Congratulations to Nan Wigington, the winner of our ekphrastic Christmas contest! Thank you to everyone who entered. You can read the other selected poems and stories here and here. We are so happy to see so many people getting hooked on ekphrastic. Look for more challenges and contests in the future. ** Return from the Woods Although she's not tired, Gretel stops, drops the reins. The toboggan she has pulled for miles glides over the crust of snow, bumps her calves, knocks loose a dusting of green needles from her shoulders, a cone of gray hair from her cap. She stares at the village, its low slung roofs, the yellow lights that shimmer from this window, that. No smoke billows from any chimney. They haven't changed, still cold, still hungry, still living by dim candlelight. She wonders who might notice her return. The father, the mother could only be dead. But surely someone remembered – Hansel, Gretel, the girl, the boy, their journey into the ravenous wild? Something black flaps in the church belfry. Crows? A new priest drunk on wine and winter fumbling up the spiral stairs to ring the vespers bell? Did the people pray anymore? A weight of bread bulges in Gretel's coat pocket, presses against her thigh. She pulls it out, bites into its brown sweetness. It tastes of smoke and ginger, witches and brothers, sin and cinnamon. It sucks at her teeth like sour fruit and jelly. Oh, the village. They would only understand salt and fat, never sugar or skin, incest and lust, witch and boy, boy and girl, girl and woman. It was how they lived, safe and warm in a magic cottage, all appetite and answer, touch and pleasure. These people in those dirty dwellings only knew pain. They bore so many children for the oven. “Why are the children the ones we always sacrifice?” Hans had asked once. “Because they are so delicious and fat?” The witch had answered. Who grew tired of the dirty kisses first, the squall of birth, the cloying odor of mother's milk? Meat made them all angry. Hans said he was tired of picking out the bones. The witch's spices grew bitter and exotic. Gretel found herself wandering away, never bringing back the mushrooms or the wild strawberries she found. Hans would not chop the wood anymore. The witch refused to bring in the water, choosing to fill their cups with supernatural wine instead. They all grew gaunt, moral, quick to argue about what was wrong, what was right. Hans succumbed first, his eyes, his mouth wide open as if screaming. The witch died in her bed, a smile on her lips, her sweet wine staining her sheets, her wand tangled in her tresses. Gretel grieved for awhile, but then she turned a rock into licorice, the river into marzipan. She transformed a bear into a tree trunk, snakes into branches. She stoked the witch's ovens again, but made only nut pies and raisin bread. Gretel looks at the village again, thinks of turning back. The people will probably throw her in a pit, hang her from a tree, stone her, burn her. Still she wanted to tell them of the house, its impossible arches, its sugar windows, its bitter flavor. She wanted to tell them of its promise and its lie. Yes, God walks its passageways, but the devil walks right beside Him. Gretel puts the bread back in her pocket. It's no lighter than when she took the first bite. She picks up the reins, wraps them around her shoulders, and trudges on. The wood piled high in the toboggan behind her writhes, kicks like a child waiting to be born. Nan Wigington Nan Wigington lives and works in Colorado's capital city. Her flash fiction has appeared in Pithead Chapel, The Ekphrastic Review, Gordon Square Review, and in After the Pause.
4 Comments
Editor's Note: This is the second selection of entries for the Christmas Isn't Cancelled ekphrastic prompt collection. The first selection was published on Christmas Day. Click here to read them. The contest winner will be announced and awarded shortly. ** The Angel Ellen sighs. Almost Christmas. Not that she gives a farthing these days! With her sleeves rolled up, she sweats, labouring in a haze of steam; around her scuffed boots, filthy water; her hair hangs limply, like greased string; from the low ceiling, constant drips; slopping around in her sink, the soiled linen of London’s finest. With vigour, she scrubs petticoats, swills cotton, dabs with blue at the city’s grime, stiff within each collar. Outside, snow swirls and drifts. She needs to get finished; this weather will get worse. Better hurry if she’s to be paid! There’s still wringing and rinsing; still this heap of clothes for the high and mighty: they’ll need them for next week’s swanky soirées. She sighs, loudly this time, trying to forget those few Christmas pasts when the sun seemed to shine out of her backside. Grabbing her shawl and mittens, she clasps a bucket and heads out into the street. As she goes, she hums The Holly and the Ivy, remembering. * Dante Gabriel Rossetti’s hand slowly tilts her chin, this way, that way, until he is satisfied. He smooths her wavy hair so that the gilt hairclip is balanced just above her left ear. He whispers to her to open her lips slightly. She laughs. He strokes her mouth into position, instructs her to imagine she is singing something holy, like Hodie Christus natus est. Ellen pulls a face, bursts out laughing. She tells the artist that she’s never heard of it or that lingo, but would The Holly and the Ivy do? She belts out the carol before he can stop her. He asks her not to sing but to simply imagine pure, sweet, heavenly music: her lips must remain still. She informs him that it’s a cold March morning not Christmas and if he doesn’t want her teeth chattering, it would help if more coal could kindly be put on the fire. The artist frowns. Ellen sighs. She knows that look by now. It’s time to do as she’s told: that’s what she’s paid for. She knows what she owes him: he’s plucked her out of the laundry, given her hope. So, she takes up her position, clutches the strange-looking instrument, moulds her mouth into a chaste, unworldly gawp. She breathes slowly, drifts into a daydream, keeping perfectly still. Rossetti smiles, paints as she poses, hour after hour. * Outside, it’s raw; the tips of her chapped fingers feel numb. Under her hot breath, a stream of oaths as she heaves and cranks the water-pump’s handle, her neck, arms and back aching. She pauses, shrugs, lifts, twists, pulls at her shoulders, then begins pumping again: there’s no time to idle, not like back then. * Today, she is an angel, singing of the Holy Birth. She leans against a beautiful flowery wall; she is an angel with a fine clip, studded with pearls, fastened into her auburn hair; around her neck, emeralds; she wears a pretty patterned, satin gown; she plucks the strings of a golden lyre; her eyes are clear blue; her fresh, softly flushed face almost brushes against an icon of the Holy Mother and Child; her gaze is heavenwards. * Water spills over the bucket’s brim. Ellen is lugging the bucket by the handle towards the yard when her shawl slips onto snow. She curses, pitches the bucket down, grabs the shawl, gives it a shake and brush. She’s about to wrap it round her head again, when she turns to see a tiny tot, with her gran, peering up at her. Ellen grins. The little one screams. The old woman drags the child away, scolding her. Ellen watches them go; all the time, her fingers trace the ugly scars criss-crossing her face. She tries not to be, but she is bitter. One minute she’s coining it in, just for sitting around dolly-daydreaming at the ceiling. The next, no artist will look her in the eye, let alone paint her. Who wants the likeness of a smashed pot that’s been stuck back together badly? And all because some soldier, who fancied his chances and didn’t want other men gawping at her, set to work with a knife! But that was then.This is now. She has shirts and bloomers to attend to. Snow-flakes pirouette across the cobbles. Ellen and her bucket trudge back to the sink. Down the street, she hears an out-of-tune drunk strangling Hark the Herald. * The end of another long sitting in his studio. Staring in wonder at Rossetti’s painting, Ellen suddenly senses what he sees in her: she is beautiful; a proper stunner. This painting will be the making of her! There’ll be a queue of gentleman artists begging her to sit. She can put up her prices too. She’ll never have to do a proper day’s work again! Studying her own sweet angelic face, Ellen can’t help smiling. Dorothy Burrows Based in the UK, Dorothy Burrows enjoys writing flash fiction, poetry and short plays. Her work has been published online by various websites including The Ekphrastic Review, Words for the Wild, Another North, Failed Haiku, The Poetry Pea and also in Mslexia’s newsletter. The Ekphrastic Review has nominated one of her flash fictions, “Four Horses, Two Friends, One Postcard” for Best Short Fictions 2021. She tweets @rambling_dot ** Winter Spirit a soft white blanket muffles the valley’s floor as four wrapped-up youngsters gaze and giggle at the world’s sparkle, then they start to play the youngest child pats snowballs, still happy at the bottom of the pile the next in the line, with little dog on lead, barks orders at elders second-in-command shouts back, icily proud, fierce, fighting for status big brother artist works, absorbed in creation, above silly games snow blankets cedars as children shiver, shaping their winter spirit: it appears in laughter but will leave when the tall trees weep Dorothy Burrows Based in the UK, Dorothy Burrows enjoys writing flash fiction, poetry and short plays. Her work has been published online by various websites including The Ekphrastic Review, Words for the Wild, Another North, Failed Haiku, The Poetry Pea and also in Mslexia’s newsletter. The Ekphrastic Review has nominated one of her flash fictions, “Four Horses, Two Friends, One Postcard” for Best Short Fictions 2021. She tweets @rambling_dot ** Tanka the boys used so much snow to build their ice giant I was really cross they barely left me enough to mould one little rabbit Sheila Lockhart Sheila Lockhart is a retired social worker and lives on the Black Isle in the Scottish Highlands. She is a member of Ross-shire Writers and the Moniack Mhor writers’ group and has been published in Northwords Now, Nine Muses Poetry, Twelve Rivers (Suffolk Poetry Society), the StAnza Poetry Map of Scotland, The Writers’ Cafe and the Ekphrastic Review. ** Double Yoked Holiday fever had us elbow To elbow in sweaters two For one if You could find the Same size but then It didn’t matter really after Awhile the joy of Color and pattern eclipsing Sense until we Grabbed the same one at The same time pulling Then realizing we were in The same egg, burning eye to eye for The other to let go when a Restock dropped by the Salesgirl with brighter Prospects caught your eye and Opened your hand to seize that Purple leopard print from the wild Melee instead while I kept clutching that Yellow buffalo check all the way to The register. Strangers still we spotted each other Again that weekend at a company Christmas party you in the Same careful cashmere as I coloured Chagrined knowing the secrets of Each other’s closets and The mad whirl Inside filling them Still in the same egg. Kate Bowers Kate Bowers is a Pittsburgh based writer whose work has appeared in The Ekphrastic Review, Rue Scribe, and Sheila-Na-Gig. ** Toast on Your Wedding Anniversary To a couple who’re yoked together like two oxen pulling through snow, who toil towards progress and plod without counting steps or kicking each other, who endure obstacles – eyes like stars, horns top-lit and chains adorned with bells. If I lift off your harness, I sense you’d choose to stay together, your bodies in sturdy balance. Patient with your lot, you low and trample hard clods underfoot searching for the next bellyful. You stand out – blue skies or grey. Helen Freeman Helen Freeman started writing poetry during recovery time from a serious road traffic accident in Oman and got hooked. She has been published in several magazines and supplements including with Corbel Stone Press, Ink, Sweat and Tears, Clear Poetry, Algebra of Owls, Ground Poetry, Your One Phone-call, Open Mouse, Red River Review, Barren Magazine, The Drabble, Sukoon, Poems for Ephesians and The Ekphrastic Review. Some of her ekphrastic poems were published alongside related Diane Rendle paintings at an exhibition in Open Eye Gallery, Edinburgh. She taught English for many years in Kenya, Tanzania, Oman and Dubai and now lives in Durham, England. The Merry Troll A merry little troll droll and demonic sidesteps the hearth at Christmas a naughty little heathen is he. Behooded in a red-and-white cape smote with ashes and soot this furtive oddball Sinterklaas this gnarly grotesque mischief-maker jests rude gestures with his fingers and his nose. A wicked prankster a Victorian Grinch he clambers up the cold stone chimney and chortles with an ogreish laugh after snatching gifts and stealing off with stocking treasures leaving behind no clementines only a sour lemon cut in half and its rind. A fragile angel in the sack on his back watches over him through the coal chute before he scurries away to a reindeerless sleigh snowbanked on Christmas Eve. Tanya Adèle Koehnke Tanya Adèle Koehnke is a member of The Ontario Poetry Society (TOPS) and the Scarborough Poetry Club. Tanya's poems appear in The Ekphrastic Review, The Canvas, Big Arts Book, Canadian Woman Studies, Foreplay: An Anthology of Word Sonnets, and other publications. Tanya taught English at several post-secondary institutions in Toronto. Tanya also has a background in arts journalism. ** The Ice-Maiden She isn’t all there her eyes say to us pity, sadness, shock shimmering a pearl and crystal veil the white dress drapes in the white of perfection her face, the beauty of rescue all those broken red hearts she gathers in the cold blue night holds cupped in her hands like a shaman her attendant white bears are guardians of heartbreak as she carries the sadness with her to warm it at her hearth Amy Phimister Amy Phimister is a writer who resides in Sturgeon Bay, Wisconsin. She is a member of the Wisconsin Fellowship of Poets and has been published by WFOP, Yardstick Books and The Ekphrastic Review, and was a finalist for the Hal Prize. She and her cousin have written a children’s book called A-B-C the Animals which will be released by Sand Beach Press in December. Unprecedented I tried my best to be stern, even raised a finger at her, ballooning my wings, brandishing my sceptre, but I tell you my heart was racing like a sonic boom. My knees crumpled. My cape flapped about. I thought she’d never accept such a seismic request. She just knelt there, lily-white, allowing the page to turn. Helen Freeman Helen Freeman started writing poetry during recovery time from a serious road traffic accident in Oman and got hooked. She has been published in several magazines and supplements including with Corbel Stone Press, Ink, Sweat and Tears, Clear Poetry, Algebra of Owls, Ground Poetry, Your One Phone-call, Open Mouse, Red River Review, Barren Magazine, The Drabble, Sukoon, Poems for Ephesians and The Ekphrastic Review. Some of her ekphrastic poems were published alongside related Diane Rendle paintings at an exhibition in Open Eye Gallery, Edinburgh. She taught English for many years in Kenya, Tanzania, Oman and Dubai and now lives in Durham, England. Lone Oak in December Stark bleak tree cobwebbed with spidery branches mazed in battleship grey how majestic and desolate you are. When soft white flakes dance upon your outstretched rickety limbs your spindly tenacious beauty sparkles as though captured in a snow globe. A crystal city in winter mauve is the backdrop for your being your trunk bends to support your fragile weight that has toiled through the seasons. How you pine to find your roots like the ones in a family tree but what is the genealogy of a lonely individual with no ties to ground them? Shake and the snow falls all around you Oh, beautiful grey tree. Tanya Adèle Koehnke Tanya Adèle Koehnke is a member of The Ontario Poetry Society (TOPS) and the Scarborough Poetry Club. Tanya's poems appear in The Ekphrastic Review, The Canvas, Big Arts Book, Canadian Woman Studies, Foreplay: An Anthology of Word Sonnets, and other publications. Tanya taught English at several post-secondary institutions in Toronto. Tanya also has a background in arts journalism. When Will the Counting Stop? She harvested figs, counting them into baskets and counted days waiting for a baby. Some months one came and left before she could count breaths. So she tended trees. Finally, a son. All year she counted feeds, smiles, words, steps. She counted paces round Bethlehem – her lovely town, until suddenly it wasn’t. See her cower – bullet eyes, arms glued, bare feet kicking, cornered by bulls ripping her apart? She’s glaring at us, petrified by our choices, the weapons we wield, the boots we’ve donned. She’s still counting other mothers all around the world cradling doomed children, running for their lives. Helen Freeman Helen Freeman started writing poetry during recovery time from a serious road traffic accident in Oman and got hooked. She has been published in several magazines and supplements including with Corbel Stone Press, Ink, Sweat and Tears, Clear Poetry, Algebra of Owls, Ground Poetry, Your One Phone-call, Open Mouse, Red River Review, Barren Magazine, The Drabble, Sukoon, Poems for Ephesians and The Ekphrastic Review. Some of her ekphrastic poems were published alongside related Diane Rendle paintings at an exhibition in Open Eye Gallery, Edinburgh. She taught English for many years in Kenya, Tanzania, Oman and Dubai and now lives in Durham, England. Angels The sky was midnight-blue, just a few pale stars to guide the flocks, all the rest darkness. A dull clatter of sheep bells in the hills. Then the almighty flash above our heads. Words were spoken or maybe sung. We had to screw our eyes against the brightness. Angels? Heavenly host? They looked more like ghosts, long thin substance-less things, no wings, pale faces, arms and legs, like crucified boys hanging there in the midnight sky. But beneath their feet the frozen earth blossomed, primroses, crocuses, violets, the flowers of Spring. Sheila Lockhart Sheila Lockhart is a retired social worker and lives on the Black Isle in the Scottish Highlands. She is a member of Ross-shire Writers and the Moniack Mhor writers’ group and has been published in Northwords Now, Nine Muses Poetry, Twelve Rivers (Suffolk Poetry Society), the StAnza Poetry Map of Scotland, The Writers’ Cafe and the Ekphrastic Review. Editor's Note: The second selection of Christmas challenge ekphrases will post today at noon. Happy New Year everyone! ** In the Nuptial Chamber, the Sun Shines What the sun thinks when happy That she is multitudinous That she is a gift giver Of turtles and lotus She greets Shiva Invites the salamander And Phoenix to fly She is concupiscence The joy of birth and release From darkness. She is sunrise and sunset at once And when she cries, for joy, Her tears are yellow. She is fecundly epicene Over full with two Too many sexes And many eyes to see it And red lips to taste it. When will the lotus bloom? Will you be there Will you ride the elephant Onto this teaming canvas? Lucie Payne Lucie Payne is a retired librarian who has spent the last 25 years encouraging others to write and she is now taking up her advice and writing as much as she can. ** Still Not so noble—the truths I tell. Still, I share how it is I love. I tell that once upon a time, I meet a dog named Dharma and how ill-behaved he was. I knew a monk named Gerry and still, I know several men with the name Jesus. But still, it is the women called Mary who outnumber them all. Bless me, I chant and stretch arms wide to place a turquoise mala overhead to rest at the pulse of my throat. It’s the same head blessed sixty plus years ago though I don’t remember the splash or the honor nor the song that was sung. And still—we call it holy wine. The bread we offer to birds & squirrels. Amen. Patty Joslyn Patty Joslyn moved to Cape Cod, Massachusetts from Mendocino County, California, in 2018. She is fascinated with both death and birth as passages into new realms. As a writer she has been published in El Calendario de Todos Santos, poetsonline.org, VOYA, (Voices of Youth Advocates) Tupelo Press-30/30 Project-March 2015, and several anthologies. She has been a guest presenter at many events. Patty’s book ru mi nate was born in 2017 and she has eight self-published chapbooks. She and her husband share four wonderful grown children. Patty has never fully recovered from empty nest syndrome or the fact she can no longer do a cartwheel. She was once a wedding and birth photographer; now she simply tries to capture moments of beauty in each new moment. ** The Machinery They Sent to the Heavens And they reached and reached all the way up until their children swallowed stars. Hot bolts held the wondrous thing together while the sky shook, and when girders and gears rested on the skeletons of angels, the strangers rested, too, slept between two rivers, which erased their names. And they told the story of a child on a stone, sent girls out to ziggurats and tribes with bowls of smoke and balm from herbs. Together they rebuilt the world. The story is an old one except this time it’s told with songs, dream songs around a fire-- They designed a kind of machinery to listen to prayers, sing to lepers and bless the wicked. Yes, I have seen it-- It has a face of dials, voice of storms, and all of it went up, hung on the constellations. And they knew the mystery and workings of it: its immortal hum for Cassiopeia, which is how it communes even now with the earth below-- and all that moves upon it—star-crossed healers, the jangling spell-struck and raped. It ticks in the sun’s celebration, an idolatry of summer. Hand-made zodiac of fingerprints and coins worshipped by sun-kissed cherubs who touch the foreheads of poets with glittering spindles and keys. Lenny DellaRocca Lenny DellaRocca is founder and co-publisher of South Florida Poetry Journal-SoFloPoJo. His work appears in many literary journals, including The Ekphrastic Review. He has published four poetry collections and two chapbooks. ** To Celebrate the Bountiful My love for you is a thousand suns with adoring eyes all circling in rotation. My love for you is the fish that swims upstream with only the promise of reaching you. I paint our world bright yellows and brave orange hues, fingertips pigmenting the walls with colour. I pluck a golden globe from the sky, like a dandelion in the field, just to light the lamp of life with tender offerings. Joined by a bounty of threaded beads, we are surrounded by luscious berries falling off the vine, a feathered crown bird, a necklace adorned turtle, and the young elephant draped in fine silks. The circle of us jumps from splashes of ochre to deep pools of tawny red. We rise to the surface, resplendent with feathers and blossoms. My love for you is a celestial celebration, a festival of the marriage of all things. Cristina M. R. Norcross Cristina M. R. Norcross lives in Wisconsin and is the author of eight poetry collections. She was the founding editor of Blue Heron Review (2013-2020). Her latest book is Beauty in the Broken Places(Kelsay Books, 2019). Cristina’s poems have been published, or are forthcoming, in: Visual Verse, Your Daily Poem, Right Hand Pointing, Verse-Virtual, The Ekphrastic Review, and Pirene’s Fountain, among others. She has helped organize community art and poetry projects, has led workshops, and has also hosted many open mic poetry readings. Cristina is the co-founder of Random Acts of Poetry and Art Day. Find out more: www.cristinanorcross.com ** Scrutiny I am full of holes. Perforated. Bored. Clamping a fistful of frustration, I punch out syllables on the arm of the chair: Every gaze drills a silent, undeflectable, glass-clear rod into my body. They see everything, I tell him. Who? he asks. All of them, I say, watching a knot in the skirting watching me. Outside, inside, through… When I get angry, the punctures glow. Pink. But they dance. And they tap their feet to the splash of blood spewing from my heart as it races past the windows they have skewered. Cold bells, singing in silver, bounce on their nubby ankle bones as they stamp. Their curled fists spring open, splaying rayed fingers which momentarily glimpse the golden eyes of sun, then retract to transient hibernation before bursting open again. He’s watching, too. Who? he asks. The sun. The sun watches them watching me. And there are days when my heart stills, and my blood runs so cold it is blue. Salt crystallises on the rims – maybe they are iced fishing holes. I don’t know – and they peer right through to the horizon that has sliced the sky from the ocean. A shrill wind stirs feathers into their hair, and their earrings rattle in chatter, and the turtles clack across the rocks, past the dead-eyed fish, to find home. Their bells scrape like tumbling tins as they shiver and wrinkle with the chill, and blades wedge in my skull. Do they ever sleep? he asks. Never. Their eyes flick like pendulums, always searching – Searching? he says, his brows pulled up and tethered by invisible strings. –and counting the time. Counting the emptiness. Which is unquantifiable. Sometimes, they accidentally catch each other’s eye. Left Right. Tick Tock. I catch his eye. Flinch. The eyelets in my shoes are staring. And, as though I am pore-filled earth, they push in jewelled noses, breathing in meadows, narrowing their fingers to reach in to pick flowers and – When? he asks. On yellow days. They fold leaves on their palms and watch them uncurl as though settling to sleep. They are distracted by birdsong and cherries and drink the amber of sunset. Yellow days are the best days. He exhales over the top of braided fingers, the tip of his breath fingering my face as he shoulders the weight I carry. And these eyes are everywhere, watching you, looking deep within you, constantly? The mosaic mirrored elephant on his desk glints and winks at me. For the first time, I look directly at him, and see golden poles of sunshine spearing his body through the window. My shoulders slump, too. What’s so difficult to understand? I wave my fingers through the glittering sceptres, feeling the merest veil of warmth, nod, and just think the words: They’re watching you, too. Helen Laycock Helen Laycock’s flash fiction has been showcased in the Cabinet of Heed, Reflex Fiction, The Best of CafeLit and Lucent Dreaming – whose inaugural flash competition she won. She was longlisted in Mslexia’s 2019 flash fiction competition and her work was selected to appear in the 2019 Flash Flood Journal as part of National Flash Fiction Day. Helen Laycock's short stories appear in a variety of anthologies and magazines as well as in her own collections. A former lead writer at Visual Verse, her poetry has appeared in Popshot, Poems for Grenfell (Onslaught) and Full Moon and Foxglove (Three Drops Press), and her children's poetry has been published in The Caterpillar magazine. She also writes children’s fiction. ** Facial Fantasia The sun-flower-whorl of the deities is abloom with their smiles, augmented by their big black eyes. Their purity ratified by their nose ornaments. The obelisk in the middle Is reflective of its monumental stature. The baroque conglomeration of birds, the marine life and the deity of the crops constitute a colourful polyglot. The bridal couples at the bottom-ends have their own lessons to portend. The genuine, on way to set up the homely relationship, and the ersatz, despite the garland and the gift, bears a head borne serpent in its stinging bid, aiming to vitiate the august bondage. Yet this fantasia is sanguinely alive with its exotica of colours bright. Muhammad Farooq Malik Muhammad Farooq Malik: "I am Muhammad Farooq Malik, an ex-army major, but now a professor of English Literature. I have been teaching for the last twenty-five years, at the University of Central Punjab, Lahore, Pakistan. I have considerable interest in English literature and composed two poetry books, namely, I the itinerant and Conjugal Concoctions. I am also engaged in translating into English the selected works of three great Urdu poets namely Ghalib, Iqbal and Faiz, aiming to preserve the rhythm and lucidity intrinsic to Urdu Poetry. Now 72, I go hiking regularly to rejuvenate my spirits and revitalize my bond with nature." ** Faces of the Sun The sun has many faces, sometimes covered, sometimes not, but she always smiles, a little lop-sided smile, a wide welcoming one, a beam of complete happiness, there’s always a smile. So I shall cover the wall with her faces, with her smiles and the sun will smile at us each night we spend together. Yes, even in the night we shall see her smile. Lynn White Lynn White lives in north Wales. Her work is influenced by issues of social justice and events, places and people she has known or imagined. She is especially interested in exploring the boundaries of dream, fantasy and reality. She was shortlisted in the Theatre Cloud 'War Poetry for Today' competition and has been nominated for a Pushcart Prize and a Rhysling Award. Her poetry has appeared in many publications including: Apogee, Firewords, Vagabond Press, Gyroscope Review and So It Goes Journal. Find Lynn at: https://lynnwhitepoetry.blogspot.com and https://www.facebook.com///www.facebook.com/Lynn-White-Poetry-1603675983213077/ ** The Brahma Kamal* The mist cleared Revealing faces in eyes, closed in hope Of a dawn such as this, The Brahma Kamal had bloomed too- The fragrance blowing into flowers woven in garlands Exchanged together with vows On a day that would allay fears Of a missing note, of the last symphony, A day that would wipe The tears that had dried, centuries ago- The conches roared, enticing the beholder To witness colors that smeared the skies, Where swam the fish and flew the turtles Following the beats of the parakeets, The elephants led the procession, the celebration In harmony of the wedding music, I could live my life, by- It was a rare show Of gyrating suns that formed saptapadi, The seven steps of ecstasy Their gaze blinding the bonhomie, Summoning the Gods to adorn the earth and Romance in human forms- Between sorrow and joy, in unison, just for today. Abha Das Sarma *Brahma Kamal is a rare, legendary and mythological plant of India. It is named after Brahma, the God of Creation and blooms only for one night in the entire year. The flower starts blooming after sunset and takes about two hours to fully bloom. It has a spellbinding fragrance. Abha Das Sarma is an Indian writer with a blog of over 200 poems. An engineer and management consultant by profession, writing is what keeps her alive. Her poems have appeared in Muddy River Poetry Review, Spillwords, Verse-Virtual and elsewhere. She also enjoys writing haikus and has contributed to weekly postings of Haiku in Action. Having spent her growing up years in small towns of northern India, currently she lives in Bangalore with her scientist husband. ** I Am Woman I am mother I am daughter I am sister I am aunt I am grandmother I am wife I am woman I am in the fish that swims in the sea I am in the key that opens your locked dreams and mine I am in the DNA that binds the world together I am in the circle of life I am woman I am the tears in your joy I am the sorrow in your laughter I am the calm in your anger I am the crowd in your loneliness I am woman I am mother I am daughter I am sister I am aunt I am grandmother I am wife I am woman Nivedita Karthik Nivedita Karthik a graduate in Immunology from the University of Oxford. She is an accomplished Bharatanatyam dancer and published poet from India. Her poetry has appeared in Glomag, The Society of Classical Poets, The Epoch Times, Visual Verse, The Bamboo Hut, Eskimopie, The Ekphrastic Review, and The Sequoyah Cherokee River Journal. ** A Gift Cloistered on the farm near a stream, she soothes her leaking soul in lotus and hibiscus, frail upon her palm. It’s time. Nine suns bathe turtles and fish, free now to breathe, to close the edges of her cracks dancing like rubies in the air. They wait for her to let go a mother’s hand, to wipe the tears flooding deep wrinkles, to lift a bowed head wilted. A red-billed oriole, sunbeam held tight in his beak, sweeps a feathered crown upon her cheek and taps a claw, gently on her shoulder; it’s a short path to the dark night. Her mother says this is both free and savage. She must go, trust the nine suns, for tomorrow is never promised. She takes a step, and the yellow light is water the day almost too much to bear. Suns watch every move, encourage her with red lips smiling. She sees him waiting, dark to her light. In his hand a marigold. He holds it to her: she reaches for its petals. One teardrop scars her cheek. The sky is honeyed and clear. A peacock struts across her feet, the smell of marigolds and lilies on the air. Maryann Gremillion Maryann Gremillion is an educator and writer working with elementary schools, teachers, and nonprofits to build transformative communities. She taught elementary school for fifteen years in Houston where she discovered a passion for teaching creative writing. Maryann also worked for twelve years as a writer-in-residence and then program director for Writers in the Schools. Her work has been published in Glass Mountain, Teachers and Writers magazine, and several local anthologies. She is excited to complete a book chapter about her work with teachers and writers in collaboration with Texas A&M University, due to be published January 2021. ** The Traditional Trend - Setter India…. the land of the delightful & the diverse …. From Kashmir to Kanyakumari, Presents an array of sights & sounds .. visual & ephemeral With no moment dreary. The land of goddess “Sita” in the epic "Ramayana“ Became the epicentre for Mithila art. Decorative motifs depicting ancient times, Became the trend setter for mixed media from the start. With Sita's father popularising this ancient art form, For his daughter’s wedding galore, Who knew this trendy folk art would be, Immensely popular to this day with art enthusiasts wanting more. India, with every corner of the country, Depicting arts in their own tradition Many tried to create their own rendition .. Indian Mithila art remained supreme With its deep rooted ethnic ethos & its colours which gleam .. Saving trees as the legend goes, The artists using tree bark as a base , With legendary deities depicted hence preventing felling , With the common belief to avoid the wrath of the Gods. What a great way to preserve our heritage & green cover, A double bonus as they say, Wishing & hoping that more such arty gestures can save Mother Earth, From such travesty which she suffers day by day! Mithila with its simple materials put to use, Madhubani style is here for centuries to stay. As a proud Indian artist, this is my belief, I say .. The artist relies on the faith of his audience, So lets go all out & pray for this bountiful art form to be world famous one day! Parul Mehra Parul Mehra: "I’m a mixed media artist, born in New Delhi (India). I have studied Art & Architecture in college, taught by some great masters of the art forms. My visual training has taught me to observe my surroundings & greatly appreciate the beauty of nature. This has inspired most of my work. As an artist I enjoy working with like minded collaborators, who also like to make a difference in the world by using art as a medium, in fact for the betterment of humanity. I’m currently based in Singapore. You can view my full profile on www.parulmehra.com." ** Kohbar of Mithila Joyously joined—our first four nights. He is beautiful. Will he cherish me? Of course I know how to paint a kohbar. Am I not from Mithila? Did I not learn from the best? It is my duty. They taught me well. Painting, penetration, piercing, plenty… love, food, divinity, the symbols: tortoise, fish, snake, Lotus covering ponds until you can’t see the water, the root stems of lotus leaves. Fertility. I have covered the wall, celebrating the faces of moon, sun and other gods, all witnesses to our union, watching the auspicious event of our first night. Rose Mary Boehm Rose Mary Boehm is a German-born British national living and writing in Lima, Peru. Her poetry has been published widely in mostly US poetry reviews (online and print). She was twice nominated for a Pushcart. Her fourth poetry collection, The Rain Girl, was published by Chaffinch Press in 2020. ** Universal Mother Mother to all, in your many arms are both weapons and instruments of peace: lotus blossom, conch shell. Mother to all, your countenance is fierce to those who would do harm, full of love for us, your children. Mother to all, appear to us in your many incarnations: as goddess of fertility, love, beauty, harmony, devotion; likewise, as she who springs forth from your head in times of battle, whose arms hold blood-soaked swords and the heads of our enemies. Mother of all, protect us, but also grant us the strength to protect ourselves. Mother of all, you have been here since before the world existed, since before the sea and sky. Mother of all, you remind us that the world is both fearsome and gentle, that we infuse energy into lifeless matter, that without destruction, nothing will be made new. Jennifer Hernandez Jennifer Hernandez, Minnesota teacher/writer, has performed her work at a non-profit garage and a taxidermy-filled bike shop. Her flash fiction, poetry, and creative non-fiction touch on themes of identity, social justice, and the different lenses through which we view the world. She delights in the interplay of image and text and has published work in Visual Verse and Poetry in the Park in the Dark, a project sponsored by Saint Paul Almanac in which poets and artists collaborated to create broadside posters for display in solar-powered “rocks” that lit up at night for passersby. ** The Ink of our Journey the gods are watching faces afloat in seas of petals girdled by turtle and bird eyes of knowledge ride sun-freckled skies to hang pure silk from Kohbar I offer my gift my golden kiss garland strung from beaded neck sweet as dawn’s new milk patterns of fate tumble twist in scaled mosaic stitched on dial hope enclosed in Krishna’s lap we rise silvered in candle-sheen skin slick from mehndi-perfume the ink of our journey birth Kate Young Kate Young lives in Kent, England and has been passionate about poetry since childhood. Over the last few years, she has had success with poems published in webzines in Britain and internationally. She generally writes free verse and loves responding to art through ekphrastic poems. If pushed, she would name TS Eliot as her favourite poet. Her poems have appeared in Ninemuses, Ekphrastic Review, Nitrogen House, Words for the Wild, Poetry on the Lake and a Scottish Writers Centre chapbook. Her work has also featured in the anthologies Places of Poetry and Write Out Loud. The pamphlet Liberte, Egalite, Fraternite was published by Hedgehog Press in 2020 and her poems feature alongside two other poets. Find her on Twitter @Kateyoung12poet. ** her forest be it known that she was the centre of the universe for example, she attached her body to ashen suns, as they hold her inside the pigments of her ochre life she was born before she gave birth, and died after she set herself aflame, a sati to all death and when planets came together in conjoined rituals inside her wombs, she would receive their dance to the valence of her bewitched moons then her brimming soul would unveil into the seasons of hope, where a humming could reclaim her lost pilgrimage her virgin gaze tearing into borders of charcoal lines for example, the wings of an undying garuda would be hers, her tongues unboned of all its curses, would swallow galaxies born of oceans now churning, her eyes would flood a wilted sky, parrots unlocked in chorus of her bones be it known that she is the centre of the universe for example, breasts aflame with braids exhaled into stories of marigold rituals Kashiana Singh Glossary: sati an ancient ritual in some sects in India, during which a widow sacrificed herself by sitting atop her deceased husband's funeral pyre. Garuda Garuda is a mythical king of all birds from Hindu mythology that has a mix of eagle and human features. He is the vehicle of God Vishnu represents strength and balance. He is known as the enemy of the snake as representing evil. He was granted immortality. Madhubani/Mithila painting Madhubani – literally means honey forest. Traditionally used colours used are derived from plants – mostly ochre, lamp black, terra red. Shows scenes of forests, scenes of weddings, playful gods, planets, mythical animals and birds, has no white space usually. Kashiana Singh lives in Chicago and embodies her TEDx talk theme of Work as Worship into her everyday. Her first collection is Shelling Peanuts and Stringing Words. Her chapbook Crushed Anthills is a journey through 10 cities. Her poems have been published on various platforms including Rattle, Poets Reading the News, Visual Verse, Oddball Magazine, Café Dissensus, and others. Kashiana proudly serves as an Associate Poetry Editor for Poets Reading the News. |
The Ekphrastic Review
COOKIES/PRIVACY
This site uses cookies to deliver your best navigation experience this time and next. Continuing here means you consent to cookies. Thank you. Join us on Facebook:
Tickled Pink Contest
April 2024
|