Sunday, 12 April 2026

Four Poems by Jackie Chou







Leaves


Today
when I take my usual walk
and see the trees 
stripping naked

I will admit 
that you have left me
to be in the wind 
like the leaves
tumbling on the streets 

Everywhere you go
you are followed 
by a procession 

I am not one of you
but a different species 
many-angled
like a maple leaf
in your world
of pretty red hearts



Nothingness in November
 

Today I will write a poem 
that is uninspired 
From no loaded heart 
shall the words be fired

No terracotta scene 
will the verses describe 
Black ink on paper
is all I shall scribe

If I mention the trees
goldening in autumn
I would want to elaborate 
on the whole arboretum 

So I jot down these lines
for the sake of writing 
in a world that's obsessed 
with thing after thing



Discarded Packaging of Earbuds at the Bus Stop


The parts of the packaging 
have gone to the wind

the plastic tray
the white box torn open

No delicate fingernails
dug at the clear tape 
to peel it off

as if its proprietor 
was so desperate 
to listen to something

a song, a video
that they couldn't care less
about the earbuds’ casing

perhaps to drown out 
the cacophony of noises 
inside the bus

the languages spoken
if only for a ride
or maybe a lifetime



The Beauty


She walks in beauty*
though she's nothing 
like the night

Her eyes don't twinkle like stars
but glint like earthly flint

Her hair is more like straw
than the silken curtains
of the sky

Her skin 
is no smooth ivory 
of the moon

When she speaks 
her words 
are lackluster 

Her voice sounds 
more like a raven's croak
than heaven's lullaby 

She walks in beauty
under the lamplight 
of a lover's room

His gaze turns her into 
a runway model

*a line from Lord Byron's poem "She Walks in Beauty"






Jackie Chou has published two collections of poems, Finding My Heart in Love and Loss and The Sorceress. Her work has also appeared recently in The Ekphrastic Review and Synchronized Chaos.

 

Four Poems by Dan Provost

 






A Toast

 

He kept his head

down as the doctor

called him in to provide

the number of days

left…

 

Now, he needs to buy

a proper suit to be buried in.

 

Long friendships formed

in nameless towns.  Stranded

lifers—granted a minute of civility.

 

Few words mumbled along trapped

streets, smiles

that froze away after the prognosis is

told.

 

A few weeks remaining, a handshake then

a bottle passed around…

 

Each sip, raised to mark

The

End

Of

Time.

 

 

Don’t Use the Word Death

 

There were no

          blankets where

he chose to lay down.

 

So, the end came soon.

 

Forgotten, in the cold.

 

He has dismantled himself…

Back to the silence… 

 

 

Forced Symbols


Strange,

seeing mannequin arms,

legs, hands, feet--struggling

to stay afloat in the monstrous

Atlantic Ocean.

 

Like narrative life.

Hoping for culprits to

survive—

 

Or connect with

                   a time

                   a place

to comfortably

fail—trying to converse.

 

 

Rock is Dead, Long Live Rock—1973


More than sixty years ago, when

the rain, sleet & wind soaked your seersucker

you purchased the day before.

 

Right, Pete?

 

In ’73, you recalled your

youth through a boy named

Jimmy, the mod who also flirted

with the weather elements. Driving

himself wild with uppers, bi-polar

depression, and a popular rock band

that was big with his crowd, the Who.

 

Rock wasn’t dead,

then.

 

Back to 1973, when Quadrophenia

was released, and that kid was portrayed

on a four-sided rock opera, the band went

on tour.

 

The opening act was a bunch of rednecks

from Jacksonville, Florida, who had 20

minutes to perform.  Their final song had

the band flirting with legendary status.

 

Moon, that beautiful drunken

drummer, was too inebriated for

most of the tour to play.

 

But you survived Pete.

You survived.

 

Still living to tell the

Story about Dr. Jimmy &

Mr. Jim & how that

adolescent child fought

His internal battles from side

One to four.

 

Rock was dead

They said.

Long Live Rock!!!

Amen…







Dan Provost’s poetry has been published both online and in print since 1993. He is the author of 17 books/ chapbooks, including Getting Your Bell Rung released by Luchador Press, in June 2025. Notes From the Other Side of the Bed was published by A Thin Slice of Anxiety Press also in 2025. His work has been nominated for The Best of the Net three times, and he has read his poetry throughout the United States. He lives in Keene, New Hampshire with his wife Laura, and dog Bella.

Four Haiku Poems by Kavita Ezekiel Mendonca

 






Four Haiku Poems


empty nesters

entry pass valid

Noah’s Ark




sans punctuation

breathless poem

pause at your own risk




weather report

bright sunny day

wind warning alert




tiny winter mouse

garage warmth-seeker

survival of the smallest







 

Kavita Ezekiel Mendonca - In a career spanning over four decades, Kavita Ezekiel Mendonca has taught English in Indian colleges, AP English in an International School nestled in the foothills of the Himalayan mountains in India, and French and Spanish in private schools in Canada. Her poems are featured in various journals and anthologies, including the Journal of Indian Literature published by the Sahitya Akademi and the four issues of the Yearbook of Indian Poetry in English. Kavita has authored two collections of poetry, ‘Family Sunday and Other Poems’ and ‘Light of The Sabbath’, and a Centennial Celebration volume "Nissim Ezekiel Poet & Father." Her poem 'Advice from a Poet Father' was nominated for a Pushcart prize in 2024. She was born and raised in Bombay, India, and currently lives in Calgary, Canada. Many of her poems celebrate the city of her birth and her Bene Israel Indian Jewish heritage.

Four Poems by Jackie Chou

Leaves Today when I take my usual walk and see the trees  stripping naked I will admit  that you have left me to be in the wind  like the le...