Tag: opportunity

New Year’s Eve, New Year’s Day

Poetry by Cecil Morris

Last day, first day, side by side. Please, no.
I’d like a break, a pause, a little intermission,
like school with that last day in early June
and the first day held off until late August
or early September, one a sunny swell
of promise and satisfaction at having done,
the other a sunny swell of promise, too,
another chance to do things right.
Please, don’t give me a sandwich of now and then
with filling to airy thinness beat, the merest hint
of butter, jam. Please don’t give me a restless
interval too brief for number, a wink,
a blink between who I was and who I want
to be—really just another slice
of white bread from the same old loaf.
Give me a chance to change.


Cecil Morris is a retired high school English teacher, sometime photographer, and casual walker. His first collection of poems, At Work in the Garden of Possibilities, came out from Main Street Rag in 2025. He has poems in The 2River View, Common Ground Review, Rust + Moth, Talking River Review, and elsewhere. He and his wife, mother of their children, divide their year between the cool Oregon coast and the hot Central Valley of California.

Tabula Rasa

Poetry by Jennie Meyer

The beach a sheet
of untouched morning snow—
the sweeping tide a distant rumble.

My scuffing footprints
as I draft this new poem in steaming breaths—
the first and only brushstrokes.

Not a soul on the beach— no bird, no human,
no dog, not even a fowl’s fork-print embossed.

An empty canvas, free of life’s clamber.

Only one white car parked on Atlantic Ave.
One song sparrow singing like its spring
from some snow-filled limb.

One black mussel reaching out
from beneath the white sheet.

One seagull lifting off from tidal stream,
landing on the blanketed beach, mirroring
its purity with her white sloping belly,

painting it, Pollok-like, with one blast of scat.
Each of us engaged in her craft.


Jennie Meyer’s poetry has appeared in two print anthologies and numerous print and online publications. She is a 2024 finalist for Cathexis Northwest Press: Unpublished Author Chapbook contest, a 2023 winner of Beyond Words: The End of the World Creative Writing Challenge and a 2022 grant recipient from Discover Gloucester.

Black Lines

Poetry by J.V. Foerster

Her wings are cut and then she is blamed for not knowing how to fly.”

Simone de beauvoir

I imagine my body
free from its bones
the wind my invisible sister

Free from waking up
and weighing myself
each morning to see what place

I have on the ground in
this world of obsession
to form and insolence.

I dreamed last night that birds
were flying at me and behind them
they left lines in the air.

Thin black lines to hang up my
desires or to dry out my regret.
I think they came to show

me that when the eye can no longer
find its place in the ordinary you
must sleep and dream another life.


J.V. Foerster has been published in Eclectica, Agnieszka’s Dowry, Red River Review, Midnight Mind, and many others. She was nominated in 2011 for a Pushcart for “Apple Girl” by Fox Chase Review. J.V. has work in the Rosemont College Press and Philadelphia Stories Anthology “50 Over 50: Celebrating Experienced and Emerging Women Writers.” She lives in Portland, Oregon.

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