Monday, 11 May 2026

Two Poems by S. T. Eleu

 











THE FOX, THE SCORPION, & THE SKUNK


Fox, kicking back against a riverside poplar, rolled

her eyes when Scorpion sidled up with twice the smarm

oozing from their exoskeleton, oozing as if musk

from the tail end of their shoremate, Skunk


fool my kind once: natural selection

attempt it twice: prepare for vivisection


Scorpion, needing to cross the river, had no desire 

to end up as fish food like their insolent cousin of yore

so they locked up their stinger, handed the key to Fox

and warned her of Skunk’s spasmodic approach 


nothing ventured: species stagnation 

nothing gained: species cessation


Skunk, smiling the smile of furious form rabies, raised

his tail, his voice, his flag of hydrophobic irascibility

then launched into a rant about the evilly evil evils

of rain, of unlikely allies, of unholy alliances, of rivers


come lie with me: I have neither fleas nor gas

trust me: never will I ever never bite you in the ass


Fox and Scorpion, shaking water off their backs, danced 

upon the green, green grasses of the opposite shore

and sang to the moon, to the stars, the next day’s sun

songs of survival, of friendship, de libertad, de Muerte


if the enemy of your enemy is to be your friend

make nice right away or else you’ll get it in THE END




CHEAP LOCKS


robberies

again rattle the neighborhood


Police Chief gives a press conference

blames everything on cheap locks


everything


then washes his hands, puts on sunglasses

slowly        walks        away


* * * 

neighbors: Richard, Hannah, Venancio, Karam

fed up with weasel words, wolf-snake winds


form a council of mages

so as to combine their unique skill sets


unique 


and then some

conjuration, herbalism, technomagic, psychokinesis


* * *

potions mixed, charms blessed, entryways enchanted

each spell bestowed with a personal piquancy 


each spell cast with devil-may-care knavery 

to serve and protect families, homes, relics, sanity


protect


ab iniuria aliquem 

defendere


* * *

two thieves break into Richard’s home

but instead of ransacking the place for valuables


they have an uncontrollable urge to take out the trash

fix the screen door, do the laundry


laundry


sorting, presoaking, loading

unloading, loading, unloading, loading, . . .


* * *

Hannah’s second cousin sneaks in to grab

what she can convert to cash fast


so odd to see her later, though, bathing

the rescue cats: Krallen and Claus


claws


box of bandages, business card of her sponsor 

under the blow dryer


* * *

thief uses a keyless entry hack to jack Venancio’s truck

but finds himself driving to the local supermarket 


where he shops for the family’s groceries

where he shops for the family’s unmentionables


unmentionables


hexxxxxxid cxxxm, lxxe shxxxoo, bxdxug sxxxy

axxe cxxxm, txxo shxllx, fxxxxn pxzzx, . . .


* * *

an identity thief rifles through Karam’s garbage

finds a magic flute, marching band sheet music, moldy cheese


in no time he’s pied piping About Damn Time up and down

the alleys of broken glass, lost mittens, swole-ass rats


RATS


squeak, squeak, tickle: EEK

squeak, squeak, nibble: OUCH


* * *

the council comes together for dinner, discusses

the Sox, the heatwave, the symphony, the Police Chief


found passed out in his car with someone

who was neither his wife nor his niece


neither


rumor has it he’ll keep his job, and why not

crime is down




S. T. Eleu - Raised in Vegas then exiled to Chicago, I (they, them – gay, femme) have been a musician, teacher, and neurodivergent Vulcan. Gloriously retired from time clocks and authority figures: life is good. Real, real good.






Two Poems from His "White Labyrinth" Series by Joel Chace

 






Untitled Poems from White Labyrinth Series


At the incline, he

begins trudging.  A path

upward is for the

old; that downward, for

the young. Incontrovertible, but

he doesn’t know why. 

Damp mid-winter air chills

as he treads carefully

 

over icy patches. He’s

forgotten these pleasures of

cold, muted sunlight shimmering

the moist facades, gray

and brown, of houses

abutting each other; and –

where the park opens up

near the summit – black

 

branches jigsawing pale sky. 

Taking his initial step

of descent, he recalls:  

a path upward is

for the old; that

downward, for the young. 

Cautiously, bending aged knees -- 

calves and thighs tightening –

 

he lands on a    

narrow stretch of ice.

His heart bangs his

chin. But his fear

and the years that

have brought it on

commence to slide away. 

Frigid air rushing by

 

his ears exhilarates. Despite

momentum, no blurring occurs.

Vision  --  all senses – sharpen

those neighborhoods passing by. 

Sweeping around a curve,

month after month dropping

away into the past,

he marvels at maroon

 

scalloping midway up the

façade of a house

he used to visit. 

Whooshing through one square,

he opens his lungs

to delights of a

bakery then a tobacconist’s;

through another, he shivers 

 

at a Schubert melody

played upon a piano           

slightly out of tune. 

Younger.  Younger.  Farther down

into the city, until

that thin rivulet of

ice abruptly ends, and

he has to catch

 

himself from hurtling headlong. 

He stands in another

square.  No more radiant

hues; only a monochrome               

of lead.  Pervasive odor,

mop water. Sounds muffled

as those beyond asylum

walls.  Before him, a

 

washed out three-story building  -- 

his workplace.  Glancing at

a clock, he sees

he’s tardy.  So, small

and old as he

is, he enters, takes

a seat in the

grimy anteroom, and waits      

 

       to be summoned.

Emergencies  --  thicketed, secret, deep. 

Emergencies of thorns, dust,

dusk. Clouds thicken twilight.

 

On those distant hills,

lights begin flickering and

rising in a line.

 

Following emergencies  --  announcements, blood

on this ground.  If

there’s hope, it’s in

 

    the mountains.

 

 

 

Time’s taken its time

with him.  96. 

Thick, jet-black hair; same

weight he would have

been before quitting school;

 

ruddy, wrinkleless skin.  When

he does speak, he

pushes high, raspy sound

just barely beyond his

lips.  Lived with his

 

older sister for eighty

years, with her and

her husband for sixty. 

Both gone, now.  On

occasion, a grandniece visits

 

the facility.  She recalls

just once when he

made loudness, when  --  the

parlor filling with words,

laughs  --  he rose from 

 

his chair, plodded to

the TV, cranked the

volume on his show

full blast, scaring the

Christ out of everyone. 

 

His sister pointed up

to his room, where

he went, puffing a

voice thin as breath

mere inches in front

 

      of his face.



Joel Chace has published work in print and electronic magazines such as Lana Turner, Survision, Eratio, Otoliths, Word For/Word, Golden Handcuffs Review, New American Writing, and The Brooklyn Rail. Underrated Provinces is recently out from MadHat Books. Bone Chapel is coming out soon from Chax. For more than forty years, Chace was a working jazz pianist. He is an NEH Fellow.

 

 

 

 

 

 


Five Poems by Sreelekha Chatterjee

 






Missing a River’s Familiar Home


Sailing a boat, my eyes are dim,

the river’s brim doesn’t hold its water’s name.

Ice thawing, infinite oceans overwhelming,

while the rivers are empty—

true identities missing, 

realities are soundless myriads.

Bounteous universe of the river purports its beginning,

an insignificant canal spells its expiration.

Nothing is permanent in its life of lives;

boundless future limited by the shallow present—

voices giggling, chatting, chanting 

on river cruise vessels moving to and fro.

Eco-friendly solar–electric hybrid boats

wheel into the memory of the forthcoming—unborn.

River men dream of trees, sand on the shores

and running waters of the spinal river—

new ones unite with the old ones,

thoughts pausing and splitting like riven waves.

The heavy florilegium, drivers of fantasy

pardon the greyish, frothy water,

while the wielders of democracy

see the vitreous pouring of the cerulean sky.

Scorched and blackened, ankle-deep,

stressed holding religious events

that discard their remains.

Lugging my boat down the waterway,

I feel the pent-up river unable to drain,

its channel long blocked by human detritus.

Tranquility of the river and its rejuvenation

cease loudly, wreathing its gloom;

lucid shadows in the water highlight

its creeping sleep of death.



Those Who Never Returned From Exile


Under the sky’s blue seal, once reigned a spotless sapphire sea,

the coral reefs visible, as clear as glass.

Now, countless fleets of fishers, tourist boats on the sea’s throbbing heart

ensnare its—what used to be unseizable—bionetwork.

Voices are heard in the air of somewhere global,

of warming uncontrolled, impurities straying, none to withhold.  

Peace floats like a come-and-go perfumed tide—

ebbs and flows along with the spume,

when one promenades on the sand

that is unable to gather form in the wild.

Dark clouds drift on the horizon,

isles seen in-and-out of sight.

Traditions that walked miles eons ago—

settled, mingled, some yet to discover

the secrets of the advanced tribe.

Each Andamanese mind holds enigmas, a cellular jail

where freedom—from hunting–gathering—struggles continue to thrive.

Penal colonies taken over by the independent progressives;

governing the clannish society, a distant dream, 

a ban temporarily—or forever—for the wise.

Zero immunity and fiendish moves of a few communities

on spotting a flag of modernism, total abandon of archive.

Akin to a frigatebird, one half of their brain

sleeps, while the other maintains the flight.

Temblors and receding sea beach make them wonder,

ancient folklores hint at a disaster.

On an impulse waxing their judgment,

strange, sun-toasted bodies turn to higher ground.

From the mountains, safe and sound,

beyond their eyes’ reach, 

they envision demonic tsunami waves

dash with zeal and might—beaches 

and forests soon disappear underneath.

Calm ensues, water—no longer of pain—leaves, 

all that is submerged is once again seen.

A helicopter hovers above

like a worry, as a buzzing bee in the mind,

till pointed arrows deflect the complexities of contemporary life.

They have demands of Nature fulfilled,

but Nature has spells of tame and torture.

Man—trapped in stone age or evolved to the nuclear age—

has never learned to surrender.



Sundarbans Will Continue to Live and Die


Nestled in the delta—where the Ganges, Brahmaputra, and Meghna

meet the Bay of Bengal—Sundarbans alive, 

existence immersive but rare and fragile. 

Mind’s eye wanders—twinning, vigilant—

seeing with both cognizance and ignorance—

sighting the lush green, dense canopy, visible vegetation;

unaware of the intricate below-water

root and the unapparent level of the ecosystem.

A natural bounty of mangroves

or a terminal minefield for 

its unheeded inhabitants,

a throw of dice to survive? 

Beneath the drooping fronds

harbored by bowing branches,

touching the ever-whimsical brackish water,

breathe dark shadows, akin to a devil’s lair playing behind.

Sentinels of the swamp—Hethal and Sundari—

depleting like the hair on an oldster’s head.

Frequent cyclones intensifying, 

wind-ruffled tidal surges dip the forest, 

blights soil infrastructure, gnawing on its pride,

while throats dry like parched earth, 

thirsty in a watery desert of brine.

Will silver harvest, sweet gold, brown barks yield enough bread?

Or, is there a dying need to shift to new occupations under constraint?

Banabibi’s protective power reigns,

a belief in which Muslims and Hindus unite—

their fellowship of old and young, equally of sorrow and joy. 

Dakkhin Rai haunts the jungle, keeper of tigers prowls;

folktales that hint toward an ancient knowledge 

to respect and coexist with nature—

remembrance and obliviousness together never die.

Will they ever come face-to-face in their survival fights?

The end perhaps no man shall know.

Rise in the sea level unnatural,

counting trees and Royal Bengal tigers 

seems a futile exercise.

Building tomorrow in a world of today—

hope aerial roots of mangroves will continue

to access air, activate their snorkel-like function, 

when stifled and choked in waterlogged, oxygen-poor soil,

with memories of home like a wondrous, fresh dawn

after a long, solitary night.



An Upsurge of Glacial Tears


Shako Chho, a glacial lake—size of seventy

football fields—remains placid

in the lap of the eastern Himalayas.

Serenity breaks when its soul’s pride

is haunted by watery inundations and landslides.

Thangu valley beneath shudders,

unprepared, unsuitably balanced for contingencies, 

at its sudden levee failure

like a promise once held sacred, suddenly hard to keep.

A few hundred people—semi-nomadic Lachenpas—

busy with their farming during the summer and monsoon

wearies at the thought of the restless lake,

resembling a society in conflict, by traitors sold, turned to perfidy.

When winter descends with thick layers of snow,

they move to their second home, down the valley furthermore.

Flood’s fury, tossing swells govern,

a seven-minute duration,

short warning time, to enact devastation.

Accumulated debris and sediment, 

snow avalanches in a chain reaction,

melt accelerated when the Earth burns,

glaciers recede and liquified water floods—

a fast-expanding lake is nothing but a natural curse.

Fixing—check dams, workable monitoring systems—

an onerous task, a race against time. 

Question of relocation is a hard essay;

home for centuries, an abode where they reside. 


Note: Thangu valley in Sikkim is being threatened by glacial lake outburst floods.




In the Shadows of Extinction


Gentle giants claim residency in villages;

coffee, banana, and coconut plantations under threat,

chasing away the energetic bee over our creamy cup

no easy feat, with conflicts escalating around.

Human lives and urbanization hold places in reservation charts,

while the tuskers’ names strike off from the forest maps.

Unprecedented rate of encroachment into their habitat,

as does the poaching scourge for profitable ivory tusks.

Ropes and wild snares trick them like pigs and deer,

maimed body parts, their survival defeated by infectious bouts.

Elephant statues adorn our display shelves,

impart strength and favor good fortune, they all say.

Hued in red, black, white, green, they are positioned

to channel beneficial energy in the living spaces.

Power dissolves with a broken piece,

the real one’s cry seldom riots our heart’s peace.

Along with each one, the sky falls on the ground,

whoever the soil needs remains in indefinite doubt.

Pathways lost in dense forests, waterholes

in dry riverbeds no longer come to the fore.

Seeds that need passage through digestive tracts

wait forever to sprout in the forest, no respite from the moil.

Dung beetles starved over tightly packed soil,

elephant fertilizer in scarcity, plants in nutrient drought.

Depleting number never resumes calm,

we reap what we sow,

overlooking the hands that plough rich and deep,

but we sleep in comfort, sound—ignorant of the turnabout. 

Ancestors forgotten like an ancient tribe,

their benediction we no longer seek.  






Sreelekha Chatterjee is a poet from New Delhi, India. Her poems have appeared in Madras Courier, Setu, Verse-Virtual, Timber Ghost Press, Suburban Witchcraft Magazine, Ninth Heaven, The Wise Owl, Porch Literary Magazine, Orenaug Mountain Poetry Journal, Creative Flight, Pena Literary Magazine, Fevers of the Mind, and in the anthologies—Enchanted Encounters (Bitterleaf Books, UK); Go, the Prayer Has Been Sent (Orenaug Mountain Publishing, USA); and Christmas-Winter Anthology Volume 4 (Black Bough Poetry, Wales, UK), among others. Her poems have been widely published in more than forty journals, magazines, and anthologies globally across thirteen countries, and translated into Korean and Romanian languages.

 

Facebook: facebook.com/sreelekha.chatterjee.1/, X (formerly Twitter): @sreelekha001, Instagram: @sreelekha2023, Bluesky: @sreelekha2024

  


Two Poems by S. T. Eleu

  THE FOX, THE SCORPION, & THE SKUNK Fox, kicking back against a riverside poplar, rolled her eyes when Scorpion sidled up with twice th...