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Poetry

Tanka by Sadakichi Hartmann

April 15, 2022 By TBeaulieu

I.

Winter? Spring? Who knows?
White buds from the plumtrees wing
And mingle with the snows.
No blue skies these flowers bring,
Yet their fragrance augurs Spring.

II.

Oh, were the white waves,
Far on the glimmering sea
That the moonshine laves,
Dream flowers drifting to me,—
I would cull them, love, for thee.

III.

Moon, somnolent, white,
Mirrored in a waveless sea,
What fickle mood of night
Urged thee from heaven to flee
And live in the dawnlit sea?

IV.

Like mist on the leas,
Fall gently, oh rain of Spring
On the orange trees
That to Ume’s casement cling—
Perchance, she’ll hear the love-bird sing.

V.

Though love has grown cold
The woods are bright with flowers,
Why not as of old
Go to the wildwood bowers
And dream of–bygone hours!

VI.

Tell, what name beseems
These vain and wandering days!
Like the bark of dreams
That from souls at daybreak strays
They are lost on trackless ways.

Carl Sadakichi Hartmann, born in the late 1860s in Japan, was a dramatist, fiction writer, and art critic. His poetry collections include Naked Ghosts: Four Poems (Fantasia, 1925), Tanka and Haiku: 14 Japanese Rhythms (G. Bruno, 1915), and My Rubaiyat (Mangan, 1913). He died in November 1944.

Nucleosynthesis by Cyn Bermudez

April 14, 2022 By TBeaulieu

Fusion of hydrogen
breathing life
into the stars
burning brightly

Proton chain dangling
as the mighty ones
press helium into carbon

Nitrogen to oxygen
then iron halts it all
in a bang the dragon
brings death and life

Cyn Bermudez is a writer, poet, and artist living in California. She is the author of And the Moon Follows, Brothers, Graffiti Heart, and The Dragons Club (forthcoming). She writes in various genres: general, science fiction, fantasy, weird, horror, and more. She has short stories, poetry, and art published in various journals and anthologies. Cyn serves as the current president, program chair, and webmaster for the Writers of Kern, a chapter of the California Writers Club. She enjoys other creative outlets like photography, sketching, digital art, and painting. For more information, visit her website at www.cynbermudez.com.

Stay Connected! blog wordpress | instagram @cyncbermudez | twitter @cyncbermudez | editor Planisphere Quarterly | president Writers of Kern.

Sirena by Cyn Bermudez

April 13, 2022 By TBeaulieu

Cyn Bermudez is a writer, poet, and artist living in California. She is the author of And the Moon Follows, Brothers, Graffiti Heart, and The Dragons Club (forthcoming). She writes in various genres: general, science fiction, fantasy, weird, horror, and more. She has short stories, poetry, and art published in various journals and anthologies. Cyn serves as the current president, program chair, and webmaster for the Writers of Kern, a chapter of the California Writers Club. She enjoys other creative outlets like photography, sketching, digital art, and painting. For more information, visit her website at www.cynbermudez.com.

Stay Connected! blog wordpress | instagram @cyncbermudez | twitter @cyncbermudez | editor Planisphere Quarterly | president Writers of Kern.

Cotton Candy Delight by Jennette Green

April 12, 2022 By TBeaulieu

Pink cotton candy
Feathery clouds melt like air
Sweetness coats the tongue

Jennette Green writes sweet romance with a touch of spice. She fell in love with writing as a child and filled notebooks with stories. Her books have received “Reader’s Favorite Hero,” “Reviewer’s Choice Award” and more. She writes contemporary, historical, sci-fi and fantasy romance. Her contemporary romance, Snowstorm, was an international bestseller on Amazon.

Rain Lady by Ramona Acree Burnham

April 11, 2022 By TBeaulieu

The old rain lady came tap, tap, tapping.
“Come in, old woman.” I cried
And ne’er a word but rap-a-rapping.
Her cane she briskly plied.
Rap-tap the water was drop-a-dropping
from off the rain lady nose to toes.
Tap-rap the cane was plop-a-plopping.
From my feather soft bed, I arose.
The shade came down swish-a swishing
and hid the rain lady’s face–
But still I heard the twish-a-twishing
rap-tap cane all over the place.

Ramona Acree Burnham was born in 1914. She wrote most of her poems as a young adult. She left a loving legacy of creativity for her daughters in an old leather book in which she also collected “great thoughts” from writers and philosophers from around the world.

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