BLIND MOTHER I'm one of the children of that mother With biggest and milky breasts in town Who lives to feed the adjoining cherubs But too blind to notice the malnutrition Which's been drawn in crystal on her kids; I've been down in the mouth all day long; I told my mother and did she tell me; Put in the ground thy ears o' son And water them with stream of thy eyes! SAINT Beloved On my journey To thy world I embark Beloved If I reach There I'll dwell Till sun dies Beloved I am saint; I am sent To clean your sin NIGERIA Behold, Here, Nigeria is my home; Where my parents, family and friends Are born and raised by different hands Do we have other place to call home? Halt, o' brethren Don't let others in our hearts Plant the seed of hatred; Lado, Ejike, Olu we're but family Let's alone stand to face our face; Hang on, The land, where we sang while farming Is now with our hands turned it abattoir; Where we slaughter our own brothers Who live to provide for us the foods Listen, Why o' brethren and when again Shall we regain our senses? Tell our brothers to put down their guns So peace would be freed and go everywhere WEARY WANDERER Home my abandoned heart, O' Dija Let love be its eternal servitude In your sacred kingdom Clasp me in your arms, O' Dija For my limbs grew cold Strap my aching body to your back Hold onto my hands, O' Dija I'm an eclipsed moon In your starry sky I reshine I'm a weary wanderer, O' Dija Take me to your pool Let's swim and have ourselves anew
Poetry from Christina Chin and Uchechukwu Onyedikam
10 birth after birth — Christina Chin veiled in the curse eve the queen of Eden a dark symbolic thirst — Uchechukwu Onyedikam 9 her tornadic aura... impossible to resist tumbling into nothing — Uchechukwu Onyedikam three boys and two dogs — Christina Chin 8 beneath devil's moon a paradise for outcasts to hear birds whisper — Uchechukwu Onyedikam in a quiet room midnight séance — Christina Chin 7 tunnel vision hope will arise to dawn — sapphire blue sky — Uchechukwu Onyedikam following an implosion — Christina Chin 6 cultural dance spin to the rhythm of the djembe — Uchechukwu Onyedikam the traditional ritual begins — Christina Chin 5 appeasing the incensed goddess — Christina Chin she bends towards the divine the arc of Ọ̀ṣun rite of passage — Uchechukwu Onyedikam 4 perceiving landslides and floods — Christina Chin the pigeons have flown away soaring in the rising sun nature's freeway — Uchechukwu Onyedikam 3 a winner on the rostrum… — Christina Chin light of her eyes swirling around his macho body with thrust in her heart — Uchechukwu Onyedikam 2 a record shortest day as earth spins faster — Christina Chin laying trust on the universe i bid farewell to the passing trials — Uchechukwu Onyedikam 1 where's she but a dream? the beauty as well a fabled city — Uchechukwu Onyedikam emerges and falls in the river tigris — Christina Chin
Poetry from Akinmade Zeal
FATHER AND SON by Akinnmade Abayomi Zeal HE traipses in with a souring countenance and glinting eyes Having survived jeers and taunts of the wealth drunk mates He nurses the bruises of his bullied legs 'Life has gone askew', he bawled at himself. 'The world has wrenched away from its roost and doused. While I was more child than now, the world finds peace with me We used to smoke our candies and lollipops We were fraternal with different twain. We bathe in dust side by side with love And hatred finds its place beneath the soles of our boots .' He comes away from his eavesdropping To school the grudged hapless son : 'Peace! Be still! Steel yourself from grim I plea I have found a remedy to your woes. At Better Days College! You will no longer bandy with your betters! There you will be gorged with love and clemency.' Numbed and stupefied he looks. ' Why Better Days?' I have learnt to love here!' 'I had known that you might know no peace there I had known that you flock there with your betters, People of higher race and grace People of luck with less love for your people People whose colour of their eyes makes them betters People whose saves are bloated! I only took a risk! I knew you will find no love but lost. I knew your meager twain will wane you.' 'But why Daddy?' Why should all this be in being?' 'The world has tilted scrupulously I tell you You cannot know even full peace at Better Days College. Not anywhere in the world. Peace cannot romance with men as beast as they are! Unlikely my Boy! Unsusceptible! Less the day these classes are crushed and made obsolete, Less these colours of our skins are mere flesh When men eschew their source and swim into one another, Less that our worths make us not any better than our peers.' I affirm : 'Peace for men will be hatred!'
Poetry from Preacher Allgood
grind the Saginaw and feather the six it’s a trip to the urologist in your ‘69 Chevy Blazer a wreck that needs a lot of money thrown at it money you don’t have the light turns green you jiggle the three-on-the-tree into first ease out on the clutch and pray it will catch there was a time when this heap was new there was a time when her paint glistened there was a time you were proud to drive her you grind that ten spline Saginaw into second feather the worn out inline six until it smokes and squeals and smokes some more at seventy they’re stripping your dignity away sticking fingers and probes up your ass asking if you know what year it is asking you if you get enough to eat You fiddle the shifter into third And check the speedometer even though it broke years ago another half a mile to go on this two-lane and then you merge onto the big road where the heavy traffic moves fast because everybody thinks they can catch up to some unassailable self-worth
Poetry from Christina Chin and Matthew Defibaugh
lying on the beach towels sunburnt nudes in a vintage Playboy Christina Chin / M. R. Defibaugh cresting waves she tells him how rough she likes it doing a cartwheel before the surf M. R. Defibaugh / Christina Chin he fans her with the wine menu after a swim and a cold shower still feeling hot M. R. Defibaugh / Christina Chin pretty bobbies in an updo hairstyle removing pins the night falls down to her waist Christina Chin / M. R. Defibaugh picotee edge white amaryllis on her lacy lingerie untying the ribbons with his teeth Christina Chin / M. R. Defibaugh
Poetry from Shaurya Pathania
Love affair with cigarettes You've kissed my lips, but why didn't you feel me? You've touched my fingers, but why didn't you hold me? Am I not worth you, Can't you set me free? You lighten yourself among others, the ones whom I loved, the ones whom I've been loved by, But I've always been left behind, Will I ever call you mine? I stand helplessly, to see you tasting people in front of my eyes, But I stand hopefully someday I will not be dull and you'll be my prize. Many say, you're a menace, yet I'm ready to kiss and caress, Never mind, I'll see you again soon, kissing my loved and dear ones, I'll be sadly happy to see you healing their wounds and burns. Woken Walks And the roads seem alone in the naive night, do they despise being lonely, or do they enjoy this presence of them only, I've tried to know, I walk down roads, but they don't sense my presence, and I shout at them for my relevance, still, they hide under the pretence of ignorance, I guess I disrupt their peace in the dreary dark, and somewhere they answer, they don't like getting marked, emptiness is what they crave but why am I here, do I want the same? Sniffs Smell, odour, aroma and fragrance Always chase the good kinds, at any stance, at any chance, good or bad, who defines? Where are my boxers, in my house, I shout Lie they under the table, worn out and torn out I pick them up put them under my nose Call me gross But this is what I do alone behind the doors closed. Why do I do this, I don't have any reason, probably, the odour and aroma makes me feel human. Is it bizarre or do you practice it too? find those boxers in the cart, don't think much, just do feel them, sniff them wear them and dance, witness the smells transgress into a fragrance. Saturday Saturdays are dreadful I stay entirely in the cubicle, stare at the heap of clothes, the heap so weak, that it couldn't stand for a single week, I see dirt on the fabric and the shirt hopefully stares at me, waiting to hold and to be held but I won't, and scarcely she will feel my scars on my shoulders, belly chest, back and arms, Today I am just naked lying down on the floor, I talk, I sing, I scream, I cry, It's raining but I feel dry, and my throat is sore, I stroke and scratch my wall and fit the paint in my nails, I fight my urges and deeply inhale, I'm glad I succeed or I'm sad I succeed, I don't want to know, All I wish is this day to move, I'll put clothes on my body and wear fancy shoes, I will run away astray without feeling weary, I need a different day, Saturdays are dreary. Self-portrait Mirror's a window, inside we see, trying to be real and free irresponsibly!
Poetry from J.D. Nelson
the violets snort without me
tele
comic
scram
bled
which shannon?
a wintry eye
& high beams
you’ve been
silent
skull popcorn
friends help
wilma!
a ladder into the television
I miss the winchell’s
& a normal king’s dinner
wallet toe$
a numbered eye
a sporty nectarine
a serious mammal
a friend of the sun
J. D. Nelson (b. 1971) experiments with words in his subterranean laboratory. His poetry has appeared in many small press publications, worldwide, since 2002. He is the author of several collections of poetry, including Cinderella City (The Red Ceilings Press, 2012). Nelson’s poem, “to mask a little bird” was nominated for Best of the Net in 2021. Visit http://MadVerse.com for more information and links to his published work. His haiku blog is at http://JDNelson.net. Nelson lives in Colorado, USA.