Friday, 3 July 2026

Five Tan-Renga Poems by Uchechukwu Onyedikam & Christina Chin

 






5 Tan-Renga Poems


Uchechukwu Onyedikam (italic)
Christina Chin (plain)



deep afrobeat 

from the nextdoor 

open and close


a shared wall thins

to a drumskin





the devotees’ worship 

with an alignment  

beaded blue


each blue sphere 

a captive storm





the dance

of Agbogho Mmuo

raising earth


the clay itself 

to dust





village vigilance 

what goes around 

Èṣù


crossroads

the messenger smiles





after the downpour 

in large numbers 

akụ


the soil’s green  

counts in yams





Christina Chin is a painter and haiku poet from Malaysia. She is a four-time recipient of top 100 in the mDAC Summit Contests, exhibited at the Palo Alto Art Center, California. 1st prize winner of the 34th Annual Cherry Blossom Sakura Festival 2020 Haiku Contest. 1st prize winner in the 8th Setouchi Matsuyama 2019 Photohaiku Contest. She has been published in numerous journals, multilingual journals, and anthologies, including Japan's prestigious monthly Haikukai Magazine.


Uchechukwu Onyedikam is a Nigerian creative artist based in Lagos, Nigeria.  His poems have appeared in Amsterdam Quarterly, Brittle Paper, Poetic Africa, Hood Communists, The Hooghly Review, and in print anthologies.  Christina Chin and he have co-published Pouring Light on the Hills (2022)


Five Poems by Royal Rhodes

 






THE WATCHING HILLS


a body, still fairly young, on a blanket,
motionless under the mobile stars,
as the chill in stalks of coarse grass,
trout lily, and jewelweed
settles on hemlocks mantling these hills
near ledge shelters and open caves.

We have been conditioned by horror films
to panic at bodies sprawled on the ground,
and the documentary photos displayed
of a battle-zone field station
before the casualties were removed
to base camp for quick autopsies,
the thoracic Y's, sliced and sewn,
from shoulder blades to pubic bone,
and the body bags hosed down.
Or the crime stories on cable stations
showing the morgue, like a food locker,
its dead bloated from floating days
in a murky, junk-congested lake,
with a penis shrunk to a mushroom cap
and furrows lining cheeks and thighs.
And liberal viewers can't look away.

The body, no longer heroic and lovely,
even when wounded, as once in art,
has buried the feeling that springs from grief,
a quick blossom that wilts to grief.
Once a little less than the angels,
it returns to the soil, but only the soil,
no longer the hostage against surrender,
like the raft of corpses, lashed as planks --
the deadly remains of a royal flagship
steered by grinning cannibals --
that could fire the passion of revolution.

But this is macabre, romantic drama.
See, the body we watched is moving,
attaching itself to a sleeping partner,
as we step back in the watching hills.




 A Painted Field in Ohio

 A local artist used strokes
 of color across a canvas,
 in an image to fix in place
 the landscape and sky,
 looking "East of Gambier",
 as a way to help to preserve
 the picture in our minds,
 the one that will never
 be seen by anyone else.
 Let us foresee an airy tide
 of crows, like black stars, yawl
 in the updraft over trees,
 tacking and turning at angles
 into and out of hidden winds
 and over the flat water,
 reflecting the sky ascending,
 in broad layers of clouds,
 shadowing the ready fields.
 And whatever things we see
 start to become objects
 bearing light, reaching
 out to the ridges of dark air
 clotting around cloud scrolls..
 Streaks of sun-lines,
 condensed, have picked out
 the rutted, tumbling lanes
 of mud, bricking the roadways
 through the low line of hills
 Just a few miles north
 where the glaciers moved
 and then retreated, tract by tract,
 subsequent floods brooded
 over upturned stone basins,
 and then receded in time.
 The last traces of moisture
 ascended into the looming clouds.
 And here the other living things,
 plants and small spores,
 rose and sank, over and over,
 leaving deposits like a script
 we still attempt to decipher.
 And now the painter's hand
gives us ample clues about
that long and wordless message.



DREAMS MAY COME

There is no real escape in sleep
as the doors close on the dayworld
and the house, its corridors of rooms,
and the yard outside grow awake.
Waiting outside on this quiet street
between the trimmed-hedge enclosures
on each stifling summer night
were eyes, staring like radiant stars.
In bed in the unfinished atic
I followed an interlocking maze,
and moved slowly, much too slowly,
from soldiers and strangers sent to hurt,
or missed a train or ship by seconds,
or felt trapped in a narrowing tunnel.
My conversations with the dead,
familiar as when they lived with us,
began and stopped, as we changed places.
I was departed, while they still lived.
Mostly I lay still, expecting
something to happen, to see a face
fill the open, inviting window.
And one, long, endless night
a gruesome monster glared back,
its whole body convulsed in horror
at what it saw alive in my room.




HOPE

It began long before the present,
before the documentaries
and repetitive legislative reports.

When bison were shot in their wallows,
when artists lamented the carrier pigeons,
or the final Dodo died alone.

Before rare and common species
in a vast Trimalchio's feast
were killed for feathers, hides, or horn.

The apocalyptic talk today
of global change by fire or ice
has kicked around and around for aeons.

The skillfully hidden number of deaths
we store in print-outs, in statistics,
dull us looking backwards or ahead.

The Darwinian struggle to crown a victor
failed. And there is no forgiveness,
as each thread is pulled from the web.

The after-effects of our suicide
attempts have reached a sum
that dealt this hand: Aces and Eights.

Termites, with billions of eggs, will live
until the cremated remains of forests
cover their cast-off wings with ash.

And the god of reverse creation
will withdraw the roiling oceans of fish,
the creatures on land, and all birds,

after the trace of humans is gone
and the waterless planet cracks
from air condensed with colorful poisons.

And the sun and the moon are no more,
and the stars in domino-effect
sputter once and cease to shine.

And light collapses into itself,
the size of a pin and then vanishes;
and words choke in this god's mouth.



A PRISONER OF HOPE

I strangely find myself
a prisoner of hope, not
on a seven-storey mountain
but in the once familiar
village where I circle
in the ways I once had known.

Silence now is taken as
infinite in license and protection,
leaving rescue in some
other willing hands.

Avoid the crime of witness
of the occupying forces
that threaten an investigation
where I may now become the
voice of my own prosecution.

Should each onlooker,
safely distanced,
report themselves to
the authorities in masks
as co-conspirators
with those they will arrest?

The land that once had meant
escape became the country
many wanted to escape from,
a circuitous exchange we made
in anguishing itineraries.

We claim we did not see the
shift to panic after plain denial,
as we became the foreigners
within our very midst.

Poetry must now be read
as if a transit visa,
aiding us across some border,
if any safe one still exists,
that would, at least, be open
to our smuggled hope.

History, we know, repeats
itself. But always worse
in all the bloody commerce
of failure to escape.

Throngs I see upon a
lonesome road
carry only
shadows of their
inner lives to find
an earthly paradise
now gone.






Royal Rhodes taught classes in global religions for almost forty years. He has always had a love for poetry in various forms and languages. His interests have also been shaped by the study of ritual in ancient cultures. He lives in a small village that is close to a nature conservancy and green cemetery.

Thursday, 2 July 2026

Three Poems by Lynn White

 







Hattie’s Tea Party


“I find her quite intimidating, actually,”

said Dormouse sleepily,

“not the sweet little girl I expected

and I really hope Hattie 

doesn’t invite her

I don’t think she would

quite fit in.”


“Who the cares if she fits in or not,”

replied Rabbit firmly.

“In a mad world no one knows their place.

Hattie will be asking her questions

and he knows the importance of madness,

so if she can’t answer madly,

then she’ll have no place.”


But it was they who had no place,

they who were transformed,

consumed 

in the madness

so only the whiskers and ears 

of their old selves were left,

while Alice danced her way in, 

invited or not,

and sat in the spotlight

like a star.


And it was Hattie who had to leave.

Their cups were empty.

He had forgotten the tea.





The Old Hall


It was more Wuthering Heights than gingerbread house.

And the old woman living there alone

was no more a witch

than the raindrops

hanging

from the trees

were really diamonds.


We knew that.

Even though 

she said that they were.

And she gave us drinks candy bars.

Surely no witch would be so kind

to children who were trespassers

and teenagers looking to party.


We didn’t see the ghosts, 

not then.


But later 

we watched them dig up the garden

and under the drifts of snow

we smelled the flesh

and saw the bones

of past trespassers and party-goers. 


And afterwards,

nature reclaimed it’s space

so the hall stands empty

and no one else remembers 

an old woman

still

only

the raindrops remain

frozen in winter,

frozen in time

hard 

as diamonds

soft 

as tears.

Still

we don’t know

why.



First published in Belladonna’s Garden, Winter 2025





After The Party


It was a good party.

“you’ll be seeing pink elephants tonight”

they laughed.

I didn’t believe them

I thought the elephants would  be blue,

a better colour for me.

But it was me that was blue.

The elephant I was riding

was just 

elephant coloured.

It was a very good party.


First published in The Daily Drunk, April 2020










Lynn White lives in north Wales. Her work is influenced by issues of social justice and events, places and people she has known or imagined. She is especially interested in exploring the boundaries of dream, fantasy and reality. She has been nominated for Pushcarts, Best of the Net and a Rhysling Award.

 

https://lynnwhitepoetry.blogspot.com and https://www.facebook.com/Lynn-White-Poetry-1603675983213077/





Five Tan-Renga Poems by Uchechukwu Onyedikam & Christina Chin

  5 Tan-Renga Poems Uchechukwu Onyedikam (italic) Christina Chin (plain) deep afrobeat  from the nextdoor  open and close a shared wall thin...