Tag: open sky

Tourbillion

Poetry by Carole Greenfield

And didn’t we spark, didn’t we spin in our different skies,
the first time we unearthed veins of gold and silver threading
the lines between us?

Didn’t we emit quantities of white light, dazzled the darkness,
and didn’t your laugh snake itself round my heart,
a lovely writhing?

Didn’t we say to ourselves, This is the one I’ve been searching for,
my whole life long?
And didn’t I try not to listen to the voices
telling me,

This is the serpent in the garden,
this is the key to the puzzle,
the end to my peace,

the reason why I will never
know Heaven again?

[Author’s note: Tourbillion, another name for a serpent, is also a type of star that spins in the sky and gives off large quantities of gold, silver, or white light.]


Carole Greenfield grew up in Colombia and lives in New England, where she teaches multilingual learners at a public elementary school. Her work has appeared in Stone Poetry Quarterly, Sky Island Journal, The Plentitudes and other places. Her debut collection, Weathering Agents, was released by Beltway Editions.

Blue Sky

Fiction by Darlene Eliot

Unfurl the blanket and sit down. Lie back with your nose tipped to the clouds. Listen to Rainbirds sprinkle water on the grass. Let mist caress your shoulders and cheeks. Watch the bees flirt with open-faced roses. Run your hand over the damp grass. Get up and rush back to the house. Retrieve the Sumo orange you forgot when you ran outside, shoeless and expectant. Rest your head on the blanket. Let the sun warm your eyelashes. Pine and eucalyptus tickle your nose. Run your fingers over the orange rind. Cradle it the way you wish the universe would cradle you, if only for a moment.


Darlene Eliot’s work has appeared in Bellingham Review, Sundog Lit, Epiphany, and elsewhere. She lives in California.

before the sky

Poetry by Ken Cathers

you sit on the handlebars
I’ll pedal like crazy

we’ll be a great fabled bird
on a dirt road journey

hang onto the wind
my little one, hang on

nothing can
catch us now

we will be home
long before

the sky can open
and crush our joy
          with thunder


Ken Cathers lives on Vancouver Island off the west coast of Canada and has spent much of his life working in the forest industry. He has been writing for several decades and has seven books of poetry. Several poems have appeared in Impspired (England) and the MacGuffin (U.S.).

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