An Online Literary Journal for Poetry and Flash

Tag: consciousness

Life at Large

Poetry by Judith Yarrow

I sail the little boat
of my consciousness
on the great sea
of the universe

tossed about
by waves invisible
to me and toward
a faint horizon

maybe a harbor
or maybe just a cloud
receding. Still I sail.


Judith Yarrow lives in Seattle, Washington. She’s been published in Women’s Words, Cicada, Bellowing Ark, Backbone, Aji, and others. She was the featured poet in Edge: An International Journal, and her poems have been included in the Washington State Poet Laureates’ 2014 and 2017 collections.

This should’ve been an Urdu ghazal instead

Poetry by Uday Khanna

While being buried I thought why spare me space for breathing,
I should’ve been wound in white and cremated instead.

Waking has taken up the place of life,
I should’ve been nostalgic for a time which passed me by instead.

Living has come disarmingly too fast lately,
I would like a stern word instead.

Someone asked me how I write so beautifully of terrible things,
I should’ve been a keeper of chopped meat instead.

I was named ignorant far too many times,
I should’ve been left blissfully unaware instead.

I keep meeting myself on different horizons for novelty,
The mystery of time is repetition instead.

This circle tells me I’m merely a handful of mistakes,
I should’ve been a fistful of wasted sperm instead.

Soon poetry will become unattainable,
I should’ve gone back to plucking flower buds instead.

O poet, you’ve spent all your life seeking to write about an ungrateful ant,
You should’ve stepped on it instead.


Uday Khanna is a research scholar currently pursuing his MPhil from the University of Delhi. His research interests lie in the fields of postmodernism, media theory, cyber-culture, and 20th century short-story genre.

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