NATURE Poem: The Island Versus the Bush, by Sara Hailstone

The island holds her like the womb
she feels safe inside the circumference of shores.
Bridges like doorways have been her extensions,
the ice has broken apart and there are birds floating.
The land rolls out from the lips of the Bay blanket-like,
the ancient trees logged for hulls and architecture,
cleared, sectioned and severed, she eyes maps,
the white arms of the birches remain reaching towards sky.
The winds whip slanted from the water, cheeks red and burnt,
there are snow drifts she navigates around and plateaus of ice.
Juniper bushes encase the island’s visage like heavy burrs,
choking out other vegetation, it fools her to think of fire
and what a land would look like after such ravage.
There are stunted pine trees with red tips that echo of heat,
drought and burning; she hugs her arms around her, closes her eyes.

She came from the rock, the mineral deposits above the immense
Canadian Shield and she cannot feel the pull of Neolithic enthral
on this island of Juniper and Pine. Her eyes look for boulders,
the massive dark giants of the great moving water and her heart
beats to a rhythm of black rivers and the mysterious bellies of lakes.
She came from the bush her hair braided with thick vegetation,
the jungle of a northern scale that tipped weights amongst survival.
Grist mills and mines, marl and clay, the fool’s Gold that ushered
in an industrial migration leaving only names of honoured euphoria:
Eldorado, Ivanhoe, Madoc, Queensborough, Deloro, Marmora.
Her mouth cups the names of places and the secrets she knows there,
the rivers like friends that open into oasis and she scans the skyline for
her trees, the Maples and Elm, saplings and large Oaks, the romance
of Weeping Willows, she grew up in their enticing shadows.

The dichotomy of cultures cuts knifelike drawing blood,
she’s stepped into womanhood in the middle of comparison.
They perceive island heavenly, rich in economy and culture,
there are novelists here and poets, artists and wine-makers,
businessmen and teachers, they carry the idealism of refined
socialization on their shoulders with pride and they can look
her in the eyes when she enters, they can be kind and give her
a simple un-barbed hello. She is her own here and not someone’s
sister, or daughter, or lover, or uncomfortable wayward waif.
The County, that pride, the love of home: the Northerners fear
such open expression and become lost in stereotype.

Languae flattens, alters perception, and she knows that
some overlook the beauty of the rock, the curve of river,
for money and material things, for main streets and prosperity.
They stomp along the Shield and look down on their faces reflected
in the currents of transforming rivers. They become rough like
landscape and as untamed as the Northern vine.

The island holds her like the womb
she feels safe inside the circumference of shores,
for now, while she regains her footing, her bearings.
But, she misses dreaming and the imagination of the woods,
she yearns for rock faces, rivers carving into the raw breathe of forest,
her muse, rural ruin, she writes listening to the spirit of the North,
despite the frame of her windows that hold the edges of island,
the emptiness of field, and the low quiet melodies of Juniper and Pine.

NATURE Poem: (( Elucid reality Untold )), by Goalnar Mioini

A cappella echoes in the highland of Kilimanjaro, riding the wind swiftly,
On tunes it goes around, comes around.
Caressing the head of sleeping volcano.
Upheavals rock body dressed in snow white bridal, Shiny flakes role-play as pearls and jewels
laying down on the skirt.

X- Climbers footprints stamped snowy passageway,
Inking fifty shades of Grey on white bridal And it’s no more plain.
Like a bold signature
Though-Soon-to-be-melted-
Confirming that journey lasts longer than its tale!
Without any explosion or grunt
Kilimanjaro stays still and the echo lives on and on.

Seasons out there do play dice,
Tossing & turning,
Therefore and thus,
And then revise!
True Wins outnumber our loss.

NATURE Poem: The Wasteland, by Tridip Patir

I send this message out
To a herd of sheep
To a generation of men, I ask
Are you happy with how it’s turned out to be?

Can we not find a place of respite?
Are we stuck in this wasteland for eternity?
Forgive me for being so blunt….or don’t
Weren’t you the ones sent for our reprieve?

What went wrong, you followed a fool
You followed him to the gates of hell.
Not a moment of thought, not a minute of reason
You followed him to the halls of death.

Now tell me how are we to live like this
With not a morsel to fill our hungry bellies
Rain may wash away your committed sins
But who washes away your childrens’ scars?

Now what have you to say for yourselves?
You generation of fools?
What have you to show for yourselves?
You herd of paupers?

You warred against your own brothers
Slayed and bathed in your own blood
You drifted from the ideals of your ship
Under false notion of motherly love

Now look at this wasteland
None resides where you once slept
Your children, they are of the last
We are….of the last.

You killed your own bountiful mother
And you warred against your own brothers
You slayed your own blood
Under false notion of motherly love

What went wrong, you followed a fool
You followed him to the gates of hell
Not a moment of thought, not a minute of reason
You followed him to the halls of death.

Now what have you to say for yourselves
You generation of fools?
What have you to show for yourselves
You herd of paupers?

What have you to show for yourselves
You generation of fools?

NATURE Poem: Nature’s Gift, by Qudus Ishola

Work calls and your anxiety peaks;
No worries, life will move on soon.
Give your body some rest,
My friend,
For life will go on,
With or without you.

You vouch for tomorrow
And mouth prayers for grains of fortune
The river takes
To the mouth of the sea;
Vouch and mouth,
For these are nature’s proof.

You toil for ends
On an empty stomach;
Thunder growls
In the depth of your soul.
Your body is hungry for salve —
Please feed from nature’s fruits.

Clear bullets of water
Pelt the earth;
Sustenance rises, slowly but surely,
In defiance
Of our time and space.
Nature’s fruits are for the living.

Life’s subtle truth is said
In roars;
So listen to the crashing
Of the waves.
There you hear tales from the deep,
There you see life
Being given and taken.

Life presents paths
To prosper;
Only those who dare
Enjoy the loot.
Worry less about tomorrow and live;
Live a little
Before your youth is taken.

Knock, knock,
And say the pass code:
“Kindness to nature,”
That’s the code of life.
Nature gifts from what we have sown—
You exist as part of a grand plan

LOVE Poem: HOMESICK, by Lane O’Conner

I have never gotten seasick in the way the dictionary says.
I have never felt the rocking of you and been dizzy from it.
I have never swallowed too much of your salt,
I have never swam too far so I’d drown.
I have only ever felt like I was engulfed in you,
flowing with your waves.
I have swallowed your salt, and I have swam far out,
But it never hurt.
It had never hurt like it hurts to be away from you.
I’m seasick,
But in the way that when tears fall down my face and roll into my mouth, I can only taste your saltiness.
I dream that I’m near you, and everything is right.
I’m flowing free in your water.
But I’m not with you. I’d give anything to feel a wave roll over me,
But all I feel is the waves within, pulling me back as the tide recedes.
And then I’m always pushed back with the same force I’m pulled by.
I am not seasick in the way that people are because they have too much of you.
I am seasick because I have too little of you.
Humans drown in the ocean. Fish dry up on land.
Ocean, I think I could never drown in you, because I am already beached like a dying whale, drying out in the sun.

LGBTQ+ Poem: Cavity, by Savannah Wade

I roll you around in my mouth like an old fashioned caramel.
You soak on my tastebuds. A cracked golden pearl.
Isn’t it a terrible sin? To pass from mouth to mouth.
Shared by lovers, ending before it begins.
A furious exchange, a loose curl of muscle finding muscle.

Powerful in our making.
Biblical in our making.
Kings and whores know our language.
Twisted in syllables.
Sweet in exchange.
Yet –

Who amongst us does not want
The pulled sugar, the crystals, edible glass.
The divot, the sharp edges, sugary and crass.
If it has your name, I want it buried in my inner jaw.

LGBTQ+ Poem: Before/After, by Vincent Myers

As I trim my beard, the way I always did, a tear comes to my eye.
I wash hair down the drain, but memories remain.
One thing is still the same.
I’ll continue to trim my beard.
But it won’t be with you.
I’m at peace with that.

I haven’t seen you in over two years.
What will you look like?
How will I feel?
Even though questions endure.
The hair goes down the drain.
Memories remain.

I dreamt of you.
And thought of you.
I wrote about you.
I came anew.

Conversation and pleasantries.
Then emotion.
Sick family members and hard times.

I met your new somebody.
I saw your dog.
He looked like ours.
You said that was intentional.

I floated through the museum like a ghost.
A museum I typically love.
Mind was elsewhere.
Body disconnected.

I held back tears on the C train.
A few fell on the way.
Back at the apartment.
I could barely see.
It felt good to release what had been damned.

LGBTQ+ Poem: Wire Girl, by Atticus Combs

As a child, I was made of wire
Crooked arms, crooked teeth
Crooked smile

I practiced my face in the mirror
Lips pulled tight, eyes forced wide
Never quite right

Bent, pulled, straightened
I was molded under the steady hands
Of everyone who was more right than me

As a child, I was a wire girl
Small and quiet and dressed up
A princess on Halloween

I am not a wire girl
Bent because I am
Not because I am forced to be

My smile does not sit perfectly
Yellow-toothed and crooked
A snarling boy who plays in mud

As a child, I was a little boy
Wrapped in pink barbed wire
Dressed up and hateful for it

LGBTQ+ Poem: US, by Robin Robinson

Touch the crypt of my chest
and I take you like quicksand.
Count my ribs like the rippling teeth of a piano
and make me too hungry to think.
I could unzip you with my lips,
your throat tart with sweat.
I could dip into you. I could ask
forgiveness from the wildfire
of my skin, and it would give
me forgiveness, still warm.
One day, I will make my imperfect
body shelter and we will swap
apologies like spit.
Isn’t it enough
that our illegible bodies creep
into each other like watercolors,
tongues falling into the purples
and blues of the unlit room,
skin revealing meat, meat revealing
bone, bone revealing marrow.

LGBTQ+ Poem: Even After This I Wish, by Caleb Edwards

I wish I hated you
But I can’t hate people I love
There are worse things you could have done
And your existence in my life was never one

I wish I hated the way you talked
But your voice was a mello instrument
That could pull discordant strings and come out making sense
The way your lips parted in passion kept my soul and therefore my life

I wish I hated more
I never forget things I should
Like the way your curled hair made brown look gold
Or how scruff never seemed softer

I wish I hated your memory
But whenever I see a half smile your name is attached
And suddenly you are in front of me
As if you never left

I wish I hated writing
Because instead of homework I’m writing
You distract me still even after all you haven’t done
And I wish I could stop

I wish I could stop thinking
Maybe then you’d leave my mind
And maybe then I’d be free
Maybe then I could learn to hate

I wish I didn’t want to hate you
And I wish you were still here
I wish I could still make you free lunch
And I wish you could talk me to sleep

I wish we could continue where we left off
In the next morning when I wake
I want to hear you talk for hours on end
About passions I now share with you

I wish I could stop wishing
For someone other than myself
Because I’ve realized every person has a hope limit
And I’ve burned two years worth on you