Sunday, 10 May 2026

Ten Tanka Poems by Joshua St. Claire

 







Ten Tanka Poems


the weight
of stone
on stone
on stone
Zubenelhakrabi





grocery shopping
for New Years
I thought I saw you
but you wore your hair straight
and were still alive





frozen waves
of the Iapetus Ocean
the rise
and fall
of the Appalachians





high-rise office
the virga and I
take all day
for our feet to touch
long mountain





first monarch
her head
in his lap
as he reads
Baudelaire





the sound of sand
rolls onto the strand
as it leaves the land
the repetons
of a villanelle





the greenwhites
of the last hydrangea
the many worlds
that bloom and die
in my hands





rereading One Art
the mist’s whiteness
up and over
the Appalachians
over and over





deeper
into the scent
of chestnut blossoms
an old dirt road
into the what’s gone





white wings
flitting in and out
of white pines
the rise and fall
of Pissarro’s green










Joshua St. Claire is an accountant from a small town in Pennsylvania who works as a financial director for a non-profit. His haiku and related poetry have been published broadly including in Lothlorien Poetry Journal, Modern Haiku, The Heron’s Nest, and Mayfly. He has received recognition in the following international contests/awards for his work in these forms: the Gerald Brady Memorial Senryu Award, the Vancouver Cherry Blossom Festival Haiku Invitational, the San Francisco International Award for Senryu, the Robert Speiss Memorial Award, the Touchstone Award for Individual Haiku, the British Haiku Society Award for Haiku, and the Trailblazer Award.










Five Poems by Tessara Dudley

 






Under An Ancient Curse

 

on the borderlands between

a thing and its antithesis

I encountered a crow—

or was she a crone?

seen from the corner

of one eye or the other

this crow crone seemed

to flicker and flux

at once a witch woman

and a winged thing

wild and whirling

or still-silent waiting

I offered her my name—

for such things hold power—

and she gave me in turn

waking dreams and fits

when I see through

the thin world around me

to the truest things beyond 


 

the tower

 

the ticking clock counts my days

an inexorable march to the grave

a passing of seconds

that trickle through grasping hands

bells proclaiming each hour that passes

announcing the next day

            and the next

robbing me of that simple joy:

the peace of unknowing

            of happiness unwaning

            worlds unwanting

the sorrows and summers of childhood

adulthood stretching away

under hot suns and pelting rains

turning me inside out

to face each fresh dawn

with curiosity             and woe

and the burden of learning

            my own mortality

                        once more 


 

A Love Poem But Truer

 

it is a dozen eggs

a basketful of bread

and a bouquet of herbs

 

her kitchen was warm

her voice even warmer

a laugh booming back

from the white walls

and raising the loaf

with its heat and fire

 

we danced the light edges of this kingdom

a joyous domain with

high windows and high

ceilings and high spicy thrills

in songs of descent 


 

Home

 

my lips shape new hope in my gentled mouth

is there a place where the broken dreams go

if they travel south and then further south

seeking a land that has been left fallow

where nightmares were the last harvest allowed

before abandoning the ravaged ground

cares tucked away til they could not be found

no casual search will expose these seeds

only devotion like most loyal hounds

can plant the relief these broken dreams need 


 

my body is a list II

 

my body is a list

except when it’s not

sometimes it is a broken clock

right twice a day

I write my thoughts

like prayers prepared

for offering

now, dearest, surely

this suffering is enough

 

I am suspended

in the moment just

before the magic trick

is revealed

before we know if the

lovely assistant has been sawn

in half

as the audience holds their breath

so is my body a question

the answer to which

is never quite uncovered






Tessara Dudley is a Black queer poet, a working-class disabled femme, and a bonus parent to a rambunctious young one. Tessara has published poetry in Sun Star Review, Wordgathering, The Black Napkin, and Words Dance. Their poems have also appeared in anthologies published by Minerva Rising, Zoetic Press, and 9 Bridges Press. Tessara’s first poetry collection, Fallen/Forever Rising, was published in 2015. After taking time off to finish their schooling and raise a child, they are currently working on a second poetry collection.



 


Butterfly Island - Short Story by Betty Brown

 







Butterfly Island



Short Story

by Betty Brown

 

            Last night she dreamed of their arrival. Shimmering clouds drifting over the white-capped bay. The island’s tree-topped cliffs reaching with welcoming arms offering rest and sustenance to the weary travelers. They were coming.

            As Iris opened her sight-faded eyes to the September dawn, her wrinkled face creased into a smile as she softly murmured, “Not yet, not yet. Soon, soon. One day more. Tomorrow is the equinox.”

            She reached for her thick-lensed glasses resting on the handmade, cherry-wood nightstand beside her bed. One of the island’s walnut trees, felled by a storm a century ago, had provided the wood for the carved, antique bed that Iris now climbed out of to smooth the butterfly patterned quilt on top.

            She hobbled across the room in her nightgown to retrieve her faded, patched, green robe from the chair in the corner and then limped carefully, one step at a time, thump-THUMP-thump-THUMP, down the stairs to the kitchen.

            The early morning sunlight peeked over the windowsill to illuminate the tiny kitchen. Iris filled the kettle, set it on the stove, and lit the propane burner beneath. She readied the teapot and its cozy with the crocheted, orange butterfly on the top. While the water heated, she busied herself rummaging in the cupboards.

            Clucking like one of her hens, Iris said to herself, “I must prepare for my visitors. They should arrive tomorrow. At least, I hope they will.”

            She covered the scarred, old table with a tablecloth and set out all of her dishes upon it. Every plate, every bowl. Each and every one of her cups with matching saucers. Even the serving platters that had held countless family meals in decades past. The candlesticks and silverware had been polished last week and now gleamed amongst the china. All of the well-loved, beautiful items were adorned with images of butterflies.

            After her breakfast tea and a leftover biscuit slathered with summer honey gathered this year from her bees, Iris dressed and proceeded outside to do the morning chores. She released the chickens from their nighttime coop, fed the cat and dog, and then strolled out to the garden to pick whatever was ready to harvest today.

            She stood for several minutes gazing at the panorama that surrounded her cottage. She could see the sparkling crests of the gray-green waves in the distance and hear the whispering surf on the beach below the limestone cliffs. The wild meadows blanketing the vista were full of every plant species native to the island, but the milkweeds reigned over all, their tall blooms reaching for the blue sky and swaying in the gentle, late summer breeze.

            Iris picked up her gathering basket, filled it with vegetables and herbs, and sighed with pleasure as she headed back to the house. Everything was ready for tomorrow.

            Next morning, as dawn whispered over the horizon, Iris was awakened by shadows fluttering on the bedroom window. She opened her eyes to witness the beginnings of the long-awaited events of this day.

            Live, powder-soft wings began emerging from the butterfly fabric of the quilt covering her bed as well as the curtains on the window leaving the worn fabrics bare and white. Iris raced down the stairs as fast as her ancient legs would carry her, heart keeping pace -  THUMP-THUMP-THUMP-THUMP. As she passed the photos on the stairwell walls, more shimmering wings and antennae erupted from the colorful images and joyously soared after her.

The air downstairs was a wingding of swirling hues filling the tiny kitchen. The china and silver on the table were now plain white, stripped of their winged insect images. Even the orange butterfly on the tea cozy found flight. Iris hobbled out the back door and was met with a fluttering kaleidoscope so thick it obscured much of the sun’s early rays.

The Monarchs had arrived.

            They found their way to Butterfly Island every year. Time would be spent resting, feeding on the bountiful milkweed, and laying eggs. The next generation would emerge from their chrysalises and continue the migration journey back toward the warmer southern climates of Mexico, leaving Butterfly Island, and Iris, to face the cooling of autumn and the winter snows alone. But the soft-winged souls always brought a special gift just for her. A thank you for letting the native milkweeds flourish in the rich soil around the little isolated cottage.

Through the haze of butterflies, Iris could see faint shadows glimmering. She witnessed the shapes and shades of her long-dead family, friends, and ancestors emerging between the millions of fluttering wings. They all gathered in this place at this time each year. The whisper-thin images waved cheerfully to Iris. Some even blew kisses, put a hand on their heart, or reached out. She had always known they were hovering nearby and watching over her every day, but the butterflies’ arrival at the fall equinox was the only time she could glimpse their beloved faces for an instant through the veil of death and life that separated them from her.

            Iris murmured to the gathered, precious shadows, “Not yet… not yet. I’m old and tired but my work is not quite finished. The island must have a new caretaker…soon…soon…”


Betty Brown was born and raised in the Northern Appalachia region of Southeastern Ohio. Her writing is influenced by the wonder of the living world. Her work has been published in the anthologies Common Threads, Dawn Horizons, Remember When, Ohio Bards, Poets of the Promise, Harmonic Verse, and Botticelli. Her work is supported by a grant from the Greater Columbus Arts Council.




Saturday, 9 May 2026

Five Poems by Zhu Xiao Di

 






Mostly Alone

 

Don’t get me wrong

I like being alone

A lot

 

Yet when I drink

I wish to talk

If only to myself

 

As I eat

What I cook

I wish somebody could taste it

 

I rarely sing

Only when nobody is listening

To what might come out

 


Monologue

 

I’m old and not old,

not old, yet old.

Strange at first,

yet it’s the only thing

I’m certain of.

Everything else slips.

 

Different from before,

this new feeling.

As a child, you never doubted

being a child.

Even denial proves it.

When you longed to grow,

you either were or wanted to be,

without question.

 

Only at my age

(I won’t say which)

you feel this split,

a double self, half-known.

Deny one, the other turns true.

I won’t give examples.

If you can’t imagine them,

you’re not here yet.

 

I don’t blame you.

It’s the only promise I can keep,

standing where I strangely stand.

 

 

Rose in My Backyard

 

In my backyard

Stands a rose planted by someone else

I inherited it when I bought the house

Yet I rarely see it behind the garage

 

No matter if I think of it or not

It grows at its own pace

As I occasionally visit it

Would it be appreciated at all

 


Magic of the Mirror

 

You were angry and looked in the mirror

Found yourself sullen and scowling

You didn’t like what you saw

So you smiled to make yourself look better

 

You were worried and felt blue

You peeped in the mirror and found

A long face, then you straightened your shoulders

And held up your fists, ready to fight

 

You were tired and felt fatigued

With a glance in the mirror

You found a youth behind an old face

Briskly reborn, fifty years younger

 

You were overjoyed and felt like a king

One quick glimpse in the mirror

Refreshing your mind and memories

A humble, clean soul came back

 

 

The Sun

 

The sun that shines

Is the one

I love

 

The shining sun

Is what I

Want to keep

 

What other use

Is the sun

If it keeps running away

 

Anyway

Who am I—

Not a god, after all

 


Zhu Xiao Di is the author of Thirty Years in a Red House: A Memoir of Childhood and Youth in Communist China (University of Massachusetts Press, 1998, 1999; Penguin, 2000), Tales of Judge Dee (novel), Leisure Thoughts on Idle Books (essays in Chinese), and over 120 poems published in journals across the U.S., U.K., Singapore, and Canada. His work also appears in the anthology Father: Famous Writers Celebrate the Bond Between Father and Child. A poet of memory, migration, and endurance, he lives in Boston, Massachusetts.


Ten Tanka Poems by Joshua St. Claire

  Ten Tanka Poems the weight of stone on stone on stone Zubenelhakrabi grocery shopping for New Years I thought I saw you but you wore your ...