“Queen City” by Erin Jamieson

We lived in undulating suburbs:
one brick home to the next
away from the cacophony of
blinking city buses & factory fumes
a mundane routine of chores
& studying, preparing for a future
my mother insisted I have:
safe, confined, stable but

my trips to the city became more frequent:
first, school trips with brown sack lunches
with soggy pb&J sandwiches: Eden Park,
Underground Railroad Museum
the city was colorful, chaotic, never asleep-
both frightening & compelling

I wandered back into the city
with no intent, just a need
to escape the small brick home
I found myself back in:
living with my parents in my 20’s

I took a trolley, wandered Over the Rhine
ordered a Shawarma Wrap from Arnold’s
bought flowers from Findlay market
tossed a coin just outside Fountain Square

I returned home, pansies and violas in hand
the scent and heartbeat of the city
clinging to my clothes like a second skin

& I knew it wouldn’t be long
before I found my way back

jamieson.78Erin Jamieson holds an MFA in Creative Writing from Miami University of Ohio. Her writing has been published in over eighty literary magazines, and her fiction has been nominated for a Pushcart Prize. Her debut novel, Sky of Ashes Land of Dreams, was published by Type Eighteen Books (Nov 2023). Twitter: erin_simmer

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“Afterwards” by Gene Fendt

The hurt purple of evening’s clouds
has pulled its quilting between the rooves and stars,

and winter spreads its tablecloths
upon the dozen building tops within his view.

Only the table in the farthest corner
has a light,

awaiting the happy couple
whose reservation has been cancelled.

                              *

In the gathering dark the snow appears
as a prayer of the heart spoken

long before it is known by the mind,
as once they had entered each other’s lives,

as wind begins its quiet dance with snow.
The deeper dark behind him grows:

the quiet sanctuary abandoned,
he stares at the single light.

                              *

Every table is the most expensive in the house:
the one at which no one is seated;

the lit one is exorbitant,
but for it we would not be open.

Only by accident and unknowing
will both be in this city again,

though the fresh linen snow will fall
a dozen times this winter,

starched to the crisp fall at the corners
on the tables they once looked upon

with love.

Geneheadshot24

Gene Fendt is the Albertus Magnus professor of Philosophy at the University of Nebraska, Kearney. His first book of poetry, “Eternal Life and Other Poems” will be published early in 2025 by Angelico Press.

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“At the Museum with Mr. B” by Gene Fendt

“There’s a duchess,” he said, “who sees the world,
and knows its tricks; has played some in her time,
but now prefers a calm and sumptuous rest,
which this portrait gives her: a clear—nor evil,
nor confessing—eye, now looking on your
newest world with ne’er surprise or wonder.
Her own flesh, once ripe with five-fold joys,
still looks plausible, as she willed, though bone,
unfeeling, is all that may remain somewhere.”

“In this farm scene something of my old world
goes on, and of its better imagos—dei,”
he added, my half-learned Latin blinking back.
“This washer-woman, bare and chapped of arm,
still seems to feel the hot work her spent days
did—arms, shoulders, back, knees, even in sleep
shaped to muscle necessities through time.
Her younger counterpart—daughter perhaps?—
the milkmaid, sylph soft, though hair is up for work,
forehead against the warm haunch, still half a-dream
against the world her mother’s face is hid
by steam of. All of life not just between them,
but in them, under them, around them. Thus art,
and artist’s work, are only to reclaim:
Nothing having never lived takes its life
from him, but something live may live again.”

So we walked down, into the modern wing.
“Now this, I must confess, is quite above
my art and understanding—these dozen stones
a-piled, and twice that many, here, laid straight
upon the floor. Many streets I walked
with her were cobbled so—Rome, London,
Florence, which we loved with each own heart—
each stone owned history too. Dante, mayhap,
stood on one when first espying Beatrice,
another caught the blood of Caesar, or
a saint. Stonecutters, for their daily wage,
had fit them well for Summer’s swell, Spring rain,
Winter’s contracting bite. We knew all this,
and lived and walked, or carriage rolled upon them;
but these, removed, no longer part of life—
though once they were…. Their history writ and pasted
on the wall here, informs us of some slave port
landings and one time sugar storage:
what means this now, dissected from the whole,
and moved for exhibition to continent
and tongue of which it has no part? They are
as meaningless as stone, unless one speak
for them. Once cobbles spoke themselves to us—
of elders, of their elders, and their work—
a city we still could wonder in, walk on,
be grateful for. And is this all displaced?”

We exited to a shade filled atrium—
Roman copies of silent dancing Muses,
a laughing satyr, three burghers of Calais.
“In your gigantomachic city, this museum
seems not to scale, all else proportioned so
Titans alone might walk and see the sun.
This to human measure, and flaws humane,
spacious as a brain, with old—or sudden—
colors, versions of the universe, and
virtue pedestalled, here and there, a moment
on an off day to behold, to wander round
and down the quick steps to the café.”

“Except a love by which spirit pulls mind
through body to another spirit likewise
reaching for that beauteous totus tuus
embrace, I wonder what this time on earth—
our only—is all for; so all my work
is hers, as she once wrote for me: Portuguese
to English, nonesuch without her.”

“That you I never met before are kindred
in that spirit I have surely hoped for;
that all might see through each to the soul, I wished,
in work, to practice seeing: truth begets,
and trues, our wonder—what we were made for.
That bubble you are bent on blowing big
the sharp world will quickly prick—or itself
explode, its heavy bottom pulling
the world weight of its surface to a plane.
Only love’s gifts last, all of these are art.

Geneheadshot24

Gene Fendt is the Albertus Magnus professor of Philosophy at the University of Nebraska, Kearney. His first book of poetry, “Eternal Life and Other Poems” will be published early in 2025 by Angelico Press.

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“Under the City, 1992” by Gene Fendt

On the subway you see:
sorrowful, defeated, dazed,
a girl almost in tears,
dark hair hanging
over her face; the man
in a dirty Giants jacket
asleep at 5:15;
and in the next odd car
an ethereal beauty, turned
to see herself in the dark
glass, not yet aware
of the world, nor wanting it.

Geneheadshot24

Gene Fendt is the Albertus Magnus professor of Philosophy at the University of Nebraska, Kearney. His first book of poetry, “Eternal Life and Other Poems” will be published early in 2025 by Angelico Press.

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“Welcome to Bella’s” by Michael Theroux

Outside, the crisp yellow heat is brittle and breathtaking,
and has just flattened the afternoon.
Inside, there is cool dark red wine,
piles of pasta, platters of cheese & crusty garlic bread
with little plates of olive oil and balsamic,
and fresh ripe fruit – and time.

Time enough for us to talk, leaning in close
Bella’s – as if the very canals of Venice ran by outside.
Not streets of the southern San Joaquin.
Dull car traffic seems to be replaced
by gayly painted gondola poling their quiet way along –
while we sit with elbows on a red checkered tablecloth.

Apropos for Italy to exist here in America,
to not blend in, but to stand out bright,
discrete and insular, its own three-block nation.
Whether Napoli or Cherokee, we are a Nation of Nations
exuding the heady aroma of Difference,
the essence of Diversity.

TERU-2023

Michael Theroux’s career has spanned from field botanist, environmental health specialist, green energy developer and resource recovery website editor. Now he is shifting from the scientific and technical environmental field to the creative. He spends his days writing incessantly in his home in Northern California.

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“The Problem of Sequencing” by Jim Stewart

Motivation: Brooklyn is a matrix of blocks
for example, on Church the cars roll slowly, and honk
to pick up rides off the street. Everyone knows a way
to get around, squeeze between. In a Hilbert space
the dimensions can be infinite. So where are you?
From Empire Ave to Eastern Parkway the hill rises
and the Messiah’s face is everywhere. The problem
is trivially solved in spacetime. But every corner
is different from the day before. In the old truck lot
piledrivers are pounding in another tower beam.
The pierogi place is a weed store. Everyone knows
a way to a place they saw five years ago, or twenty.
It’s still there, and all gone. I’ve seen people stay
right where they are and end up in a different city.

Jim Stewart

Jim Stewart has been published or has poems forthcoming in In Company, New Mexico Poets after 1970, Liminality, Rattapallax, Passengers Journal, and the Moonstone Arts Center’s Ekphrastic Poetry anthology. He co-edited and designed Saint Elizabeth Street magazine and hinenimagazine.com. He teaches programming and logic in New York.

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“Dave’s” by John Grey

Old soldiers line up at Dave’s downtown,
buy newspapers, scratch tickets,
and play their Keno numbers.

Theirs are the silent footsteps
not drawn by the smell of bus-diesel,
but to spend another morning
with head-shaking headlines
and luck as forbidding as enemy planes.

While others rush to the job,
they take their time
just in case it’s not the surly Dave’s cashier
who’s there to take their money
but that losing lottery number…death.

It’s a warm day already.
There’s no wind.
The air is thick as the soup
their wives serve up
night after night.

Dave’s is air-conditioned at least.
And there’s a table at the back
where they can curse politicians,
their fortune, their knee-joints
and the threadbare thanks
they got for having served.

No point bringing up the good in their lives.
Morning is not the time.
Dave’s could never be the place.

File0005 V3 (2)

John Grey is an Australian poet and US resident. He was recently published in New Plains Review, Stillwater Review and Big Muddy Review with work upcoming in Louisiana Review, Columbia College Literary Review, and Spoon River Poetry Review.

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From “Atlas” by Glenn Bach

Williamsburg Bridge
in the morning Manhattan bound:
the trees of the East
River park a thicket
of brambles, a brown blur
of winter, the sun behind you
a crushed daisy, hushed ferry cuts
a sword blade along the surface
of the river, the J train above your
heads a halo that goes and goes.

Williamsburg Bridge
in the evening Brooklyn bound:
a tug nudges a river barge,
you stood front window / front car
on the J train Brooklyn bound,
the underground
unfolding before you, graffiti-
thick and glimpses of squatters
and no sun forever.

And in the morning the same
rooftops and factories of Brooklyn,
the same barge again cutting
through a Hopper-painted
backdrop of skyscrapers,
green ribbon edging the Lower
East Side clockwork,
an ancient landscape
still and wise as the Hudson
Highlands, falling and falling
into Manhattan, an island
surrounded by water.

Originally from Southern California, Glenn Bach now lives in the Doan Brook watershed of Cleveland, Ohio. His major project, Atlas, is a long poem about place and our (mis)understanding of the world. Excerpts have appeared in jubilat, Otoliths, Plumwood Mountain and others. He documents his work at glennbach.com and @AtlasCorpus.

From “Atlas” by Glenn Bach

The fall of New York,
leaving the canyons of artifice
and the calculus of blooms
as we walk in our sleep, fireflies
in cupped palms, bees and their
drowning, this week a whirlwind
of weather slipped in
through an open window as keys fit
the steeplechase of locks
and shoulders find their coats
of Broadway and 115th,
flipped collars and checked
scarves framing fleeting expressions
at play across wind-bitten cheeks,
dispersing the thin threads
of words captured and elongated,
made firm in hand-set type, folded
and slipped into jacket pockets.

We breathe the runoff and the dust
of scuffling shoes, effluvia of insects,
hair growing imperceptible as bark,
cherry blossoms like WWII flak
in the sky.

Bricks across knees,
new words invented for what we see
emerging from suspended animation,
the light years of this continent
as we sew the holes in our pockets,
fill them with stones from both oceans.

But here the umber canyons, throbs
of gold taxicabs and all the trains full
of strap-hanging figures
with bodega-bought flowers
wrapped in cones of plastic,
children glancing up
at the giants
towering above them.

Originally from Southern California, Glenn Bach now lives in the Doan Brook watershed of Cleveland, Ohio. His major project, Atlas, is a long poem about place and our (mis)understanding of the world. Excerpts have appeared in jubilat, Otoliths, Plumwood Mountain and others. He documents his work at glennbach.com and @AtlasCorpus.

“Touched By” by Morgan Boyer

A transit car pole can tell you
many tales of times their steel
rod bodies were touched

By a community college kid
with Kleenex-filled jacket pockets
as she braves through flu season

By a beer-breathed Penguin’s fan
on the phone with his wife
relaying the 3rd quarter like a war story

By a 2nd generation Hispanic woman holding her plastic
bags by the flimsy handles that stretch ever so thinner

By an elderly man
scratching off lottery tickets
like bite sized scraps of a dry dandruff-ridden scalp

By a cardiac-eyed
Medicaid card carrier whose
lifeblood was replaced by metal
when the company switched to
an automated answering service

By a thirty-two-year old Penn State
grad heading to shovel french fries
into buckets just like his soot-faced
great-grandfather shoveled coal

By the administrative
assistant of a dentist who works
solely to afford anime
merchandise and streaming subscriptions

Touched by a soul that was now lost, not found

Morgan Boyer is the author of The Serotonin Cradle (Finishing Line Press, 2018) and a graduate of Carlow University. Boyer has been featured in Kallisto Gaia Press, Thirty West Publishing House, Oyez Review, Pennsylvania English, and Voices from the Attic. Boyer is a neurodivergent bisexual woman who resides in Pittsburgh, PA.

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