The Flaw

by Wes Civilz

 

The flaw arose ex nihilo last night
While I was sleeping solo. Like a line
Of bunched hives, there it was. Red, trailing snake-like
Out of one ear and down below my chin,
Helmet-strapping across the windpipe’s tube,
Meandering around the shoulder’s bend,
Folding around the elbow—subterfuge
And itch and slyness—finally to end
In tiny tendrils underneath my thumb.
I camouflage it when I leave for work.
I use a coat of flesh-tone paint and, um,
Feel almost normal. Like immoral artwork,
The winding, painted flaw is hidden soWell you could hug me and you’d never know.

 

 

 


Wes Civilz lives deep in the forests of New Hampshire. He posts writing-oriented videos on Instagram under the handle @wes_civilz, and his writing has appeared in journals such as The Antioch Review, The Threepenny Review, Arts & Letters, and Quarterly West.

2025-03-23T10:18:00-04:00March 22, 2025|

Bertha

by Sophia Carroll

 

I take it in turns, governess
& ungovernable.

Woman who fears knife-shine laughter,
& witch who descends from the attic.

Voice calling over the moors
& the one who answers it.

There is a hex in my blood,
& a trail of smoke from my pale hands.

Care is imprisonment
& I have learned to escape it.

Shut me in your skull-house
& I will burn it.

 

 

 


Sophia Carroll (she/they) is an analytical chemist and writer. Her work appears or is forthcoming in SmokeLong Quarterly, wildness, and elsewhere. She is also the co-founder of M E N A C E magazine. Find her on Substack at torporchamber.substack.com and on Bluesky @torpor-chamber.bsky.social.

2025-03-22T10:04:01-04:00March 22, 2025|

Ghazal for Missing Snow

by Sarah Mills

 

Mornings, we had an insatiable appetite for snow.
I served burnt toast, raspberry jam, egg-white snow.

Don’t you want to be happy? she asked, as if I could enter
happiness like the address of a website, store gigabytes of snow.

I knelt on a chevron rug and prayed while listening
to ruby-throated hummingbirds migrate. On the skylight, snow.

The meteorologist’s predictions were sharp as stalactites.
He assured me: below 32 degrees Fahrenheit—snow.

When I was a child, snow accumulated for days, like teeth
overcrowding Earth’s mouth—an overbite of snow.

I ask the postal clerk how long it will take happiness to arrive
in my mailbox. She sells me insurance, offers to expedite snow.

At night, his ghost visits me wearing a puffer jacket and red scarf.
He hovers above my bed like a satellite—midnight snow.

I gather the glitter from a broken snow globe.
It glistens like a future, a sword, an armored knight, snow.

These words fall like flurries and land on a blank page.
As the author of this poem, can I copyright snow?

The universe’s indifference gives me frostbite, so I rub my hands
together. With these sparks, I’ll write and recite snow.

The Tragicomedy of Sarah Mills. A curtain rises, a curtain falls.
Just before the lights dim, enter stage right—snow.

 

 

 


Sarah Mills’s poetry has appeared or is forthcoming in RHINO, trampset, Jet Fuel Review, HAD, Rust & Moth, Pithead Chapel, Beaver Mag, Identity Theory, The Shore, and elsewhere. Her work has been nominated for Best of the Net and the Pushcart Prize. She is online at sarahmillswrites.com, and on Bluesky @sarahmillswrites.bsky.social.

2025-03-16T10:13:20-04:00March 16, 2025|

Fallow

by Carole Anzovin

 

Here I lie, my virtue spent.
I am the sharp-edged eggshell,
the empty ooetheca,
the crumpled cereal-box liner
without even the dust of breakfast.

It is my brown season,
a color like November,
belly-full with cloudy skies
and the whispering of frost.
I can only rest. Be vacant.
Slip out of my routines.

Dust and cobwebs gather.
The lightest feathering of snow
falls. My bones feel the hardwood
floor through the carpeting.
In the gathered stillness,
only breath can be heard.

 

 

 


Carole Anzovin (she/her) lives and writes in Western Massachusetts. Her poems have appeared in The Cackling Kettle, Silkworm, Impossible Archetype, Corvid Queen, and other journals. Find her online at @sunhearthpoetry.bsky.social and living-vividly.com

2025-03-15T09:59:12-04:00March 15, 2025|

Indian River Will-o’-the-Wisp

by Rosangela Batista

 

Afterone hurricaneafter another

I came to understand
this will-o’-the-wisp.

After the will-o’-the-wisp
I came to understand the wind
gravedigger’s toil on the sandy
barrier islands.

An impatient gravedigger,
this Florida Wind.
Exhumes carcasses of beings
who have not completed their Bardo,
who didn’t even lose their teeth.

That bituminous night
beyond the howl of the whirling
Sabal palms, the sudden bluish
flame flickered, the riverbank
appeared like the plume
of an exhausted rocket.

It grew and retreated, meandered
uncertain of the journey.
The light of the liquefied creatures
excavated from their dens
thrown by the winds
from here to there.

The dead breath
of the will-o’-the-wisp
from Florida shook
the blue-gill fish, alligators
from the NASA swamps.
The great blue heron ejected himself
heading toward the Atlantic like a war missile.

 

 

 

Rosangela posted her Portuguese version of this poem at facebook.com/Poems4Calm/


Rosangela Batista is a Brazilian-American writer based in Florida. Her poems have appeared in The Wallace Stevens Journal, LitBreak, The Westchester Review, Poets for Science, and Gavea-Brown.

2025-03-09T12:26:12-04:00March 9, 2025|
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