Ekphrasis
The would-be sculptor of muses. A Poem by Fabrice B. Poussin
The would-be sculptor of muses Ether comes to be in the bright light it makes auras like so many living hosts to chase the others as if to mate. In awe of the unknown phenomenon the maker of miracles seeks a solution to make a wonder from such soft chaos. A silent symphony emerges in a waltz particles of a curious matter embrace swirling in a gentle cyclone. Pondering the unexpected spectacle magician in his dreams he is still waiting for the only moment in time. Perhaps then he will be the great master holder of the secret he has been seeking when at last the creation becomes his muse.
Fabrice B. Poussin teaches French and English at Shorter University. Author of novels and poetry, his work has appeared in Kestrel, Symposium, The Chimes, and many other magazines. His photography has been published in The Front Porch Review, the San Pedro River Review as well as other publications. Most recently, his collection “In Absentia,” was published in August 2021 with Silver Bow Publishing.
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)
Ode to Olivia. A Poem By Jack D. Harvey
Ode to Olivia Oh, Olivia, during what disingenuous dialogue, getting closer and closer, you told me in that bar by the seashore "pretty good-time girl comes once, comes often," eyelashes shyly lowered, thick and lustrous, lowered time and again to hide the hard eyes I knew were there. I was surprised by your interest; vital with intent, your lithe body tilted towards me, white teeth showing in a smile, breasts firm and unfettered in your summer blouse. Delirious with your fancy magic I nearly fell off the bar stool, fell like a fairy-tale frog clear down to the bottom of the mossy well, my member swelling in your favor, transported to to your body's joyful openings, anticipating hot and wet, those ports of entry, those sweet breasts, that sweet tongue flicking between your lips; promises of things to come. O ye spermy nights of the gods! The rune on our canoe's tail says "enter here, ye of little haste" and willows brush our arms as we paddle down the river of ardor and fulfillment and coming together and whatever else we can muster up from a time of dreams, from the manna of this earthly paradise. Olivia, you were brown as a nut from a summer of sun; a glamorous summer goddess there for the taking and still it came to nothing. A change of heart, a parting glance, and off you went. Your naked this I never saw, your curly that I never pawed; alone in the majestic garden of self I sit stiff and cold as a block of ice; a lonesome soldier in a sentry box waiting for the gate to open; it never does. Olivia, you left me as you found me and just as well for the both of us. There we were in that bar, and there we are forever, enshrined, inscribed like Keats’ Grecian urn, graceful outlines, a frieze of some long past event, at rest in that luminous wasted moment forever; no future, no past, no time at all and what never happened, what is not there just as real as what is there.
Jack D. Harvey’s poetry has appeared in Scrivener, The Comstock Review, Valparaiso Poetry Review, Typishly Literary Magazine, The Antioch Review, The Piedmont Poetry Journal and elsewhere. The author has been a Pushcart nominee and over the years has been published in a few anthologies.
The author has been writing poetry since he was sixteen and lives in a small town near Albany, New York. He is retired from doing whatever he was doing before he retired.
His book, Mark the Dwarf is available on Kindle. https://www.amazon.com/Mark Dwarf Jack D Harvey ebook
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)
Life. A Poem by Amita Sanghavi
Life:
The tear,
The sigh,
The twinkle in the eye.
The whisper,
The wrinkle,
The silent, true story
You and I survive.
Amita Sanghavi writes poetry, teaches at university and loves to visit art galleries and museums.She teaches English at Sultan Qaboos University, Muscat Oman. An is MA from Lancaster University, UK, she is pronounced Ambassador of Poetry to Oman by World Poetry, Canada and Representative of Immages&Poetry Art Movement, Italy and Affilate Researcher at CELCE University of Leeds, UK.
Her poetry book “Lavender Memories” and two edited poetry anthologies were published in 2018, 2020 and 2021 respectively. Her latest book s ‘Astad Deboo: Poetry in Dance’
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)
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)
King Kong vs. the Green Witch. A Poem by Richard L. Weissman
King Kong vs. the Green Witch Shuttered in that arched ceiling house with oversized window eyes, fear frozen as ten foot high Green Witch and King Kong square off neath crabapple tree beside the scotch heavy station wagon. Flared feminine nostrils bull out white choking smoke as accented witch hurls broomstick spears at Brooklyn's hairy ape. Uncertain who to root for I cower neath my cottony get, and pray for peace. Even now some nights that five-year-old boy revives ever cowering neath warm get as warbled voices of the long dead king and Green Witch, throw rock centered snowballs down from sad rooftops of this life. Amplified through sterile echo chambers, their cold white straitjackets bind me to safer letters, as pained hourglass grains drift relentlessly south. So I wake and puke up vanilla conformity echoing art house dramas or MGM movie plots, neutering unknown verses till they sound like every mediocre show on thin air. Whispering, "Picture this... it's easier," in hope that peace will come to this mental house divided if only I write as they want.
Bio:
Richard L Weissman has written fiction since 1987.
In 2000, his theatrical play, “The Healing” was selected by Abdingdon Theatre for a staged reading Off-Broadway.
Richard is the author of two Wiley Trading titles. His second book, Trade Like a Casino was selected as a Finalist for the 2012 Technical Analyst Book of the Year Award.
In 2016, Mr. Weissman completed his historical novel in the tradition of magical realism, “Generations”.
In 2020 his poem, “Mountain Bird and Loquat” was selected as the grand prize winner of the Florida Loquat Literary Festival.
In addition to hosting, “In Our Craft or Sullen Art” – a biweekly poetry radio talk show, Richard participates in live spoken word events throughout the U.S. https://richard-weissman.com/
on Facebook: @magicalrealismnovels
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)
Unexpected Disturbances & Rhododendrons Blooming in the Smokies. Two Poems by Gary Grossman
Unexpected Disturbances Damn, what the hell? I shuffle upstream, rod in hand, just outside the rhododendron line, and am struck by flying needles forearm, ankle and neck. effing yellow jackets. Mother drove poorly always fiddling, cigarettes or radio. until her ‘65 Karmann Ghia vaulted a 30 foot embankment on the road cleaving the sage-shrouded hills between Tecate and Tijuana – DOA— this story is true, not artistic license. I was orphaned at eighteen, no sibs, no dad. And so life is an erupting Krakatoa, a Hurricane Katrina, an unexpected disturbance, COVID-19, recession cancer, bipolarity and yellow jackets, till the chips are cashed.
Rhododendrons Blooming in the Smokies In Summer’s rumpled heat, the blue Scent of hemlocks slides upwards, Spreading comfort across the ridgetops. Stooped shoulders the ridges, remainders Of pinnacles, scoured by centuries Then slowly cloaked in oak and maple. Just below the ridgetops, an emerald Sea, sharp pines weaving winds That unfurl through the hollers. From the top of a ridge I can almost Touch them, reach down through wet air, To green-bedded pink blossoms. The fluttering hearts of a slow-rolling valley.
Gary Grossman is Professor Emeritus of Animal Ecology at University of Georgia. His poetry is published or forthcoming in 30 reviews including: Verse-Virtual, Your Daily Poem, MacQueen’s Quinterly, Poetry Superhighway, and Delta Poetry Review. Short fiction in MacQueen’s Quinterly and creative non-fiction in Tamarind Literary Magazine. For 10 years he wrote the “Ask Dr. Trout” column for American Angler. Gary’s first book of poems, Lyrical Years is forthcoming in 2023 from Kelsay Press, and his graphic novel My Life in Fish: One Scientist’s Journey is forthcoming. Hobbies include running, music, fishing, and gardening. Website: https://www.garygrossman.net/ Writing: Blog: https://garydavidgrossman.medium.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)