Poetry from Roodly Laurore

Haiti’s Hell  

Yelling is heard everywhere.

Policeman dying,

bandits create the law.

In every corner

of each street burns fire.

Woman is crying,

belly in knot, tight as a rope.

Her husband has left four children

“What will I do, my life is over?”

She says with tears in her eyes. 

Author/ Roodly Laurore 

Translator/ Jerrice J. Baptiste

 __________________________

Ayiti Lanfè

Toupatou se rèl.

Polisye ap mouri,

bandi fè lalwa.

Nan chak kwen ri se dife.

Madamn ap kriye,

kòd.mare vant.

Mari l kite kat pitit

“Kisa mwen pral fè, lavi mwen fini,”

li di ak dlo nan je.

~Roodly Laurore

______________________

Volcano

 A volcano exists in every Haitian.

When will it all erupt?

Fight for my precious country.

Dormant volcano,

Your daughter sleeps near garbage.

Tears, not enough.

An explosion of red heat needed.

What to do?

Country stands without a president.

Author/ Roodly Laurore 

Translator/ Jerrice J. Baptiste

_____________________

Volkan

Gen yon volkan nan chak ayisyen

Nap gade ki le nou tout ap eropte

Batay pou yon peyi presie.

Volkan doman

Pitit fi ou ap domi pre fatra

Dlo nan zye pa sufi.

Yon explozysion ak chale roug

Ki sa poun fe?

Peyi a kanpe san prezidan.

 ~Roodly Laurore 

Roodly Laurore was born and raised in Haiti. He is an engineer and poet. His poems are published in Kosmos Journal, Autism Parenting Magazine; Solstice Literary Magazine, The New Verse News, Jerry Jazz Musician and others.  Roodly lives in Haiti with his wife and two sons.

Jerrice J. Baptiste is an author of eight books and a poet in residence at the Prattsville Art Center & Residency in NY.  She is extensively published in journals and magazines such as Artemis Journal, The Yale Review, Mantis, Kosmos Journal, The New Verse News and many others.  She has been nominated as Best of The Net by Blue Stem for 2022. She enjoys playing the role of translator.

Poetry from Obirija Joshua

Reflections

What makes us mournful at funerals?
Is it the memories we’ve made with the deceased
Or the memories we failed to create with them?
What moves us to tears at funerals?


Is it the things we said to the one lying lifeless in the casket,
Or the things we failed to say to them?


What makes us cry at funerals?
Is it the good times we shared with the one about to be lowered into the Cold bosom of the earth,
Or the good times we failed to share with them?

Tales of a traveller

tė Uzo chekwa ghu nwa m, 

said my grandma to me 

as I set forth on my journey. & her words, when loosely translated mean, 

“may the road be your guide, my child.” 

so here I am on the road, travelling with no distinct destination in mind, 

i, a born voyager, 

descendant of men 

who commune with the road. who call a place far from home, home. 

so I, before I drew my first breath had fellowship with the road. 

little wonder why I feel safest 

on the go. why my mind 

only finds peace in places 

far from my abode. Little wonder why only the road feels like home.

Obirija Somtochukwu is a freshman student of pharmacy at the University of Ibadan. An essayist and poet, he writes on social issues, his tribal identity and personal conflicts. 

In addition to writing, he plays football, table tennis and chess.

Poetry from Mark Young

daily mortality

Consensus diagnoses based on
different synoptic patterns
derive from a nonsense line
in an old ballad. Omit that, & the
two shades don’t really match.

Frictional Fiction

We lean out of the window
as the car goes
round the corner. Too fast
but we don’t care. It’s
life, it’s sun, it’s something
to do as the car
leans out the window as
the world goes round
the corner.

one of several

He was supposed to
look younger than
the colorful helicopters
at the Museo del Aire

now that he was
receiving injections
of that really top notch
debating technique

developed from the
new high-sensitivity
technology of the
Stiffness Matrix.

A (slightly modified) found poem

If you’re not the biggest guy on the block,
you need to level the playing field…
That’s why I’m sending you this 10-million
volt spam gun. It’s the best way to protect
yourself against bigger, stronger attackers…

You don’t need to know MMA or jiu-jitsu…
You don’t need to be accurate…
You just press a button & ZAP —
your attacker is disabled, giving you
the chance to get away safely.

The best part is…Unlike knives & guns…
Spam guns don’t cause serious damage.
A lot of people would prefer to electrocute
their opponent than have to stab or shoot them…
So — if you’re one of those people… We’re

giving away 500 FREE Spam Guns (10 million volt)
to help American families stay safe. I personally
carry one for times I don’t want to use my Ruger…
& I make sure my wife & daughter keep one of
these in their purse when they leave the house…

It’s a troubling world out there, & it’s better
to be prepared. But as I said, there are only 500
free spam guns to giveaway…So you better
grab one quick if you want one. => Click Here
To Claim Your Free Spam Gun (10 Million Volt).

Poetry from John Tustin

THE CINNAMON-SKINNED GIRL

I said goodbye to her,
The cinnamon-skinned girl with eyes
As black as coal,
As brown as the earth beneath the earth.
She said goodbye and she was gone

While here I stand,
Drinking from an empty glass,
My tears falling into this endless fountain that spouts
Up into the nothing-at-all;
Looking into eyes as black as coal, as brown as the earth
Beneath the earth
That do not look back at me
And are not really here.
I rest beside the cinnamon-colored skin,
I feel the coolness and calmness for just a moment –
Knowing fully that what I feel is phantom.

I remember the kiss that sealed us.
The kiss that told me that we were us forever:
Just us.
The kiss was a lie but I can still close my eyes
And feel the shape of her lips surrounding my mouth,
So passionate, exquisite:

I still see the eyes as brown and black as brown and black can be.

I can taste her tongue and feel the shape of her lips;
Soft, dangerous, incongruous.

I still feel the skin that bound me to her and, now,
A lifetime of not her.

The skin that bound me to nothing.



CROSS

The memories of us
cling to my back
like the old rugged cross.
The splinter of your lonely figure at the bus stop,
the heaviness of the words I left lying
on the bedroom floor,
the downcast doom of that day
dragging us up to Golgotha,
to the inevitability of our death,
the uncertainty of our resurrection.
 
The memories of us
nailed up above my bed
like that little wooden cross I had
when I was five years old.
I pray to it at night and nothing happens
except a small drunken warmth in my belly
as my eyes leaden
and time keeps going forward anyway,
the bastard.
 
Driving past the church
I spent so many hours in as a boy,
in the choir, as an acolyte,
holding that chalice that the pastor
bent to the lips of the liars and the skullduggers
and the gossips and the philanderers,
Philistines all.
The cross at the top of the church so fascinating,
not ornate but so beautiful, regal, like a still bird,
snow falling whiter than white around it
like a feather crown.
I think of the time
before I knew you
and how happy I was because I didn’t know then
what little I had
like I know what little I have now.

THE LAUGHTER IN THE RAIN

I could hear the laughter in the rain
As it fell to my houseless head

The rivulets as tears falling down my face
The pools of water ever forming at shivering feet

Clothed in rags, dragging bags
Pitiless, eyes cold, manic, gleamy twin coins

Listening for a single gasp of sympathy
But hearing not a sound in the wind

Except the rain, the laughter in the rain,
The run on complaints of the street

The crackling of the moon
And the silence of the stones:

Wet, shining, waiting for my stumble
and my blood

Their faces as impassive as dead hands
And stilled hearts

Their hardness, their uncaring
To be my final bed

PERSON OF INTEREST

Tonight I am of interest to you.
Tomorrow I might die alone.
It’s been like this for me for a long time –
Long before the night not long ago
That I met you.
It’s funny how important someone seems
On a Monday afternoon:
How you can’t wait to get home and call them,
Find out about their day –
And that same person is not even a thought
Just 10 or 20 Monday afternoons later.
I think of all the people I’ve mostly forgotten
And I know that even more have forgotten me.
I remember eating cheesburgers together,
Tucked into that corner of the restaurant;
I remember it now and wonder if she remembers it
Or even remembers my name.
We were together off and on for a year or maybe more –
As time ticks on the measurements get hazier.
She’s living with some guy the last I heard,
Her divorce finally final for a while.
I was just trying to remember what it was like to have sex with her,
How many of my proclivities I exhibited,
How much nonsense I admitted,
What we talked about in the honesty of the dark.
I remember a little but not much.
I don’t know why I’m telling you this.
It sounds like a portent of doom
But it’s on my mind.
There have been so many Monday afternoons already
With different people waiting for my call
Or perhaps at the point where they were dreading it,
Ready to avoid it.
The Monday afternoons to come are less and less.
Hell, it could happen to us in just a few months –
I haven’t heard from you in a while
And I’ve forgotten you
Or, maybe,
You’ve forgotten me and
I’m still waiting for your call.


THE POEMS ARE LIES

Life is nothing like
An early frost upon the grapes
Or
Even
The life cycle of
The honeybee drone.

No.
It’s eating pretzels alone
At midnight
While listening to Enrico Caruso
And knowing that soon,
Too soon,
You will die.
Poetry lies.
You’ll be dead
Someday
And it will always be
Too soon.

The poems are lies.

Life is just like death –
Essentially one on one.
You contemplate and love
And hate and battle with
Yourself.

What you’ll regret most
Is all the lies you told
And the lies
Told
To you
That you
Believed
Were true.
Nothing about honeybees
Or grapes.

John Tustin’s poetry has appeared in many disparate literary journals since 2009. fritzware.com/johntustinpoetry contains links to his published poetry online.

Poetry from John Edward Culp

 

      I remember some theatrical 
films of newspaper leadership
 calling out,
   "Stop the presses!"
       Why?
  Well, because a great new
          headline was surfacing. 

        I think the awestruck tribe 
     of Earth Humanity is having 
   such a moment. 

      I guess my interest is,
What is that New Headline 
     that the Presses are being
         Stopped for?  
    What's the Story 
in the Silent Room?

       When I Read in front
of a Group, I like the 
attention that Silence cultivates
in the tribal convergence of
individual Attentions. We as 
individuals each have freedom
to listen or not. Interest 
is a choice. 

      Right now I sense 
a quiet and await
 the integral voices. I don't mind 
Good News or Bad News that leads to 
Greater Successes in the future. 

      Amongst the General commotion
I await that Sort of Voice which
I feel integral to Better 
decisions & Better choices.   

      I like that.



by John Edward Culp 
January 24, 2023

Poetry from Aloysius S. Harmon

Boys Are Not Stones

a poem about girls always holds red roses

floating on rivers

& boys never get to float on water.

give us a shovel,

we will dig graves and seal ourselves in the dirt.

across the street

a boy kept his palm under his cheek,

he lost his mother to the war,

his father left under the burning rain that night,

& since, he has never turned back.

Poetry from Christina Chin and Uchechukwu Onyedikam

stir fried offerings 

for vegetarians

pure friday

the day of congregation

oh ye adherents





shine

after the flood

sunflowers washed

away in tumultuous 

current






roofless belonging

a room to each

blue bird of paradise

water and seeds


at the bird feeder






contaminated 

dark fumes up above 

a scarcity of breath

the sirens and speakers 

signal evacuation 






families trapped 

on the rooftop others run 

to higher grounds

the heavy flood 


of strangled waterways





naked sky

sprinkles

stardusts

a body of beauty


to lust after







their love

private practice

the tell tale

wild daisies 


in her hair 





graveyard 

shift

approaching me

the cemetery digger


with the victim's eyes






the village boy:

learning to talk 

grandma bites her tongue 

when he mimics 


her tone on his name





slow world

under its weight

a tortoise

tumbles and flips


back in the pond