Tokyo, the Floating World Adrift

By Leah Stenson

Instead of Asian architecture with antique charm,
I found box-like concrete structures
built hastily after the bombings.
Ponds with footbridges were still to be found
yet few Japanese had time to sit in a garden,
much less admire the moon.
Women rushed about in drab business attire
elbowing their way onto the trains like samurai
salary men in their blue pin-striped suits.
People flocked to department stores with more fervor
than they did to places of worship.

The city of my dreams, long gone before I arrived,
had quaint tile-roofed houses and gardens
with wooden footbridges crossing koi ponds
where Basho’s moon rippled on the water’s surface.
Women in floral kimono tightly bound
with yards of satin obi encircling their waists
teetered on wooden geta, their hips swaying gently
as they minced along cobblestones on the way
to Shinto shrines and Buddhist temples
where incense graced the air and people intent
on purifying themselves intoned the sutra.

In the House of God

By Sarah Stoltzfus Allen

are the prayers of unbelievers
heard?
dead saints whisper,
bouncing their doxologies
against cold stone.
and i am
walking on eggshells in Your
oppressive, silent house
feeling the anxious spiders
stir in my gut.

even when Your words
call for peace,

i feel no arms
of rest.
only black, leather ropes
meant to keep
me
in
line.

i suppose there is
safety in
regulations,

but not
freedom.

A Little Dark

By Frederick Pollack

A weakness, a taste,
incipient
glaucoma — and you’re playing
a kind of “chicken”: seeing
how little you can see before you can’t.
Sunset alone moves; the
other windows offer
commentaries on sunset.
You enter the memory
of a room containing the idea
of a chair. The cat,
disturbed, turns, her eyes
reflecting streetlight
parsecs away. You
shuffle ritually among
buried causes, unintended
consequences, hidden angles,
wrapped in a certain rough,
enduring fabric.
Twilight is generous
at any social level: it swells
what you have, what you don’t.
Until at last you sit,
cornered beneath
one lamp, think
One lamp is sufficient,
and then reach up and turn it off.

Blessed

By Sarah Stoltzfus Allen


early morning porch sitting
before the chaos
cigarette
while flicking thin pages
gleaning morality
she closes her eyes
the weight of her tiny world
piles onto minimum wage shoulders
into growling SNAP belly
blessed are the poor in spirit
her baby can’t play T-ball.
registration takes away from rent
she shouldn’t have said
“we’ll have to see,”
two weeks ago when she already knew.
was his hope worth it?
last night:
hot tears running streaks
down dirty cheeks
followed by angry
accusations
“you never let me do anything, mama!”
this morning:
a sleepy-warm shape
settles against her hip
“sorry i yelled, mama.”
blue eyes met
tears pricked
in the corners of
mother and son
for theirs is the kingdom of heaven