Poetry from Abubakar Auwal

Mother's birth/journey to grave

She died once more
After she was born. 

The husbands she married 
Were blind, since she gives joy. 

Her children spread;
Convolvulusly but not convolvulus. 

All her breath were shadows out. 
Not knowing she corrode in corral. 

Yet, her children were blind in proposals ;
On whom to titled a father... 

Since 70s, 80s, 90s, 20s, till date ;
All the cosmopolitans enjoyed her hood and goes away. 

May the spider-weavings of her children.
Fall out from their coronets. 
To rewind mother, back alive. 

Poetry from Imam Sarafadeen





Morning Dew

I sat down beside the tree

Talking to myself and and the surrounded bee.

Inside me, nothing shows but thy love

Turning and turning as the day rough.

Impossible possible, not my love for you,

Table for two is ours for true.

If your love is a prison, then I’m your criminal

Tag me around you and take me to anywhere tonal.

Is love not a beautiful thing?

Think of it, and tell me everything.

I am not ready for your preaches

tones that come by your inches.

Instantly, I wake up everyday,

Thy love comes to me as the morning dew and stay.

Poetry from Mesfakus Salahin

Mesfakus Salahin
Oh father

oh father, oh father of the nation
You are the Bangobandhu, Shaikh Mojibur Rahman
From the heaven make the garden of Sonar Bangla
You are alive in the slogan 'Joy Bangla'.

You have given us a flag of green and red
We are still under your love and shade
We shall never forget your contribution 
You are the father of the nation.

You have given us wind of independence 
We see in our heart your courageous face
You are the source of our inspiration 
You are the hero of the heroes of the nation.
Oh father.oh father, oh father of the nation
You are the Bangobandhu, Shaikh Mojibur Rahman.



Poetry from Christopher Bernard

August, New Hope, 1961

By Christopher Bernard

The heavy ripening summer,
green in the mountains,
high wheat, sleek corn,
alfalfa massed against the ground,
strawberries, raspberries, black,
peaches almost over-ripe,
tomatoes big and sweet –
a sultry land baking hot
with loam, topsoil, sleep.

The year ripening:
the wind from the north, in snow, rain,
ice, forgotten. Trickles
of moisture tickle the back of your neck.
Nothing tempts like ice-sweat lemonade,
except maybe a plunge 
in a pool under the hickories.
Time stops for weeks.
You never want it to move again.

August the earth in that place slept
and dreamt of a half-forgotten spring,
winter dead, July’s hopes,
as a whisper of coolness slipped inside,
like a drop of water inside a crack.
And under the sultry atmosphere
a breath of ice stole like a knife, 
steely and rare. . . .
Someone now long dead
looked up from her summer book, hesitated, and said,
to no one in particular, “I can feel fall in the air.”

_____
	
Christopher Bernard’s collection The Socialist’s Garden of Verses won a 2021 PEN Oakland Josephine Miles Award for Literary Excellence and was named one of the “Top Indie Books of 2021” by Kirkus Reviews.

Poetry from Michael Pollentine

Ash

When the tips
No longer sprout 
Leaves
And those clinging on
Curve upwards
Almost drawing
A blanket over
Itself
Means
It is dying
It is easier to bring
Down
A dying tree
Than a dead one
Like transferring her to the hospice
After we had transported her 
From her home
To my bedroom
And then
From the hospice
To the mortuary
To be burned
Amongst tears
And scattered memories 
Of a life
Voiced
By someone else
In my room
Clearing
Magazines
With half finished
Crosswords
And curling pages
I regret throwing out


Pyre

Purity
Rages
Its swollen scent

Sucks
Oxygen inwards
Along with terror

A procession
Of curtains
And burning eyes



Terrarium

A melting vortex
In the shape of understanding
A blind tear

Virulent
Energy blast
Claw scrapes
A cistern 

Spat in
Capped
Shaken

The fizz forms
After it stagnates
Repugnant
Ooze

Bubbles
Joy flicker
In the slime of
Transmutation

Dare you touch the glass?





Plush

A flying
Slug
Torpedoes
Glitter
Trails
Through a
Black
Eco-system
Will it hit?
Will it miss?
Will it be lost?
Will it even be first?



Flirt

Pheromones
Tangle in the air
Ejaculate
A liquid rain
In colour form
Invisible
Tangible
Yet free of fingers
Eyes
Trace
Lines
Minds 
Wish
To caress
Inside a black hole
A claw
Waits
For reckless
Forms
To eviscerate
Or smother
With
Pathogens

Poetry from wv sutra


brother charles


should a man wear a smock if not an artisan

walking alone with his spirits feeling

their affectionate regard his shoulders

draped with the black flag of freedom

wise to keep distance from the innkeepers

and townsfolk wishers of ill


should a man wear a large bow tie if he sings

every day in a thrilling voice would he look absurd

in the midst of greatness however briefly

of the bourgeoisie waxing eloquent in a space

of vermillion or possibly amaranth


daguerreotype image ambiguous showing

frustration or pique willing in spite of all

to live in his own times helpful to others

to me certainly in my fragmentation 

my dislocation any brief refuge any respite

from the runaway omnibus


i remember brother charles

and the other brother charles

the teacher opening wide his arms to the

singer the francophone buddhist

nostalgic for salad days at the sorbonne

his reading list dragging behind him


not to forget brother charles the trumpeter 

the messenger the bike enthusiast

who filled his bottle as a boy emptying 

a thousand as a bearded man who

now has gone hence in his winding sheet

hand in hand with psychopomp


where is the bygone man who would beat

another on the street for what had been written

and as the beaten one staggered on

disgusted women would gather their skirts

and spit with contempt fearful of the threat

to polite society and with good reason


yes the silence of my dreams is real

the thrilling voice hallucination

charles my brother gave me

tones of gray for consolation

and raised for me a temple

in the midst of desolation

wisest of brothers stretching forth

a hand in loving valediction




w v sutra was born in Africa and raised in Southeast Asia and the Middle East, borne hither and thither on the surging tides of cold war and soft power. He has been at various times a rock musician, a public health professional, and an educator. He began writing poetry during the Covid-19 lockdown. His work can be found in various online journals and at wvsutra.com . He lives and works on a horse farm on the shoulders of the Holston Mountains in East Tennessee. Twitter @w_v_sutra

Poetry from Jack Galmitz

He Is Risen

The rising man
the showman
the big shtarker
did a turnaround:
moved the boulder
clear of the cavemouth 
and bowed in three
directions to applause
you've never heard
the likes of; maybe
once before when
Horus rose from the dead
and greeted the sun
as anyone would after
that torpor the cheers
were louder.  

In the bars, they only talk
of their guy who came
after as the one and only
to shower with gratitude.
And damn the unbelievers.
And don't be mentioning
Asar in these quarters



March With The Zapatistas

There's something to think about
in the movement of the marching
toward a goal that's distant enough
to become uncertain of its outcome.
The men are tilted forward
as if leading horses onward.

The women are devotion, their arms folded
in the creases of soutanes placed as columns.
Determination is depicted. It is a color. Red.
White moon. Blue of moonlight in the mountains.
They go to fight. You see the swords. There's no 
deception in it. Their figures are their speech.

Though wearing peasant dress they're contemporaries
and we slowly merge with them without distress.





Evasive Action

It's all we've got so let's keep it.
Wouldn't you run into a burning building
to save a child? You wouldn't pour gas
on it. Let's get together and make an impact.
Give up those old clunkers you're still driving. 
Sell off the cattle you're raising in your garages.
They're dooming us to extinction.  Beans 
are much better for you and so are bicycles. 
Take a walk with your child and have a conversation
without lighting a cigarette. Purchase
solar panels, buy green tags, adjust your thermostat. 
Throw yourself to the ground to stop a convoy
of tanks slowly emitting CO2 gas in the countryside. 
And get those B-2B's out of the sky. They're GHG murderers.