Three Featured Poets
Arting in Solidarity with Greta Thunberg
(Photo: Greta Thunberg/Twitter)
. . . . . .
surrendered to the sea
By Lola Stansbury-Jones
My heritage and my lifeblood
will be washed away in the flood.
With the thud of mankind’s fall,
a sea appears within a sea.
Condemned by the powers that be
like ghost towns we can’t recall.
Lola is a young, working-class poet from the post-industrial carcass of North Wales. She can be found at lolastansburyjones.wordpress.com
. . . . . .
Unimak Pass
By Lisa Weber
I watch a show about whales—
a mother and her calf traveling
thousands of miles to reach the icy cold,
krill-filled waters of the Bering Sea.
Before she can reach nourishment,
the exhausted and famished mother
must take her vulnerable baby
through a pass filled with orcas
seeking their own nourishment.
I pray the whales will make it,
but the orcas are too smart, too hungry,
and they separate the calf from its mother.
I want the mother to fight, to chase the
predators away and save her baby.
But there is nothing she can do.
I wonder why the whales must go through
this, why the mothers put their calves in danger.
Then I think about my son walking out the door,
and how anywhere he goes could be like that pass.
But instead of sharp teeth, the predators
have guns, and they don't hunt to eat,
but are driven by a hunger to destroy.
I think about these things as I watch
the orcas tear apart the whale calf
and I feel a tearing inside me.
I find myself crying and I don't know
if my tears are for the calf
or this country
or my son.
Lisa Weber is a wife, mother, and writer holding on tight to dreams and hope.
. . . . . .
Elsewhere in the Now
by Michelle Wong
despair had cried & joke had laughed as the trees swayed & sang : do not dream too much elsewher e in the now do not yearn a blueberry summer in the sweet of a winter maple run
Michelle is a teacher, writer, and life coach.
. . . . . .