Poetry from Mahbub

Poet Mahbub, a South Asian man with dark hair and glasses and a suit and tie
Poet Mahbub
War and Love

The world is exposed to this hammering 
And moulding the golden or silver necklace
How beautiful and brightening!
Everyday every moment the fighting people bleeding and dying
How pathetic the role played!  
Although we perform our duty from both sides
No caricature, no specialty before-after
So touching the heart of others
How loving the scenery of land and waters
On the other hand the little bird flapping its wings 
Gasping for a little chance to live 
In the world it's very hard nut to crack
The destination of peace and love.

Chapainawabganj, Bangladesh
28/05//2022

Water Crisis

Bangladesh is a land of rivers
But they are crying for water
If you cross them in summer or winter
Its only knee touching once twenty years ago
It was full to the brim
I live in subconscious
I die unconscious
Dryness covers up my area
Dams, dams and dams that tears the heart 
The world is open for all
But some are victimized by the barriers in waters and land
Can you imagine the problem in the subcontinent?
I live in subconscious
I die unconscious
At times when water flooded us to the place 
Can you imagine?
  
Chapainawabganj, Bangladesh
28/05//2022

The World Attacked By

The world is attacked one by one
One by one -Corona Pandemic, Russia - Ukraine fight
Israel - Palestine fight, China - India Fight
Fight against hunger and plight from country to country
We, the commoners try to get free from the clutch of the spoiled brains 
Control the markets for high rise price of the necessary commodities
Standing before the shop look so high around the sky
Eyes turn so big and red bright!
And all seem to be dark at the time of paying the bill
Fight within me on the land, in the ocean, hills and the place
Where the children are learning their lessons at the institutes
Only fight and death - death and fight.

Chapainawabganj, Bangladesh
28/05//2022

Immunity

All fades away! Hi immunity
Lost your power of moving in body
Just like the shooting star in the sky
Twinkling once goes out of sight
But we do have belief
We must stand side by side so close
Its patience that permits us to exist here from time immemorial
Day by day our immunity dims away adding the earth 
One day I must see you with our loving desire
I must run from one to the other-the loving bird
How maddening the love between!
O love, my dear love!
Immunity must be regained one day in us. 

Chapainawabganj, Bangladesh
30/05//2022


Risk

While swimming on the pond at my high school life in seven or eight grade
I take risk of him for holding me on the back
Spread my hands on water
But within a minute or two I get tired
Finding no way I wanted to escape
The more I want to escape the more he wants to hold me so tight 
At last I stared my journey again on water 
Crossing the middle part of the pond
At reaching point to the other side two or three yards left
Losing all my strength, we began to take water
Just at the moment a black boy standing on the bank jumped on 
Robust and strong enough to support us from going under water
We revived, but the moment still I remember at times to take my shelter in love.
   
Chapainawabganj, Bangladesh
30/05//2022


Poetry from Christine Tabaka

The Last Seed

My family
glass & rust
fragile & corroded
crumbling at the touch

Erased history
shame & tears
we continued on our path

Sins elude the breakwater
ocean swallowed all
a repentant crossing

Meals eaten in silence
prayers said in fear
no one dared to question

The last tree has fallen
I am the last twig
sheltering the last seed




No One Left to Hear

Talk is cheap. Always cheap. Counting pennies for a dime.
Actions play the mime, refusing to recite their lines.
I buried a crucifix once, hoping to grow some faith.
The ground opened up to swallow me. Hair tangled in 
knots like a fist pulling out roots of truth. Lavender 
speaks in soft whispers. What colors do you hear?

Pennies tarnished and pitted. Chatter, chatter, chatter.
The asking price for a word is an entombed relic.
The cost of life, caged by lies, trapped without a voice. 
The prefix of time sits on shoulders of thought, 
not able to utter a syllable. Bound by convention,
it sinks deeper beneath contrition, buried along with my cross.


I Ask the Sky for More

Standing still, alone, upon the hill / above the clouds.
Dreams turn red / they burn through time.

Time practices its lines over, and over, but cannot speak;
muted to all who would listen / its tongue severed. 

I ask the sky for more / it does not answer.
Thunderous silence fills my head.

I stare into white light / blinded by your brilliance.
I stand still, alone, upon the hill / above the clouds.

You were so beautiful / your eyes so green.
You slipped through barriers of reality.

I climb even higher. Stars reach out to take my hand.
They dance for joy / I join the dance.

The end is near <I am ready>.
Stepping off the galaxy, I fall into your vacuous night




Finding the Truth of Who I Am

there is no roof	only a starry expanse
reaching ever further
	beyond the dawn of man

we trip over words 	light as feathers
always searching for truth

in the timelessness 	of tomorrow
	ideals do not equate
as yesterday draws us back 

I was such a fool
	turning my face away
		reality played its little ruse

a thousand years 
	passed through our fingers
riding imagination	back home

time does not change
	who we are
		unless we deem it so 



The Curse of Green Eyes

Greed festers in my veins / seeping through my pores.
Wanting what I cannot have. Always seeking more.
Born with green eyes / the curse before me came.
Helpless to my fate. Desire was my calling / envy 
was my name. I craved the peace I could not have,
even that I wanted more. Nothing was for nothing, 
and everything was less. Time passed and light 
dimmed. Of memories, I have none. One emotion 
remains, the tireless pursuit of what I cannot have. 
To the very end of hope, a lust fills my soul. To 
quench the mighty thirst that bore me through this 
world. To calm the fire and know quietude just once.


Gateway to Hell

Standing at the gateway to hell.
There is no going forward / no going back. 
Paralyzed / afraid to breathe. Encircled 
by a fire of hate & apathy. One small 
move, and we topple over the edge. A 
devouring vortex of horror sucking us in. 

Four years of uncertainty / two years
in captivity. War caps off the dread. 
Fear of annihilation if we step too far.
Where do we turn / where do we go?
Darkness closes in all around. A world
trembles. Can hell be far behind? 

Beyond our reach / behind our knowing /
lies a place where we play games. 
Games of life and death. Foreboding 
stillness awaits the eruption of truth.
A truth that stands alone. We are the
makers of our own hell. 
We pave the path we trod. 



Poetry from Sandra Rogers-Hare

Juneteenth

Such a heart wracking event
Bloomed yellow, green and red streams of gladness
Ribbons around a geographic pole
Unbridled dancing, hallelujahs.

Once long ago when Texas was the last remaining stronghold of the Civil War
black people toiled resigned in its fields
Rattling horses
Cleaning homes
No one the wiser
Not most whites
Not blacks.
The imbalance of nature hummed nicely
As planned
Though thoughts, wild thoughts
Caromed with force and vigor around the cranium of mind. 
What color is freedom?

What crack whackery brought that lone horseman to the capital
His mount dusty, riding
Sweat stains lining his neck and pits
Didn’t ask for water
Tied up his hoss
Delivered his message:
The General is coming! 

On Sunday, June 18, 1865 General Gordon Granger marched
1,800 Blue Coats into the island city of Galveston, largest in Texas,
Critical seaport. 
On Monday, June 19, Granger issued General Orders No. 3.
Lincoln told him, “Better read it out loud,
Some of them don’t know how.”
In fact he read it several times around the city
At the market
At the Osterman building, Union Army headquarters
Over by the judiciary
Down on the wharf . . . 

Two months previous, when Texas finally capitulated and was annexed by the Union 
Granger took troop command of the District of Texas. 
His first official act, read General Orders No. 3:
The people of Texas are informed that, in accordance with a proclamation from the Executive of the United States, all slaves are free.
Another day at work in the life of a career soldier.
A life-changing event for 250,000 enslaved black people …
Didn’t know they had been freed two years earlier.
Why so many?
By the time General Granger assumed command of the District of Texas,
the Confederate capital, Richmond, had fallen, 
the executive mentioned in the order – President Lincoln – was dead, and the 
13th Amendment abolishing slavery would soon be ratified.
Is it possible to have a second independence?

But the slaves weren’t free.
The ex-Confederate mayor of Galveston flouted the Army, 
forced the freed people back to work, 
In point of fact, after New Orleans fell to the Union Army in 1862, 
slave owners in Mississippi and Louisiana and across the South effected their own trail of tears, a re-enactment of the Middle Passage, drove
150,000 slaves on a march to Texas, 
Deemed the best place to work the economic engine of slavery.
Build America.

Galveston was a hop and a sneeze from the Caribbean slave-trading islands
Privateers and smugglers used it as an outpost for their operations. 
As long as the Confederate Army had control, there was no way to enforce Lincoln’s order.
What turns black to red?

Freedom came to Texas slaves two years later when the Confederacy finally surrendered
Time enough to harvest two cotton crops 
When is free, free? 

Spontaneous celebrations broke out among the freed slaves
Churches and homes, picnics and barbecues 
What is the inside of red?

The color red became prominent
Partly because it is the color of blood and
Partly because it was a color of spiritual power among the Yoruba and Kongo peoples,
Shipped to the Caribbean and Gulf Coast long after the slave trade was outlawed in1807.
Red, a cultural reminder of the roots of the enslaved –
Barbecued ribs in red sauce,
Red velvet cake, red beans and rice, lemonade with fresh strawberries,
strawberry soda bottled and shipped from Milwaukee.

When does emancipation become freedom?



~ Sandra Rogers-Hare                              

Poetry from Santiago Burdon

Angry Streets

The streets are angry tonight
traffic ignorant of the punishment it inflicts
By driving upon their asphalt backs
Sidewalks click clack with choatic rhythm 
footsteps tapping out a nervous pulse 
the throbbing heartbeat of a city near cardiac arrest
lights grow brighter as night drips darkness
Into a black ocean sky
overgrown foliage hides a concrete park bench
my slumber berth for the night
The cement mattress is harder than I can remember.
Can't find any reason to complain
It's time to pursue an evasive sleep 
Knowing the catch isn't worth the chase 
Left only to wrestle treacherous dreams
The author of a broken rest
Car horns, gunfire and screams  
Sing a lullaby off key 
Bleeding through the chorus of nights lacerated voices
in between brief moments of silence
Sneaks the moan of a lonely saxophone
Crying notes to a tune I've never heard before
Although it sounds strangely familiar


Temporary Sherry

The diamond in her wedding ring has lost its glimmer
Gone is the sparkle that once danced in her eyes
Left with a basket full of dirty laundry
Every memory a thief that has robbed her smile
She stares out the kitchen window
A future now muffled thunder in broken skies
Her conversation with silence disrupted
By the sound of the baby's demanding cry

Poetry from Andrew McDonald

Seasoned ritual

What these lights exclaim—
a commonplace of forms 
in pronouncement of death.

They wander untruths 
hollered foregone
of a solstice
established 
a season of touch.

Their dross is predicate 
to a remonstrance performed;
shaping as best 
that fathom of force cultured 
from specks unjustness shines
on bathed nights lacked their lustre.

(Here a life extolled; there
a dream extinguished).

Now so foreign we’re
stepping over the timed-in chants
to fend for places consenting 
rest from 
what reasons that ask it
of celebrations intolerance begets,

that is how to exercise rhythms
their shod worthiness proclaimed
in the sudden redux of antiphons 
once scant now abundant.

We trail in our responses,
aligned to make delicate
the occasion we’ve met,
clutching our tapers so that
light, too, does not
more easily perish.




Window shopping

Cut figures shaped waxen
mirror intentions formed
of haphazard strolls down streets 
love ill-mannered pretends them—
some ticketed green 
of truant devotions come back this
garden of delights popular in what’s hoped for.

Most of it’s distracting, full of 
stops and contrition
unripe statuary tends
those whose lives unfold
in service to lost ancestors.

But Time will come them who favour
this will to remark it—
we’re selves left as are to own devices
happenstance if birth
then recession cemented along
lines that dock us of valuables given.

Ready or not we wouldn’t have it
that smile half-shaped for the crowd to mumble,
a relic ambulating distance and emotion
the window gives toll to
as we gather and shop in the know
of what it’s wrought
an age post-capitalistic of booming abundance.




On a reading of Melanie Klein during lockdown

Projected selfhoods applaud 
affirmations to the bone;

deep their solipsism broods
the selfishness they’ve caused

if wrapped around is a gift
their Others’ not wanted

but of loans disposed 
to hearts who contend them.

They ride along 
such subtle devotion

its violence that prospers
raw conditions suffering made norm

as Life is its truth when
pretensions implode 

and grumble the heresies
politeness helps form

in softness mere cover
what tensions belie.



Avatar

Legitimate runs can’t handle 
circumstances of commotion.

They get wind of escape through 
worlds our falsehoods outmoding
as the real less tangible is speculated

more worth than this 
daily plot thick 
with the uninitiated.

But here: 
burnt-out traces of corpse
project drop-offs
the mainframed redoubt-in,
lost to bigger cause 
inhuman as much
the next one proposes
some new god its hereafters
the digital allots of 
when embraced extensions 
regulate newness pulled-out from 
deathbeds their visions
that commonplace of norms
our postmodern living.

Monotony gone
deposits best colour
this mutiny 
about us.

Poetry from Anderson Moses

PSALMS 22:19

After Shedrack Bulus


To the tongue that cradles on wounds,
every poem holds a hammer against my 
body. Which means, this body lacks a body, sometimes, it is a garden & other times, it's a flower — Perfect paradox saying; the things I once admired now plague on me. Maybe, this is how a body translate to a graveyard. Again, cast me to a river & I'll comeback a sand, scars & death close dialect engulfing a body. Every morning I trust my knees for 
Grace, but bleeds still flaunt out of me like a spring bee. & these scars too renders me a sacrificial lamb. Tell me, what mouth will remember me & still gospel how to read a poem before a congregation of grief?. The priest said, Son, learn how to build a tower for your scars. Perhaps, I remember— even the Bible pulled pigs out of a body. Say, to nurture a body for moths. Grace tarry & everything ends in science. At least to saviour a body. I, a rotten flesh hunting for hope at feet of a round rope. This poems breaks & clouds this body to a dust. Lord, won't you undress me to a butterfly? Now that blood still wets my knees on breaking tarmacs.
____________________________________________________________________________________________

I CHRISTENED MY BODY A HOME

At night,
I briefcased my unbelief into the 
esophagus of my stepmother. Nothing
defines a boy more than grief. & I, too.
My body have cocoon myriad lightless
stars, which often deduced me to a prosaic equation, I mean something poor devoid of brilliance— Emptiness filled 
me to the edge, & I bend like a crayfish. 
Which is to say, my body still clings on rotten roses. I lost a sight of myself, & my cousin is now an acronym mouthed by birds. Tell me, In what way can i unbuilt this body?. Perhaps, this poem is modern. Here, everything labyrinths to a requiem, grief, bullet, or whatever can murder. & say, a rose fading to a scar, My shadow bounced back at me. My body shriveled to a room with sharp shards. All wanting to cut & open me to a naked wound. Yesterday, i met God in the flickering of a crescent, I wanted to split this body before his presence, To unfold my soul to a faith. But, here, not everything bring peace. So i relinquished my simulacrum to the mirror & christened my body a home.
___________________
Anderson Moses, nicknamed (Son of Moses)  is a poet from a small village in Akwa Ibom State, Nigeria. He's a student of History and International studies. He's works have been published/forthcoming in Brittle paper, Nantygreens, Eboquills, Arts lounge and elsewhere. Apart from writing, he enjoys snapping images.

Poetry from Ann Pineles

Quick Write 5/24/22

Sitting at their desks, in the quiet before the storm,
They listened to their teachers. They looked back on a lessening pandemic year,
With parents and grandparents and friends finally within touch.
They sat at their desks in a classroom. The last day of school
They looked forward to summer to freedom to playing and to time with friends
In a lessening pandemic year.
They felt safe.
Children.
Someone’s child.
Someone’s sister. Someone’s brother
Someone’s best friend.
Someone’s everything.
Someone knew these children from birth
And held them and kissed them and snuggled them and treasured them.
Maybe they were lucky at home and had meals everyday
And had parents who knew where they were all the time
And had friends who cared if they talked to them and played with them and ate with them.
Maybe they were less lucky and had one parent or one person who looked after them.
Maybe they were happy to be in school because the other place they could be was not as good.

But they were all together in the classroom. All together at the same time.
And then they weren’t. They were not spared. They were suddenly not safe.
They were suddenly not children. First they were, then they weren’t.
And someone might not have been a mother any more. Or a father.
Can we be parents if we don’t have children?

And then it was over.