Art Treasures
April 7, 2026
Art Treasures / Garn Lake by Byron Beynon
April 6, 2026
A Paris Exhibition / House at Dusk by Jan Darrow
I planted flowers today
in my garden.
Nymphaea
from Monet’s Water Lilies.
The blooms
circled a stream of consciousness
altered by the willows and wisteria.
I watched for hours.
Altered blues morphed
into leafy lush and rose reflections.
The blush and shadows
balanced color changing greens.
Glassy hues.
Paint moved
like the summer sun
across the sky.
Irises crowned the edge.
Curved
brush strokes
splashed light.
House at Dusk
upstairs a door is closing
voices evaporate
the heat of the day is gone
outside
spent lilacs burnish color
onto panes of glass
trees spin darkness against the sky
the garden is iridescent
white clusters
of viburnum globes shimmer
in the filtering shadows
the earth shifts
you feel it if you’re silent
and then a gust of wind roars
through the trees
clouds move in but not before the stars
begin to move across the sky
they leave their pallor sails to the wind
while the crisp white moon
is forever moored to the tides
April 3, 2026
Photographs in Sepia / Climate Chatter by Mitali Chakravarty
Memories of a shuffled walk,
voices that called with love,
leave imprints of the past.
They remain but shadows
of yesteryears. They never
die or disappear, but linger
as part of an unspoken life.
Photographs in sepia smile,
invoking lives that no longer
breathe. Yet, they persist as
residues of what had been.
The images do not speak
or move. They are not
videos but moments
captured in fading shades.
They waft on a soft breeze,
a faint recall, and yet, stay
a part of our very being.
Stilled, vignettes still sing.
In an unknown future, what will
these remembrances mean?
Climate Chatter
It’s like summer in March.
The temperature’s up.
Near the equator, it rains.
But now there are no clouds.
There’s an unrelenting sun
beating us down and haze…
When the rain comes,
storms thunder to bring
down trees on cars or humans.
Old trees are cut, replaced by new.
Lightning strikes split the skies.
But that is only when it rains.
Earlier it poured everyday,
but the trees, they stayed.
Now, it’s seasonal and, ooh, the haze!
Old trees near my home,
where orioles roamed,
are now replaced by saplings.
I watch the world change
from my window, silencing
the television screen.
April 1, 2026
The First Step is Nothing But Air by Holly Day
to leap from its nest into the air for the first time
to not just take that first step out onto a branch
but to actually try to fly?
A scientist would tell me that it’s all
just instinct, that your average baby bird
has less fear where heights are concerned
than a baby taking its first upright, unsteady, unaided steps
But I would tell that scientist
that they must not ever have seen
a tiny sparrow, balanced wobbly on a tree branch
noisily squawking in protest at its parents on the ground below
unwilling or unable to join them for most of an afternoon.
March 30, 2026
The Crofter's Daughter / The History Teacher's Tobacco Pouch by Robert Nisbet
The Crofter’s Daughter
The teacher, plump, his jacket sad
with pipe smoke, brings her to the class.
I’d like us to welcome our little Hebridean.
It’s kindly meant. Indeed the class,
eleven years old themselves, are kind enough.
But there are so many, just so many children,
hundreds, a thousand, in that steel town school.
Passing from bell to bell, from week to week,
she likes learning Welsh, likes the crafts,
but she puzzles over rugby and the steel town’s lust
for such a muddy, heavy game. In Cornaig School,
they’d played rounders, twenty of them.
And then her mind rushes to the island,
where the white sandy machair spread
down the furlong from their farmyard
to the beach. They had dogs with island names,
Jura, Tobermory. And she’d be milking in the byre
before she went to school.
Now the steel town
and a couple of years’ unrecognised damnation.
The History Teacher’s Tobacco Pouch
He’d spread a plump tobacco pouch
before him, lunch times, at bridge,
rubbing out the warm brown curls
of Erinmore, letting float a light
Virginian scent, then tamping,
tamping down, pressing the orange
threads to service in the deep and blackened
bowl of his meerschaum. He liked
breast pocket handkerchiefs, ensigns
of red and purple, tilting oddly
askew by morning break. His nail file
would fire puffs of dust from his
pink, scrubbed nails. Only when the
lunch time bivouac had ended, would
he return to what he knew was always
there: the classroom door, the cruelty.
* Both poems appeared in Roundyhouse in 2012.
March 29, 2026
Mortals / Meditation by Catherine Zickgraf
Mortals
March 26, 2026
Soul Questions / Anxious Amble by Michael Keshigian
Soul Questions
He thought about his soul
as he walked forest trails
on a summer morning,
deciding it might be solid like his heart
rather than intangible like his mind.
Yet solid meant
it would eventually fail
and break apart
like the tender wings of a moth.
And if it were,
where might it be?
Could he be sure he had one?
Do others?
The fawn that crosses his path
then scampers in fright,
had the face of a child
confronting a stranger.
The black crow that caws concern
amid the pines
warns his brethren.
Bears retreat into caves
for sleep and survival.
Surely, they may posses
what he cannot locate.
It might have a shape
like a mountain
or resemble the beady eye of a loon.
Why wouldn’t a fox have one
or the robin who tenders her young
so carefully?
For that matter, why wouldn’t
the trees, the shrubs, or the lady slippers
with their big pink heads?
All living things bleed when they are cut.
Perhaps the soul is liquid.
The trees, on this late summer’s eve,
coerced him into believing
they could hear his thoughts,
sense his angst as they bent over
the path upon which he strolled
while night climb slowly
down their limbs
to absorb fading shadows
that danced the trail he trespassed
as the wind whimpered a whistle.
The ample leaves flailed
and quivered their percussive timbre,
a collective voice
that seemed to answer
his queries when breezes stoked the air,
silenced when the setting sun
stifled the airstream locomotion,
mitigating nature’s delicate response.
With everything quiet, everything dark,
the remembrance of another evening’s saunter
illuminated his mind,
an evening filled with laughter,
happy hearts,
bare-feet splashing in an ocean puddle,
a romantic caress; what heavy,
hurried steps he took to keep pace
with the bright image upon him
until it too faded into the current darkness
that consumed him,
steps that eventually guided him
to the sky at path’s end,
a clouded, misty sky,
where even the stars, night’s children,
those glimmers of hope
against infinite night,
were missing as well.