility. Without it, the stone would seem a broken thing, chipped, cracked, dead, a stone, and would not glisten like a wolf’s dark mane, and would not from its remnants blaze and singe you like a god. Of all its parts, there is not one that does not see you. Your life must change.
Poetry from Duane Vorhees
THE HAUL
The apostles
learned to equip
their gospel ship
with hooks cross-shaped
and Christ as bait.
And they employed
muscle and wit
to deploy nets
of iron strength
at untouched depths.
Mighty fishers,
they spent their catch
on wishers’ masts,
sinners’ anchors,
and sure harbors.
THELONIOUS STRAIGHT
The monk in
habit black attacked
attacked attacked
his devil — devil grinned
on four legs — — attacked —
blue monkish evangelist fanatic
he went afterafter his
4legged infidel foe —
with fingers uncurled
straight for the eyes, for their whites and
for their blacks
until they scream in blind
NO CHASER
the unsquare monk
the monk melodious
prayed and prayed
mystic irre
ligious
prayed his round midnights with
out even a chaser of
sunny Cannonball blues
attackattacked, in bflat
solitude
YOUR GARDEN
is filled
with forget-me-nots
but I can’t
find
any rue.
HOMESICKNESS
In my childhood
homesickness was a cheap stamp.
I was here
and Mom just over there.
When I was grown,
homesickness a boarding pass
and bride just beyond.
But then
homesickness became a tiny tomb.
I stayed outside
but Mom was deep within.
And now
Homesickness is a narrow strait.
I on one side
continents on the other.
–after Yu guangzhong
BL IN KI NG unedited by
Life starts when some man rams his Dodge
into some garage and guns the engine,
then gets lost somewhere between debacle and apocalypse.
Time unscrolls itself outside the windshield,
vibrates and alters again just beyond attention,
in constant motion from mist to liquid to real to uncongealed.
Not every stage equates to hajj,
but no ride’s just road nor map nor engine
nor even mere pathway among all the altars and the crypts.
If life’s the shimmer between death and sex,
the interplay’s the thing! The strength is in the tension.
In our yinyang universe, concave shapes itself toward convex.
…
Poetry from Patricia Doyne
SEIZE THAT TROUBLEMAKER—
AND HER TORCH!
After the “No Kings” rally in LA,
signs and costumes milled around, blocked traffic–
until the cops showed up.
Picture this: riot-gear police
seizing blue-gowned, blue-faced Lady Liberty.
They confiscate her torch, then loop a chain
around her waist, cuff hands behind her back,
and march her off, one lawman on each side.
So—Liberty’s too dangerous? Too woke?
Welcomes the tired and poor, asylum-seekers?
Says no one– NO ONE– is above the law?
We the People came downtown today,
seeking solace, strength in shared resolve—
rejecting ICE, that preys on immigrants,
but won’t apply laws to rich pedophiles;
rejecting millions spent to build a ballroom
while health care’s cut, and hospitals shut down;
rejecting war with no goals, no way out,
while old bone-spurs plays golf at Mar-a-Lago;
rejecting loss of three-branch government,
while faux-king stamps his name on doors and dollars.
We twice elected this convicted felon
with track records of insurrection, racism, and rape.
He raised the cost of living, and attacks
free speech, free press, and now, the right to vote.
Eight million, coast to coast, reject this future.
and gather to share anger, fear, and strength.
But in the end, when all the chanting’s done–
there goes Lady Liberty in chains.
A zip-tied symbol of a vision lost.
Copyright 3/2026
Patricia Doyne
Poetry from Alan Catlin
Rules for War Photographers
Recognize what the war is,
and where, then patiently wait for
the photograph to happen
Be objective and never
interfere
Even when the baby is
drowning
when the village is
burning
when the women are on their
hands and knees praying, begging
you to stop
where the girl is running with
her back on fire
Do not become the subject yourself
even when captured by
the enemy
Especially when captured by
the enemy
To not take these pictures
so we will never know what
you have known,
to see what you have seen
these pictures are too terrible
for words
Violate all these rules
whenever possible
The Crime Scene
after Stan Rice
All the faces in the ill-lit street
are wearing masks like equity
actors off-stage in guerilla theater,
a strange interlude with police cars,
emergency flashers, real murder
weapons and riddled bodies
emboldened by death, their heads
covered by rags, a black plague
mask for disease prevention in
a rat-infested tin pan alley awaiting
a visitation of wisemen from another
vision drawn with white chalk and
defined by yellow caution tapes,
Caucasian chalk circles drawn
on stained concrete for filling in
the spaces with blood evidence and
severed finger prints; the muffled
hooves of a mounted police cordon
nearby indicate the pale horses,
pale riders, have arrived.
Found Photo, “The Garden of Earthly Delights” in the Background
The talk here is
not of Spain
nor of the Civil
War
Not of Picasso
bleeding,
a failing century’s
grief
but of the harm
men do to other
men
the held-breath
silence of just-
before-the-end
and what
comes after
Mayakovsky at 3 AM
Eyes closed, stuffed head in
a noose, broken arms
wrenched aside useless as
foam, the smoke of many
cigarettes in glass ashtrays
on the littered, low table,
dealt playing cards folded
into hands, played tricks
amidst litter: empty clear
bottles, overturned shot glasses,
spent cartridges, dueling pistols,
barrels still crossed on the wall
above the torso of a bald,
black veiled woman, painted
eyes half-open, false lips
the color of dried blood.
Enola Gay, the result: details
Three wisemen with gas masks,
their asbestos suits alight; dis-
colored babies, the egg heads and
the deformed; body parts of the afflicted
blue and exploding; peace bridge
over a river, running red as ink, collapsing,
a conveyance, a memorial no more;
railroad trestles melting, steel matchsticks
pliable as plastic; graveyard markers
reduced from stone to ash; altars
for the ancients and the newly dead
wiped away; great beasts rising from
the human muck, primordial, simian,
their eyes white as heat lightning,
as atomic mushrooms after the fire
storm, after the manumission of these
wandering souls; the black impressions,
shadows frozen in flight.
Portrait of the Artist, Photo of a Mock Turner in the Background
Brought back to life, his eyes
have seen it all on both sides
of the bar, the swarthy demons,
the headless huntsmen, range
riders on white buffalo shooting
the dead warriors when artificial
respiration won’t do what jesus
did, making a mockery out of
mortality by raising Lazarus three
days gone, decayed and festering,
an incomplete new man cursed with
vision once the white scabs of his
eyes have been removed, once new
uncanny visions of resurrected pain
have been felt; the risen elk on steep
promontory wait amid the unearthly
swirl of colored mists, the creator’s
face suggests what cannot be said,
“nothing I can say will make it better.”
Poetry from John Edward Culp
+
Falling faster
than skies can
Just to find ground.
The stable beginning
where particles meet
to find a rhythm
As Love rests my
Heart safely
Told a thousand truths
each different without
source until I touch
Harmonious Light with
direction.
Myself I AM
Best upon
needless to
say.
.............................................
A morning script
by John Edward Culp
April 6, 2026
All Rights Reserved
+
Poetry from Yeon Myeong-ji

Asked How Spring Should Be Used
I sleep beside an old film
where long-forgotten names come and go.
Sleep folds away the faces I miss,
soaked through with the tears of flowers.
In the place where past words were set loose,
unshed cries are tangled, unable to be locked away.
When I dip an old brush,
droplets open a path.
A breath touches that distant landscape —
in the place where hidden flowers bloom alone,
there is the heart of the sea.
Flowers blooming underwater
sway yellow with a trembling grief.
Some springs must gather courage
just to be used —
they must be wept through.
Hands that had sunk
heave up what they could not hold;
eyes whose depths cannot be known
even after sorrow has drained away.
Days we once embraced
lie arranged in quiet rows.
Spring returns carrying the word I’m sorry.
On the anniversary we meet again,
rolled up inside our unfinished speech.
I’m sorry
for leaving you behind.
봄을 어떻게 사용하느냐고 물었다
연명지
머리맡에 오래된 이름이 드나드는
낡은 필름을 두고 잔다
그리운 얼굴이 접혀 있는 잠은 꽃들의 눈물로 흥건하고
지나간 말을 부려놓은 곳에
잠그지 못한 울음들이 엉켜 있다
오래된 붓을 담그면 물방울들이 길을 연다
그 아득한 풍경에 닿아 있는 숨
혼자 숨어 핀 꽃들의 자리에 바다의 심장이 있다
물속에 핀 꽃들이 노랗게 울렁거린다
어떤 봄은 용기를 내서 울어야 사용 할 수 있다
가라앉은 손들이 울컥 게워놓은
슬픔마저 빠져나간 깊이를 알 수 없는 눈빛들
껴안았던 날들이 가지런히 놓여 있다
미안하다라는 말이 돌아오는 봄
기일에 만난 우리들 말 속으로 말아 올려지는
두고 와서 미안해
Mother’s Empty Room
By Yeon Myung Ji
When blood bloomed from her children’s fingers,
Mother would grind cuttlefish bone to dust
And cover our wounds.
In her final years, she was a map of tender pressure points;
She placed a heavy boulder atop the eyelids of life.
Leaving us—who once played beneath the shelter of her bones—
She let go of the hands she held until the end,
Taking not a single one with her as she went alone.
A certain someone, who wrote that we should rejoice
In having something left to leave behind,
Shed the tears of a bird.
And her children, sinners before their mother,
Stifled their tears, pressing them deep down.
They hid them in haste
So no one could ever find them.
Those who have buried a loved one in their hearts
Know how to unlock and bolt the gates of grief.
Though there is no scripture on how to mourn well,
Lips that met for the first time wailed out loud.
In three days, every trace of Mother
Was summoned away by the wind.
The woman who, in life, stayed only in her room,
Now hides within the fringe tree branches, within the breeze.
If blood should ever seep from her children’s fingers,
She seems ready to appear, clutching a piece of cuttlefish bone.
Even in death, she is Mother;
With that very word, “Mother,” she still cradles us.
엄마의 빈 방
Yeon Myung Ji
엄마는 새끼들 손가락에서 피가 나면
갑오징어 뼈를 갈아 상처를 덮어주었다.
늘그막의 엄마는 온통 압통점이어서
생의 눈꺼풀 위 묵직한 바위 하나 올려놓았다.
당신의 뼈 아래에서 놀던 우리를 남겨두고
마지막으로 잡았던 손들
하나도 데려가지 않고 혼자 갔다.
무언가 두고 갈 것이 있다는 걸
기뻐하라는 글을 남긴 어떤 이는
새의 눈물을 흘렸고
어미 앞에 죄인인 새끼들은 눈물을 꾹꾹 숨겼다.
누구도 눈물을 찾지 못하도록
바삐 숨겼다
누군가를 가슴에 묻어본 사람들은
눈물을 열고 잠그는 방법을 안다.
잘 울어야 한다는 교리가 있는 것도 아닌데
처음 본 입술은 깔깔 울었다.
엄마의 흔적은 사흘 만에
바람으로 불려갔고
살아서는 방에만 있던 엄마는
이팝나무 가지에, 바람 속에 숨어 있다.
새끼들 손가락에 피가 나면
얼른 오징어 뼈를 들고 나타날 것만 같은
엄마는, 죽어서도 엄마
그 엄마라는 말로 여전히 우리를 다독인다
Profile
Poet Yeon Myeong-ji began her literary career in 2013 with the poetry collection 『Gashibi』, published in the Minerva Poetry Series.
Her published works include the poetry collections 『Sitting Like an Apple』 and 『Where would the House of the Sorry’ be? 』 the e-poetry collection 『Seventeen Marco Polos,』 and the travel essay 『Step by Step, Walking the Camino.』
She has received the Tolstoy Literary Award, the Homi Literary Award, the Cheongsong Gaekju Literary Award, and the Aviation Literary Award. In 2025, she was awarded the Bronze Prize in Poetry at the Literature Asia Awards.
Her poems have been translated and published in local languages in India, Pakistan, Kosovo, Italy, Egypt, the United States, and Belgium.
Short story from Doug Hawley and Bill Tope
Originally published in the Gorko Gazette.
Le Penseur
Stan sat before the old television set, unmoving. He was just dimly aware that his torso and limbs were arranged in the same posture as Rodin’s “The Thinker,” only in flesh tones instead of the bronze of the sculpture. While Le Penseur had for more than a century captivated observers with its monumental reflection of profound introspection, Stan knew only that he was stoned on peach-flavored vodka and ersatz Nyquil. Like the statue, Stan was totally nude.
It had been a long night. Leaving his sleeping wife alone in the middle of the night to grab a beer and catch some professional wrestling on the tube, he had gotten wildly drunk and stayed that way into the morning. He worked hard as a bricklayer and only cut loose one night a week. He didn’t frequent the bars anymore, and usually held himself together enough to accompany Bree to church on Sunday morning.
He gazed bleakly at the TV, saw on the fuzzy screen only the pointless Sunday morning discussion programs. Stan moved his right elbow from his left knee and bent to retrieve his flask of generic vodka. He then snatched from the TV table the large, trapezoid-shaped bottle of generic cold meds. Decanting the green, gloppy liquid into a small plastic cup, he tossed it back like a shot of tequila. Next he unscrewed the vodka and took a bracing hit. The hair on his arms stood on end.
“I’m ready,” he said aloud, “for a Sunday without football.”
Keys rattled in the locket and through the front door walked Bree. She dropped her purse and a grocery bag on the parson’s table beside the entrance. She stared at her husband and offered up, “Shit-faced again, lover?”
“Is that what you learned at Sunday school today?” asked Stan, promptly falling off the sofa and bonking his head on the edge of the TV.
As he lay there, dazed, Bree sashayed through the living room, took up a vase, removed the fresh-cut flowers and poured the water on her husband’s head. Stan sprang to life at once.
Stan shook himself like a dog. “What’s for lunch?” he slurred.
“Hash. Don’t get up; I’ll serve you where you are.”
“Thanks, ‘hon.”
Bree brings him something ugly in a bowl.”
“Hey Bree, that’s the dog’s food dish.”
“Of course it is, I gave you dog food.”
“Bree, I can only take so much. You know I can leave you at any time.”
“Promises, promises. The checkout guy at the grocery lets me know, every time I shop, that he’s available. Good hair, nice teeth and a body that looks like a Greek statue. You really want to make threats?”
“You think you are so hot! Want to know what the secretaries for the union say about me?”
“Sure, I could use a good laugh.”
“They say I have great penmanship.”
They blink at the other for a moment, and then Bree hides her mouth with her hand and starts to giggle. Stan joins her. Soon they are laughing uproariously.
“Hey Bree, help your drunk old man up so we can watch something on TV.”
“OK, but after that I’ve got to put away groceries.”
Later they leave the TV on but ignore it while making out like a couple of teenagers. The ice cream melts in the bag on the table.