Category Archives: Poetry

Why Write

by Ed Bok Lee

The castle where I happened upon the roundness of suns
was an island prison on the ocean

No one visited my distractions here
or my more joyful sins

A sanctuary of sound and sense

The waves brought shells and seaweed I learned
to fill with palm honey Continue reading

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Ice and Regret

by Ann Howells

November,
moon of falling cold,
ice blighted, snow infested,

overcast sky tightened down—
fierce and oppressive—
as earth pulls cold around her. Continue reading

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Tiger Swallowtail

by Lisa Roullard

You arrived: leaf-like, designed—
black sparked across yellow.
A study in thin.

One black tail broken off.
Abdomen crumpled
like tea-stained paper. Continue reading

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Snow Holds

by Anastasia Stelse

Because I am visiting home,
I shovel snow
pregnant with more
than the average moisture
as it whites out the world,
houses merely mountains,
houses the peaks of Swiss Alps
where lies a castle carved
from so much ice—a glacier Continue reading

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A Child Speaks to Libokra

by Jacquelyn Markham

A myth on the Bikini Atoll, claims that Libokra, an evil female spirit, once lived in the southern Marshalls where Rongerik was originally located. She stole the atoll, hid it among the northern islands, and attempted to settle at Bikini, but was driven off by Orijabato, a benevolent male spirit who resided there and guarded the Bikinians. The elders say Libokra fled and everywhere she visited, fish became poisoned and the crops declined. Her body, cast into the lagoon, poisoned the fish that since then make people sick when eaten.
R. Kiste, The Bikinians

Libokra, my father said it was you
that came to Bikini before the people had to leave
and that Orijabato drove you off
because you were evil
Continue reading

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