Monday, 4 May 2026

Five Short Poems by Richard Polley

 







car

full tank
nowhere to go


man


with a lead
no dog



DVDs


piled high
no player



milk


first cuppa
gone off



socks


washed
one missing






Richard Polley  is a UK-based writer who focuses on short, minimalist poetry drawn from everyday observations. His work explores absence, routine, and quiet moments through simple, image-driven language.

Five Poems by A.M. Hayden

 






Womb Fist

for Sinead O’Connor

 

if you haven’t heard

the hushed vanishing

of a wrecked

            protest angel,

            then tread softly

to this arrow.         

Valley your ears

in prostration,

            listen to her

Danny Boy in acapella,

a shadow train

            that harmonizes                                  

            your blood vessels,        

body into a tuning fork

your heart an estuary,

an Eire meadow

            set on fire

                        set free

 

                                                                        

All’s Fair in Love and Poetry

A Sestina for Taylor Swift



A troubadour with a typewriter soul, patient poet,

gams a-glitter, charred cat-eyed tinderbox burns

douchebags’ love letters into falcon folklore.

She seizes every comet’s train of treason, fearless

to rhyme, freeclimb sexism’s summit, reclaim era,

willow quill, ink slipped, writing her manuscript.



Arranges singed edged montages of manuscripts,

Joan tells it slant, never recant, kitten kismet poet,

blow your shimmer kisses in our dreamscape era.

Pandora’s Box no boy will open, and it burns

to say, not even him, phoenix muses keen in fearless

catharsis, kissing ash clouds into lip lined folklore.



Pollocked keys and diaries, jersey shore folklore

turned into wet troubadour’s maroon manuscript.

Stolen memoirs, her version, her vision, fearless

to break out of cages, go in grace, roasted poet.

Beneath betrayal, you find matches to burn,

dirty guillotines slam necks, restricted humanity era



bedazzled bow and sword, Shakti of Arc era

guard up, except in notebooks of Freya folklore

called “American whore” in cat-led chariot, a burn,

nowhere as clever as the Tain Celtic manuscript.

Sorcerers have red lips and everyone knows poets

are dangerous, word spells cast on men, fearless



rhyme against treason, this Chairman is fearless

slays twang, pop, rock, synth, cottage core eras

exes in exile send island postcards for poets

“wish you were here,” pocketful of karma folklore

tortures ricochet into the muses’ manuscript.

Love bombs have no returns, regret’s haze burns.





Melancholy maze of lip scars and midnight burns,

knows the foul scent of a smoking gun, so fearless.

In Rhyme We Trust, just write the manuscripts.

Her jams lift the tops of our heads, Dickinson era.

Showgirls know how to set a scene, In Folklore

We Trust, here kitty, kitty, key is in the treat, poet



Mouths become weapons in our forging era,

a fearless definition of truth and folklore.

Manuscripts are true stories, Sincerely, the Poet.



Hill Woman

A Pantoum for PJ Harvey

 

Dark room revenge reverie uses winter’s

fingertips to reach the keys, so help me Jesus.

            Puff sleeves doused in gasoline; these          

            cunning threads escape loosely sewn seams.

She mirrors a dangerous daughter, young

dish, white chalk in water.

            Sheela na gig is ravenous, Magdalene’s big  

            dick energy guts the fish.

 

Puff sleeves doused in gasoline; these cunning

threads escape loosely sewn seams.

            Seaweed wraps our cute cunts, spitting out   

            Persephone’s pomegranate seeds.

Sheela na gig is ravenous, Magdalene’s big

dick energy guts the fish.

            Hemless sculpture silhouette, eye shadow    

            puppets cavort in harpie catsuits.

 

Seaweed wraps our cute cunts, spitting out

Persephone’s pomegranate seeds.

            She mirrors a dangerous         daughter, young         

            dish, white chalk in water.

Hemless sculpture silhouette, eye shadow

puppets cavort in harpie catsuits.

            Dark room revenge reverie uses winter’s      

            fingertips to reach the keys, so help me Jesus.

 


Tuesday

for Billie Holiday

 

One Wednesday afternoon

after high school let out,

a thin-haired boy introduced me

to samosas, mango lassis, and Billie Holiday

all in the same hour.

 

Her moonlit music scooped me, spooned me

her velvet voice licking my white kitten ears.

The monotone boy may have hoped

for some exchange, but now only mango

on my tongue, and Billie’s world, existed.

 

I wouldn’t understand Strange Fruit

until years later, when magnolia trees

and southern breezes changed for me.

Her smoking, joking, poking,

on government lists, wouldn’t put up

 

with nobody’s shit and when she opened

her mouth - anyone could see the universe

if they wanted to, hear its sound in an arcane

            infinite river of crinkling record static.


 

How to Become a Bad-Ass Witch

for Stevie Nicks

 

1.     build a nest of dried moss and crystal wands

2.     gather lyrics and sage in fingerless gloves

3.     hover near huts of synchronous moonlight

4.     stir words into gold dusted wonders

5.     whisper secrets in a wrought iron cauldron

6.     consecrate everything with a tambourine

7.     spin counterclockwise until you dervish

8.     stretch your shawl wide like hawk’s wings

9.     ignite change, make it holy by rooting deep

10.  dig down in the toothy forest to firmament

11.  guide us weary travelers with a witch ship

12.  navigate misogyny sea, decks waterlogged

13.  shield us from darkness of ego and power

14.  discern, as a true sorcerer, power in balance

15.  draw salt circles of protection

16.  climb mountains in black lace pointy boots

17.  seek solace in witchy little cabin of mischief

18.  machete sadness swamps, weeping wetlands

19.  shapeshift into red-winged blackbirds

20.  “find your coven,” lay out the tarot cards

21.  illuminate innate truths of Empress and Star

22.  hold in wombs our molecular motherhood

23.  cast spells with breast and bone,

24.  burn beeswax candles, regency fan the flame

25.  learn to fight, moon in Scorpio or Sagittarius

26.  get mad, make a snack, grab a torch  

27.  refuse to stand down, aside, or back

28.  answer questions in riddles, or more questions

29.  landslide into sword’s reflection

30.  refuse to be silenced, bounded, or restrained

31.  refuse to use the lens liars look through

32.  avoid trials where they press you with stones

33.  trust your instincts when they try to hang you

34.  compost the broken system into crumble dirt

35.  plant placentas, grow sweet candied gardens

36.  take fay flight above fur, wings, rocks, brooms

37.  peer into valleys, look out over mountains

38.  draw wombs on our foreheads in ash

39.  feel a little bit Misty from time to time

40.  bend fortune’s final hour into a surprise party

41.  save your mind from chutes and shadows  

42.  remind us once again all reasons not to

43.  fill our pockets with keys and rocks, not Woolf

44.  walk into rage’s river, sanity under locks

45.  forgive every version of yourself,

                                                            especially that one







A.M. Hayden served as Poet Laureate for Sinclair College from 2021-2025 and is a Tenured Professor of Humanities, Philosophy, and World Religions, receiving the League for Innovation Teaching Excellence Award (2020) and the Distinguished Faculty Scholars Award (2024). Amanda has two full length poetry collections (American Saunter: Poems of the U.S. and Old World Wings: Poems of Europe) and one chapbook (How to Tie Tobacco), published by FlowerSong Press and Wild Ink Publishing. Twice nominated for the Pushcart Prize and a River Heron Editors' Choice Winner, she lives on a windy farm with her family and many rescues including a blind, three-legged dog named Vinny Valentine and a three-legged goat named Old Man Jenkins.

Five Poems by Geoffrey Godbey







DRUMMER

 

I was always a drummer.

 

Five year old with a toy drum.

The electricity even then

in my hands and heart.

 

Restlessness finding its measure.

Something to pour itself into

like chopping your life

Into 4/4

Or making it skip

like a stone in 9/8.

 

Pencil beating the desk

just to get the poison out.

 

Hands bringing alive the

bottom of the waste can.

 

Zildjian cymbal ride

giving credence to

any little melody.

 

High pop of the mama bongo

saying the room is

already dancing.

 

Not a musician with

their beauty and discontent.

A drummer finds what is there.

No ending but just release

to give notice to the silence

that hey we won’t take that.

 

 

GRIEF

 

She arrives

a little while

after the death

and sits across

from me saying

I am the one

who must do this.

The others have left,

walking toward

the hills.

 

Her cloth bag

is emptied

on the carpet.

Light

inhales itself.

Darkness comes

without effort.

 

You must stay

with me.

You must learn

from me.

 

Your grief is

sunglasses

on a blind child.

 

Carry what you learn,

deep wound of

understanding,

farther than

the blue beyond.

Farther than

the yellow sun

can find its way.

 

 

LIFE OF DOORS

 

I live my life of doors

within an amber inch of sleep

the thin light gains and loses

on my green rug like a wave.

I meet myself coming and going

only my privacy's saved.

 

I'd beat it down if words I chose

could hold the things

I'd have them keep.

I live my life of doors

within an amber inch of sleep.

 

 

SMALL PIECES

 

Give me the wisdom

of a flightless bird

but let me fly

in my dreams.

 

Take me to the place

the music started.

 

Teach me to talk

the orange language

of the pumpkin

so it can reveal

how it came back to life

from a dry seed.

 

Let me love

without purpose.

 

May the wind

have its wish

to find somewhere

to stay

and the trees

have their wish

to travel.

 

May I repeat myself

(repeat myself)

only when saying

what drives my mind

above the speed limit.

 

Let the riddle

remain unanswered,

as we dance

to the question.


 

SO MANY TIMES

 

So many times

I have been a bell

that cannot hear itself.

 

Vibrating from the sound

which disappears

over the ridge

like an announcement

to what needs it.

 

Touching the eager ear,

the heart’s half

which is broken

from chances not taken.

 

The long road forward

and the longer road back

to when we were content

just to see the sky

dancing in boundless wonder.

 

And the deep sleep

when there was darkness

so absolute

the leaving light

kissed us goodnight.






Geoffrey Godbey has published four books of poetry, most recently Lean Toward the Light by Finishing Line Press in 2024. His work has appeared in over 50 outlets including The Nation and The World and I. His poetry has also appeared in several high school textbooks. He was a Festival Poet for the Central PA. Festival of the Arts. U.S. Poet Laureate Donald Hall praised his work and tried to get him a major publisher.

 

  

Four Poems by Donna Dallas

 






Beautiful Things are Born from the Dark


Lovers entwined 

bats flutter

mesmerized by night moths 

hoot of a barn owl 

at the moon man

the waves crest hypnotically 

along the bay

 

Deep under the dark 

beautiful things are born 

the coyotes on their hunt

their blonded fur

and green eyes 

glow under the moonlight 

the trees speak 

through their splintered branches 

create a frame 

around the dark

of beautiful night

 


Malfunction


I didn’t fight 

nor scream

accepted your burdens 

so heavy and absurd

 

I became you 

as you entered me 

and you became death 

rotting me from the inside 

 

I can scream now

no one exists on this earth 

to want 

to hear it


 

Unremarkable Days


These breaking waves 

call to me

as time spills in

to this incredible Pacific - or is it that time spills out 

into endlessness??

 

There’s a man fishing along the shore 

he’s been at it all day

caught nothing but huge clumps of seaweed 

he seems calm, endless too

it’s all a funnel - the sea, the inertia of the catch 

the realization it may not be what you ever expected

 

Passersby walk the beach 

stare up at this balcony 

yes I’m here on it — don’t judge 

you don’t know my wars 

I envy the fisherman 

the seduction of his wait

there isn’t any torture or impatience

simply a quiet knowing that a fish 

will eventually bite 

things do turn - those peaks and valleys 

 

Only yesterday 

my husband mentioned he had so many photos 

in his iPhone…..thousands 

what will happen to them when we die?

will they be uploaded to some motherboard 

of dead people pics

and remain on that cloud eternally 

does it really matter?

 

Yes Mr. Fisherman you finally caught one!

no pics

only I watched

from my balcony 

basking in your happiness


 

Dear Ma


Here I sit 

you’re dust 

and I’ve just begun to whither 

 

so now I know

everything you said

thirty something years ago

has come to be

back then I shut all

your witchy predictions 

down 

 

You’d wait up 

hear me wobble in 

higher each night

burning up wild 

in some planet of my little universe 

that I sustained until your death 

 

I created a love song for us 

the lyrics scrawled across the stars

because we know 

you’re there 

on a throne 

incredibly queened 

at last 

 

Others would say 

you’re at the right hand of Satan 

those others also dead now

they didn’t know

all that I do

about your perils

and the burying of your secrets  

to protect some future 

family jewels 

 

All dust now and I’ve never told - some vows kept past death 

 

I’m still here 

only you - and whichever side of the forces you landed on - know why 

 

Bent as bent could ever be

broken and drying brittle 

I close in…maybe

 

And you smile

across the night sky 

if it’s all happening together at one time 

it was never truly so bad 

was it now?






Donna Dallas has appeared in a plethora of journals, most recently Beatnik Cowboy, Horror Sleaze Trash and Fevers of the Mind.  She is the author of Death Sisters, her legacy novel, published by Alien Buddha Press. Her first chapbook, Smoke and Mirrors, launched in 2022 with New York Quarterly. Her second chapbook, Megalodon, launched in 2023 with The Opiate. Donna has served on the editorial team of Red Fez and NYQ.

 


Five Short Poems by Richard Polley

  car full tank nowhere to go man with a lead no dog DVDs piled high no player milk first cuppa gone off socks washed one missing Richard Po...