Debashish is a machine learning scientist, who has been published in literary magazines several
times across the globe, including Poetry Life & Times, where he was interviewed twice.
He is currently contending with a severe writer’s block spanning a decade, when he has hardly
produced any publishable content. He is also losing emotional connection with his own work
gradually, and spends more time to edit/tighten his old poems than creating any new content.
Debashish Haar
LIKE THE BIRDS ON THE WIRES. 3 Poems from Bradford Middleton
LIKE THE BIRDS ON THE WIRES As I walked I would occasionally Look up, up at the sky, up where The birds ruled, home there to the Lucky, those who can move in the Blink of one eye. This time though the view was kind Of different; the birds had all Congregated, like musical notes on A line, along the telephone wire that Keeps us in touch with the outside world. It was then I thought is that how Leonard Cohen came up with the Wonderful lyrics to 'Bird on a Wire' By looking up, up at the sky, drawing Inspiration from a natural phenomenon. FALLING DOWN THE STAIRS There were times when I would live A life, a wild time, and would often Find myself falling down those stairs At the last resort out of my mind, Always always out of my mind and Late at night as that was when this Beautiful gift always got me best And sometimes it would be 3-15 In the morning and I’d be falling Down those damn stairs out of My damn mind feeling like a cat At the end of his ninth life. LIKE THOSE OLD DAYS (with my radio on) I sit here tonight and it Almost feels like the old-times as My radio builds up to one of the games of the year As old footballers talk of teenagers Turning up to training in brand new Shiny Mercedes-Benz as I sit here Writing a life so far removed from Their gilded existence it just goes to Show you how capitalism has gone so Terribly wrong…
BIOGRAPHY
Bradford Middleton was born in south-east London during the summer of 1971 and won his first poetry prize at the age of nine. He then gave up writing poems for nearly twenty-five years and it wasn’t until he landed in Brighton, knowing no one and having no money, that he began again. Ten years later and he’s been lucky enough to have had a few chapbooks published including a new one from Analog Submission Press entitled ‘Flying through this Life like a Bottle Battling Gravity’, his debut from Crisis Chronicles Press (Ohio, USA) and his second effort for Holy & Intoxicated Press (Hastings, UK). He has read around the UK at various bars, venues and festivals and is always keen to get out and read to new crowds. His poetry has also been or will be published shortly in the Chiron Review, Zygote in my Coffee, Section 8, Razur Cuts, Paper & Ink, Grandma Moses ‘Poet to Notice’, Empty Mirror, Midnight Lane Gallery, Bareback Lit and is a Contributing Poet over at the wonderful Mad Swirl. If you like what you’ve read go send a friend request on facebook to bradfordmiddleton1.
Robin Ouzman Hislop is Editor of Poetry Life and Times at Artvilla.com ; You may visit Aquillrelle.com/Author Robin Ouzman Hislop about author & https://poetrylifeandtimes.com See Robin performing his work Performance (University of Leeds)
Diaphanous, disingenuous 3 Poems from Prabhu Iyer
Diaphanous, disingenuous Parsed in the Planck intervals of me, diaphanous, is it not you? Yet impossible, disingenuous this dichotomy: thirst after the conjurings of sentience? Parsed in the Planck intervals of me, is it not you, ineffable ? And yet the flood tides of rage toss me over on the waters of life; Gulf between eyes shut and open - chasing after the web of thoughts; Parsed in the Planck intervals of me, is it not you, ineffable? Who do I call, dear presence, when called to act by the world, true to my being and becoming? Impossible this dichotomy: diaphanous, disingenuous, ever
Dear electricity, what are bulbs to you? Dear bulb of light, what is electricity to you? Do you like it in your corner beaming in your shine, or in a chandelier adorning the nights? Dear chandelier, what is electricity to you? Do you like it in your throne, brimming in your shine, or in a celebration of glory lights? O celebration, what is electricity to you? Do you like it in your vestal ornamentation of sundry occasions? Ever humble unknown flowing through the veins this elixir of life that lights up lamps, chandeliers - one indivisible borderless, yet bringing a hundred filaments to celebration: Dear electricity, what are bulbs to you, chandeliers and celebrations?
Darkness, darkness again Night goes back to night, darkness darkness again, no one cares for daylight now, when tears and stars fill up the lakes shiver sharing in our grief, where we sit in longing for one last time; Desolation goes back to desolation, ingratitude ingratitude again, our homes too unbeautiful, Little, too freckled to house your poise, steps that measured out the vast; Silence goes back to silence, unfathomed grief grief again, our hearts too frail for your love, this hour of separation, we break our bangles uninterrupted by the beat of the dhak; Inconsequence goes back to inconsequence mundane mundane again, that you must come despite us being us, darkness darkness here: light devoid of light and life devoid of purpose, Everything goes back to everything rudderless rudderless again, boatwoman, who will to sing to us of the journey to the fjord of wisdom, past the gulf of the dark? Night goes back to night, darkness darkness again, desolation goes back to desolation, ingratitude ingratitude again, silence goes back to silence, unfathomed grief grief again, inconsequence goes back to inconsequence mundane mundane again, everything goes back to everything boatwoman, rudderless rudderless again - just a prayer of longing, for one more glance
Prabhu Iyer is an Indian poet writing primarily in English. A scientist by training and practice, Prabhu weaves his quest of truth, beauty and goodness into his verse. An avid student of poetry, he is inspired by the spirit of the romanticists and transcendentalists, while also being influenced deeply by figures of the avant-garde, drawing upon such movements as cubism, surrealism and magical realism in the sense of gesamtkunstwerk or ‘total art’. He is also an ardent fan of popular lyrical poetry as manifested in the variegated Indian devotional, musical and film traditions. Prabhu’s work has appeared in anthologies and poetry journals including the PLT and long-listed a couple of times for the prestigious Erbacce Prize for poetry. He has published two volumes of poetry, ‘Ten Years’ exploring the themes of love and loss, while ‘The Hermit’ is a surrealist collection of poems. He is also working on releasing a collection of Haikus collated over many years, especially during the COVID lockdown. https://www.amazon.com/Prabhu-Iyer
Robin Ouzman Hislop is Editor of Poetry Life and Times at Artvilla.com ; You may visit Aquillrelle.com/Author Robin Ouzman Hislop about author & https://poetrylifeandtimes.com See Robin performing his work Performance (University of Leeds)
My Voice. A Poem & Artwork by Kelly Sargent
My Voice I am Deaf. My fingers speak. A coiffed paintbrush in my grasp, my voice streaks turquoise and magenta across a parched canvas. Vowels coo through thirsty linen. Click-clacking keys with my mother tongue, I chew hard consonants and spit them out. Sour, a scathing sonnet can be at dusk. Fingertips pave slick exclamations, punctuated by nails sinking low into clamminess. I sculpt hyperboles.
Kelly Sargent is an author and artist whose works, including a Best of the Net nominee, have appeared in more than forty literary publications. A poetry chapbook entitled Seeing Voices: Poetry in Motion is forthcoming (Kelsay Books, 2022). A book of modern haiku entitled Lilacs & Teacups is also forthcoming, and a haiku recently recognized in the international Golden Haiku contest is on display in Washington, D.C. She serves as the creative nonfiction and an assistant nonfiction editor for two literary journals. She also reviews for an organization whose mission is to make visible the artistic expression of sexual violence survivors.
You can find her at https://www.kellysargent.com/
Robin Ouzman Hislop is Editor of Poetry Life and Times at Artvilla.com ; You may visit Aquillrelle.com/Author Robin Ouzman Hislop about author & https://poetrylifeandtimes.com See Robin performing his work Performance (University of Leeds)
VERISIMILITUDE. 5 Poems by Askold Skalsky
KEYS IN A ROW Perhaps someone will play a melancholy keyboard piece as I am leaving, and, stopping to listen, I’ll have a vision of what is to come if I linger, if I walk up to the player, wait, then ask some pertinent question with an eager mien, the seconds gone when I would have been outdoors in the clear, the moment interrupted with a careless insufficiency, the scattered patterns of my life converging into a broken string, a clappered wheel on which the hours tick and dance to their inoperable end *** to be released from a long slow slough, much of it impenetrable like the circle of a dream manifest as reality, frightful and avoidable, a bag in a corridor laced with shadows and squalor, which the mere eye of me is afraid to undo *** moving through the veins, a fire- ball with dim obbligatos and dark copper bangs, like old radiator pipes when the steam hammers at high velocity into their joints, warming the room and almost waking the sleeper from his sleep *** here in this morning’s morning self-forgotten sullen twang comes a star gilded and silver, climbing still like the pine branches tipped with needle- frantic green, yes, caught like a tiny chip on the great waist of some spectre surface emerging into the dissolving dark. LANDSCAPE IN FALLEN LIGHT, WITH CHILDREN Just an unimportant place, radiant and ordinary, deserving the utmost scriptory, with golden quags up to the knees, the sun blotting the lough like streaks of silver haze settling in a quay. No need for a raveled sky of quizzical significance, the wrangling heads foundering in the streets, questing the unending sop of memory and imprecation to put life into the big words, immiserating the ivory dungeon, as one antinomian calls it, reduced to bah, to babbling ooze, slightly ecstatic now and then, what is preserved when meaning is deflated, page after page, of invisibility, of pity for hope lost in hell’s sunken bolgias, or the faces strapped to the skullbones of the starving young. NOW THEN, THE OPEN EYE August’s close but I already feel the solitary cold, a sleepless place and zero of the night, like an infinitive without an end and half reluctant to begin. But solitude is just a postlude to the now where all the wrongs set in, a moment’s atom out of kilter, out of being true, where finally the heart may intermit its beat with careless equanimity or grave abandonment like a nimbus with its watery crystals of deep ice, washing the sorrows from your face, from all the lineaments of being you. VERISIMILITUDE After a passage from a novel by Virginia Woolf Somewhere in the middle I recall a brewer’s cart and the genial narrator describing the gray horses that had upright bristles of straw stuck in their tails like sprouting plumes above the small brown daisies peeping from their haunches’ clefts. And a woman, seeing this slipstream brook of burblings through her mind, immediately brightens, and sorrow drops away like a feathered colander sifting the prismatic richness of her life, kindling with equine pleasure an infinite hubble-bubble of mysterious commotion out of the pernicious flurries of gone time, a lollop on horsetail streams with straw-thatched coronets, whimsical and vagulous, like sea-green sprites, bedraggled by happiness and blessed with silly dreams. PROBLEM, SOLUTION, ETC. Her academic pedigree was impressive--Swarthmore, Columbia and the Sorbonne. But toward her hundredth year she confronted her biggest source of perplexity and vexation, the state of being weary and restless through lack of interest, and began her day with crossword puzzles, then the game shows on TV. Did she return to these as the day continued to impair itself by attrition? Ramakrishna used to rebuke card-playing oldsters— Had they nothing better to do on the verge of their greatest change of outward form or appearance? Are crosswords any better? Should Kurtz have done puzzles in the dark, filling words into a pattern of numbered squares in answer to correspondingly numbered clues to prevent facing the abyss before him, the memories in him? What is a six-letter word for a painful emotion compounded of loathing and fear?
Bio: Originally from Ukraine, Askold Skalsky has published poems in over 300 online and print periodicals in the United States, Canada, England, Ireland, mainland Europe, Turkey, Australia, and India. He is the recipient of two Individual Artist Awards in Poetry from the Maryland State Arts Council, and is the founding editor of the literary magazine Hedge Apple. A first book of poems, The Ponies of Chuang Tzu, was published in 2011 by Horizon Tracts in New York City. He is currently at work on several poetry projects, including a poetry cycle based on Gertrude Stein’s Tender Buttons. A book of poetry, Shapeless Works of Partial Contemplation, is due to be published by Ephemeral Arts Press in November.
Robin Ouzman Hislop is Editor of Poetry Life and Times at Artvilla.com ; You may visit Aquillrelle.com/Author Robin Ouzman Hislop about author & https://poetrylifeandtimes.com See Robin performing his work Performance (University of Leeds)
The Inventory Poems by John Okey
Steps These days, sequential in their order, random in their events. Yet, I am supposed to come through every 24 hours With some sort of understanding, a plan for the next day, and the same every day after. What am I supposed to do? Control the guessing… Suppress the panic… It’d be more human to be a lab rat or a lamb in a Chicago slaughterhouse. I am stupid with my intelligence. I sequence, Collate, Numerate, Alphabetize, Chronicle, Dewey Decimal, Periodic Table, even square root… All fucking useless. More importantly, it all misses the fucking point. Inventory I am the poet, a disaster in stanza, the upside-down verse, enjoying one good mistake after the next. Turn in each ugly line sloppier than the last. The pen is a weak sword against suicidal woes. I scribble nothings across scraps of paper. Really anything I can get my hands on, then lose before I get home. My attempts at bringing the dark side to the outside. Double-Checking the Inventory No shine. No polish. No pretense. I am dirty and unkempt. I from when I should smile. I am a disaster in every human way. Lacking popular respectability, I revel in my ill-repute. My style is blue jeans and t-shirts. My attitude is to smirk with a hint of alcohol. I am the question mark and the exclamation point. The means without an end. Final Inventory As a sane man, I am a catastrophe. As an insane man, I have it rather tied together.
Bio
Okey is a forty-four-year-old bakery employee. He has written poetry since he was a teenager. It was during the pandemic that he finally decided to publish his work. A novel, This Here Night Life…, and a poetry collection, Back to Masturbating Monkeys and God’s Plan, are available on Amazon. These poems are reprints from his poetry collection.
Robin Ouzman Hislop is Editor of Poetry Life and Times at Artvilla.com ; You may visit Aquillrelle.com/Author Robin Ouzman Hislop about author & https://poetrylifeandtimes.com See Robin performing his work Performance (University of Leeds)
Three Poems Telos, Tabula Rasa & Algor by Carl Scharwath
Telos Two evening lovers’ echoes In you forgotten dreams and memories of essence. Touch wordlessly in a greater optimism. Waves of summer morn Under a cloudless sky with flickering lights of desire. Turning like a dancer alone on the stage of life The evening leaves turn after Their first death and sleep In the place of forgotten Gods. Does it break you apart to see the expectation so muddled? Tabula Rasa I saw the ethos of a generation destroyed- mourning the philosophers In their artful vision. The sense datum clouds with cries of the nymphs welcoming new world dawns. Mentality is, in its way forming, a sign of hopeful intelligence. Knavish roadblocks obstruct triumphant returns to Arcadia. A sterism fills my sight As the false memories Of a partial Utopia Flood my soul. Algor Like a winter landscape fearful Of revealing what lies underneath And I-one minute Adrift from myself. Opening up to you Is as easy as breathing In the quest for completion Of a new threshold. Poetry is a constructed conversation On the frontier of dreaming. I cannot help but freeze-and Scrutinize the ideology doctrine.
Carl Scharwath, has appeared globally with 170+ journals selecting his poetry, short stories, interviews, essays, plays or art. Two poetry books Journey to Become Forgotten (Kind of a Hurricane Press) and Abandoned (Scars Tv) have been published. His new book “The Playground of Destiny” (Impspired Press 8/21) features prose, poems and photography. His first photography book was published by Praxis in Africa. His photography was also exhibited in the Mount Dora Center for The Arts and Leesburg Center for The Arts galleries. Carl is the art editor for Minute Magazine (USA,) has a monthly interview column with ILA Magazine, a competitive runner, and a 2nd degree black- belt in Taekwondo.
Robin Ouzman Hislop is Editor of Poetry Life and Times at Artvilla.com ; You may visit Aquillrelle.com/Author Robin Ouzman Hislop about author & https://poetrylifeandtimes.com See Robin performing his work Performance (University of Leeds)
LAKE TITICACA. A Poem by Lorraine Caputo
LAKE TITICACA I. The fuchsia-orange sun is cresting the Eastern cordillera Its colors seep through muslin clouds & sheen upon the icy lake II. Across the altiplano between maroon worn-ribbed mountains & bright turquoise waters Shaggy-roofed adobe homes land parceled by stone walls In swampy pastures graze sheep & llama, cows & long-haired donkeys The weekly market at Benemerita Zepita Pollera-skirted women sit upon dwarf grass, surrounded by their herds of livestock Beyond the distant shores of Titicaca the snowy Andes horizon III. On this bank of the deep cerulean lake edged with marshland A woman, child to back tends her sheep Totora boats anchor amidst golden-green reeds A small boy beats fresh-plowed earth with a hoe On the far side dark copses speckle parch hills Ghostly into the clouds rises that snow-capped range
Wandering troubadour Lorraine Caputo is a documentary poet, translator and travel writer. Her works appear in over 250 journals on six continents; and 18 collections of poetry – including On Galápagos Shores (dancing girl press, 2019) and Escape to the Sea (Origami Poems Project, 2021). She also authors travel narratives, articles and guidebooks. In 2011, the Parliamentary Poet Laureate of Canada honored her verse. Caputo has done literary readings from Alaska to the Patagonia. She journeys through Latin America with her faithful travel companion, Rocinante (that is, her knapsack), listening to the voices of the pueblos and Earth. Follow her travels at: www.facebook.com/lorrainecaputo.wanderer or https://latinamericawanderer.wordpress.com.
Robin Ouzman Hislop is Editor of Poetry Life and Times at Artvilla.com ; You may visit Aquillrelle.com/Author Robin Ouzman Hislop about author & https://poetrylifeandtimes.com See Robin performing his work Performance (University of Leeds)