Two elegies for the departed by Kushal Poddar

The Vanishing Act, Magician

(In memory of the magician Uday Shankar Saha)

The white mice from his handkerchief
shivers with the freedom, as if
they remember being nonexistent.

The flash, smoke and mirrors,
sorcerer obliterated,
the stage waits for the trick,
and we think we know the punchlines
beforehand. One little father
holds the hand of his big son,
ready to leave the proceedings.

The son looks at one mice near his feet.
The faint noise is a sight now. A sleight of fate,
a magic rolls on, the magician, gone, exists
as the stage, audience waiting and leaving,
boxes and handkerchiefs, saw and mice.

Mourning For a Running Mate

(In memory of Revati Gore )

The other day
song birds flew
free above the cityscape,

and we recall that
more than anything they
ever sang; oh yes,

we recall you, my friend,
a fellow runner preparing
for the marathon in the weekend.

Sweating smiles
on the jokes
never cracked. The best of the laughs.

We cannot remember
how you withered;
no way, you quit a run

run for no medal,
that flight of the birds
above the city cage.

An Imaginary Menagerie, A Feast Of Fantastical Beasts. Please join Annest Gwilym, Neal Zetter, Brian Moses and myself. Submit your own poetry and/or artwork to me. I will be adding stuff throughout the day. Let’s Celebrate The Imagination!!!

moon hedgehog by AnnestBlackheart by AnnestLurks by AnnestNightmare Bird by Annest

-All by Annest Gwilym from her collection “What The Owl Taught Me”.

There’s No Such Thing as a Wazzock

There’s no such thing as a Wazzock Mum said
As she turned the light off and tucked me in bed
Those shadows that shake must be all in my head
There’s no such thing as a Wazzock

There’s no such thing as a Wazzock you see
The creature that loves to eat children for tea
Though in the dark four eyes are following me
There’s no such thing as a Wazzock

There’s no such thing as a Wazzock it’s true
That’s why you’ll not find them in cages in zoos
It’s rumoured they’re furry and indigo blue
There’s no such thing as a Wazzock

There’s no such thing as a Wazzock I know
As tall as a tree from its hat to its toe
With horns of a rhino and claws of a crow
There’s no such thing as a Wazzock

There’s no such thing as a Wazzock it seems
So I can sleep safely and have pleasant dreams
Why would I be woken by squawking and screams?
When there’s no such thing as a Wazzock

-Neal Zetter (from his collection “Porcupine“)

The Beast

Waiting,
watchful
in it’s lair
teeth glinting
in the darkness,
the rhythm of its breathing
broken by the raucous
laughter of children outside.

We need only to glance at it

but when we try to scrub
its image
from memory,
only then do we learn
what it is to escape.

-Roshni Beeharry (she says “inspired in part by an image of the minotaur but in my head it represents a more modern day “monster”, predatorial adults when I look at what I actually wrote and edited since…so perhaps…not fantastical beast but inspired by one and imaginary..)

The Loogaroo

By stealth of night,
she knocks on doors
in her guise of old woman
in search of blood

She stops to count the grains
of rice
left outside by the wary,
those warned of her tricks
by anxious grandmothers.

Her skin is spangled
from the Devil Tree;
an empty husk
gourd-like
she steals blood
for the Devil,
in exchange for
magical powers.

Sunrise chases her away,
but deals with the Devil
still need to be paid.

-Roshni Beeharry (She says of it: “inspired by a the Carribean folklore story of the soucouyant , “a shape shifting” vampire like creature who masquerades as an old woman by day…stories like these travelled to French colonies like Mauritius, where my parents are from, so I recall my Mum telling us about the Loogaroo, the other name for this creature I discovered when I looked into it recently!) 

Wombwell Rainbow Book Review: “Bleb” by Sanjeev Sethi

2al BLEB FULL COVER

“Bleb” by Sanjeev Sethi

Bleb by Sanjeev Sethi

One of the great positives for me when reading Sanjeev is the opportunity to increase my vocabulary. In each poem there is one or more words for which I need a dictionary. This is excellent because it puts the emphasis on meaning. This is especially true of “Bleb”, his new book out with Dreich. To me the poems deal with the separateness of people, of the reader and writer, the writer to the poems they write. Sanjeev calls these “wee poems” but they get larger with each reading. The first poem in the collection:

medic by sanjeev sethi

Speaks of the outside coming in. “Words cycle towards” him. He is “the doc on duty”. “the baby” is “the first draft” needs medical care. The creation of something outside himself that needs nurturing. This is one of Sanjeev’s major themes in the book. How poems become independent have a life of their own, but also deaths of their own too. The final poem:

newness by sanjeev sethi

Finishes with a sense of the positive “fresh urgencies”. He sees words as “empirical drills” to “decipher” the world and his relationship with it. I cannot recommend this work highly enough. He takes us back to the running track of the first poem. His poems are that “raw force” that “flow with fresh urgencies.”

I cannot recommend this book highly enough. At £3.00 it is a must read.

For Mr Paul Brookes ~Wombwell Rainbows~ National Insect Week , 21 – 27 June 2021 ~ The Prettiest Butterfly ~ A Letter to Nano ~

anjum wasim dar's avatarPOETIC OCEANS

Grand children are nature’s greatest blessing and I am profoundly blessed Alhamdolilah.

When my illness and a major surgery became a matter of grave concern for the family,this love filled letter and art work made me cry.Tears kept flowing for long.
I realized how love flows from the tender hearts, instils new life with warmth comfort and peace, curing all pain and suffering.

The sweetest letter from my grand daughter Sana Fatima Mir (my younger daughter Mahwish D Haider’s daughter)

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Then by Linda Black (Shearsman Books)

tearsinthefence's avatarTears in the Fence

Describing her first collection,Inventory(2008), Linda Black drew a parallel between her writing style and her approach to etching. ‘As a visual artist (and art teacher),’ she said, ‘my process was to begin without a preconceived idea—to approach a blank sheet, or etching plate, by merely making a mark, with as it were a blank mind, to delight in the not knowing, the exploration, the opening up of possibilities.’ A matching openness to where words might lead characterised that first collection, and has been a hallmark of her poetry ever since. With each new volume, her writing seems to take more risks, the most recent book,Then,continuing this trajectory.

Memories, domestic objects, children’s games, fairytales, and the doubtful wisdom of common sayings are all grist to Black’s process. Word associations, puns, rhymes and alliterations are allowed to lead, the poem discovering itself as it goes along. ‘Call…

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#NationalInsectWeek 21st-27th June. Sunday – Dragonflies and other insects I may have missed during the past week. Anybody written poems about Dragonflies and other insects? Artworks/photos welcome too. References to poems/artwork other than your own I will show as links in the post, unless the referenced author welcomes my use of their work. I will add to this posts throughout today, so don’t worry if your submission has not been posted, yet. Here are the prompts for the week: Monday – Beetles, Tuesday – Cockroaches, Wednesday – Flies, Thursday – Mayflies, Friday – Butterflies, Saturday – Ant, Bee and Wasp, Sunday – Dragonflies, and any other insects I missed during the week.

Sunday – Dragonflies, and any other insects I may have missed.

insect week

Banded Demoiselle damselflyCommon Blue damselflyCommon Darter emerging 2Four-spotted ChaserFour-spotted ChaserSouthern Hawker emergingSouthern Hawker neawly emerged

-David’s photos

Dragonfly, a Pantoum

Your movement, never still,
enchanted dragonfly,
master of your craft
on fragile, gauzy wings.

Enchanted dragonfly,
Whirring, quivering,
on fragile gauzy wings,
sparkling colours dazzling.

Whirring, quivering,
nature’s helicopter,
sparkling colours dazzling
like a shimmering gem.

Nature’s helicopter,
Art Nouveau jewellers’
shimmering gems
captured your vibrancy.

Art Nouveau jewellers,
masters of their craft,
captured your vibrancy –

your movement ever stilled.

-Jenni Wyn Hyatt

margarets dragonfly

Red Dragonfly by John Hawkhead

Red Dragonfly by John Hawkhead

Dragonfly by John Hawkhead

Dragonfly by John Hawkhead

Rachel deering dragonfly

-Dragonfly by Rachel Deering

Linda Ludwig Dragonfly

-Dragonfly by Linda Ludwig

ChristinaChin_purple dragonfly_Wombwell Rainbow

-Christina Chin

Before I


Before I break the Surface of the world
I live another life beneath where light
falls differently. I eat Small that curl
in front, while Larger see me tasty bite.


Hidden behind long stems I wait and wait.
Quick squirt of breath behind to catch the Slow.
Grab it with my hooks drag it to my gape.
Climb Up a stem and shed Old Skins as I grow.


Need forces me to break Surface in Dark
where I learn to breathe before final shuck.
Let limbs and wings harden into flights start.
He grabs my neck, I arch my back, Eggstruck.


I return to Surface, slice open stem.
Lay my eggs for life to begin again.

-Paul Brookes

Let Us Now Praise Ordinary Things by Kareem Tayyar (Arroyo Seco Press)

tearsinthefence's avatarTears in the Fence

Kareem Tayyar’sLet Us Now Praise Ordinary Thingsis an extraordinary collection that discusses how one can find fulfilling and long term joy through a balanced understanding of how to appreciate simple things against a backdrop of pain. I have long admired Tayyar’s work and his approach to life. It is not easy to write about appreciating life, and he is able to do so without becoming preachy or treacly. Instead, he looks into the essence of things and moments to understand them for what they are. He doesn’t ignore pain; in fact, he acknowledges it. What he dwells on, however, are the moments between moments that constitute joy. The final line of the collection sums up this philosophy well: “After all, there is so much to praise, and so little time” (103). For him, death is a fact and that lends an urgency to his appreciation of those moments…

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