Wednesday, 29 April 2026

One Poem, Two Tanka & Two Haiku by Sherri J Moye-Dombrosky

 






Projection

 

projected life expectancy

I have not asked

dread accompanies knowledge

I want to spend our time together

loving and enjoying each moment

not dreading how much time we have left

we have prepared for the goodbye

we did that early

now we are determined to enjoy

the time we have as much as possible

as much as possible until the confusion

and darkness covers his mind and then

I will love him still and

be the stranger who

kisses him goodnight each day 

 

 

Tanka

 

wrapped safe

within his scented arms

how sweet

the fall from heaven

to petal-covered earth 

 

 

in the maw

of insatiable love

temptation

enfolds my heart

with tormenting fire

 

 

 

 

Haiku

 

first prints in the snow

delicate as lace

kitten’s winter ballet 

 

 

tsunami dragon rises

from the sea curling

through the city


 


 


Sherri J Moye-Dombrosky - A retired English teacher who loves travel, animals, reading, and poetry, SJ has two grown sons and lives in South Carolina (United States) with her encouraging husband, their five amazing cats, and a demanding feral colony of twenty cats. SJ grew up on a farm and enjoys integrating childhood experiences and the interaction between nature and humanity into her poetry. Her Master’s degree is in British literature, and she continues taking poetry workshops and meeting with other poets, appreciating the opportunity to learn and improve her writing. SJ loves writing haiku, tanka, and free verse poetry, and several of her poems have been accepted in several web,magazine, and book publications such as The Haiku Shack Magazine, The Writer Monk, Zest of the Lemon, Ribbons, Laurels, Haiku in Action, Haiku Universe, Asahi Haikuist Network, South Carolina Bard Anthology, Stars, Leaf Haiku Journal, Jackdaw Journal, Under the Basho, and The Haiku Society of America Anthology.

Three Poems by Abigail George

 






What is this weakness inside of me?


 

The road is a miracle

It’s dark

 

I can’t seem to find my way

The older men are nice

 

The men who are

As old as my father

 

Have intellectual discussions with me

 

The women ignore me

Their laughter tastes like mustard

 

That’s all.

Decay.

 

That’s all

that’s left of me.

 

I wait

for the mincemeat

 

to defrost

on the countertop

 

growing older

colder, more afraid.

 

 


 

A time of questioning


 

I read my future

Counting my past’s sorrows

 

Anxiety’s pre-history

Mad with erosion in my soul

 

I think I understand 

your shy tenderness now

 

The beast 

and roots and the powers

 

Of wilderness in you

Poetry is experience

 

Vertigo taught me that.



 

 

Captive


 

There is nothing to eat

But this cage, but this day

But this depressing vessel of light,

This tragic light

But even this light

Tastes like a promotion

When it rains.

Yes, when it rains

 

There is nothing but this sea

but this cell

But this dirt, but this clay

 

My dusty feet in these sandals

As I care for a child

That is not my own.




By Abigail George

Five Poems by Adonis Alegre







all of the people will go to sleep

 

i’m afraid some silence is just a war having it’s nap,

that at any time of our lives,

there will be a madman running across the street

with a burning head

and sickness on his bread,

that his mind is so free it normalizes intrusivity,

where peace becomes his nemesis

where vengeance becomes his pride,

and they would name him no name after being exiled

and would soon return with fire

as it warms his neck like a frivolous fruit,

and wine, wine all the way to his redemption

and on that same night, all of the people will go to sleep.

 

 

dear octobers

 

dear octobers: home is a comfort that is dead,

that our dream house

is now a house of graveyard and betrayals,

where gold is a rustling place,

where shiny people is fading and involved,

but remember that

only memories are ghosts to me.

 

dear octobers: pale is a sky that is breathing.

gentle rain of the glitter-groves

and furry-smokes on trees and farms,

these are only evergreen to me.

i am sure i am not dead when you are gone. 

 

 

pain tickles the brain, prickles the heart

 

there were raining dead flowers to my ceiling, to my feeling,

another hiss of a bad thing, this freckled speck, this head.

it has never feared a nameless thing.

 

how exaggerated my thinking was,

how it speaks unstoppably cruel in a clueless crowd.

 

overthinking is partaking of absences.

this bulging who forgets the lines and silent practice,

among prices and spits, expectations are expectations,

nothing new, nothing less.

 

a favor of fever, you do me no good.

a labor of lies, you do me no good.

 

it was terror, dissecting lunacies and the lunatics.

pain tickles the brain, prickles the heart.

and whenever you burn a child weeping fire,

it will laugh like an old folk, dust off villagers like a gold cloak.

 

you sing with your pain as it no longer lingers

behind the unfortunate and ridicule filaments.

oh, dry hinge of a

butterfly wing on your left string, heartless fling!

 

to the forest and fields i run by and passes by,

wearing a white shirt and loose jeans,

with stitched blooms on the side, like wild birches,

necklaces not much, bracelets enough pearls,

i still remember—i am the gentleness of men,

 

the right taste of compassion, not the take-it-all fool

or rough rampants i swirl.

oh, their bitterness blinded me not! 

 

 

i bathed myself with wine.

 

the floret boy i know has long been frozen from his fear.

he even hides his flowers over his insecurity to the sun.

 

someone placed a cicada calling at the back of his head,

he had gotten back to his dead, found the nearest pen.

 

it was not branches that grew up on his arms but roots:

you may be stranded in your mind that wanders where.

 

i am a young adult now: full of possibilities and reasons to

just sleep on the bed & be safe from the teeth of others.

 

or now what, to jump to certain things i cannot bounce

back but let us see, as i scratch my eyes, relevance to

 

the little golds that glittered my eyebrows and upper cheek,

i couldn't handle anything more as it reached my sore.

 

and there is a shadow that spreads in my arm, an eclipse to

the real world where all of my dreams will go to sleep.

           

“i bathed myself with wine; society here i come.” i cried.

i crawled. i read the beads of this old trace to the good.

 

who am i in society? where do i belong? what can i do?

i am free and nobody, or i am here stuck in the wrath

 

of my roots. the floret boy began to flourish his dead.

i am none and everything. i am morrie and bennetti.

 

i am ready for the great doom: the spread of my petals.

i have to face reality no matter how dark it is or bright.

 

it was the great rain of the century, the breakdowns of

my generation, the anxiety that birched into burning.

 

my childhood ends here; my teenage too. the end, but

not for the rejected and endless trying. i will get hired. 

 

 

moth boy

 

the moth boy and his august poem is the last hope

that flared into thrifty thresholds:

bereaved by utterly-kind peculiarity,

his mind was a grit trickster,

like a calloused-born master, distorting fallacy fires,

tarnished with lies—he surmised! he despised!

 

to defeat the old, crooked clock of it all,

he must be born out of some pockets.

he may lose his arm, his wit,

his wonder, his twin-brother,

he may never come back the way

he changed his plans, but he will return,

the good name of that high house

with a mouse in a green crown & town-aroma.

 

he have been in an internal mayhem.

the audacity of his new anxiety

made every thing a sharp human thing.

he have been pressed by some people

who would find his deathly buttons;

cross-legged-sharp, he clipped his wings away

from the senseless & repetitive barks of his mind.

and he remembered, he must set forth birds

like tucked-scales onto the spirit of his good wills

 

and fly like a paper-soldier, his good moral character,

a mind of his own undertone,

a heart of his own burning,

a re-defined skill, sailed by the captain of fear—

now bravest of them all.

“i would like to wash my dirty hands

with bottles of drunk perfumes,”

said the other moths to the moth boy,

“and i would study grammar like a mad mathematician,

eat dry cereals like chips.”

 

but the moth boy is just a filipino boy

who combs his mother tongue in english streaks of poetry,

whose father is an ilocano who lives far by the sea,

whose mother is a kapampangan who is a good housewife,

whose japanese eyes are his grandfather’s, &

whose heart was passed down by his late grandmother.

 

lastly, in the spread of his winged arms (by sunrise)

lies the death of his melancholy-friends.

the spread of that bonafide moth finds him

the lightest key to carry.

the moth boy and his august poem

has come to an end with abundance in a fireplace,

behaved by utterly grace, its temple, its face. 

 






Adonis Alegre is a filipino poet from bacnotan, la union. he took his bachelor’s degree in ab english at don mariano marcos memorial state university, philippines. you can read his poems in panitikan ph, levitate magazine, redamancy magazine, everscribe magazine, querencia press, livina press, bakunawa press, among others.

One Poem, Two Tanka & Two Haiku by Sherri J Moye-Dombrosky

  Projection   projected life expectancy I have not asked dread accompanies knowledge I want to spend our time together loving and enjoying ...