Category Archives: Poetry

Four Poems by Barbara A. Meier

The Ghosts of Wilson, KS
Czech Opera House, Wilson, Kansas. Photo by Ammodramus
At the Opera House, the spectral shadows march 
militantly through the sunken Sokal gymnasium,
chanting “a strong mind in a strong body”,
while dining in smoky air, from a ghostly kitchen.

Above the basement, on the second floor,
Blind Boone tickles the mystic ivories,
summoning the eldritch  tornado, 
while the shadowy dancers on the third floor 
ballroom flit and skim across the hardwood floors,
a chilling inch above the sawdust.
They are wraiths to a worldly audience,
ephemeral in history, transparently 
strolling through the burnt-out shell of the Opera house; 

At night sleeping with the ghosts at the Midland Railroad Hotel,
I  hear echoes of whispery voices in the carriage 
of the Butterfield Overland Express, 
the tinny reverberations of the player piano,
and the phantasmal banjo of the medicine show.

But I awake to the whistle and grumbles 
of the Union Pacific Railroad outside my window.
The train no longer stops for anyone, 
not even me, a sojourner amidst
the phantoms, manes and lemures,
crowding the train tracks and the sidewalks 
in front of the Wilson Czech Opera House.
The Saline River
Graphite nails scratch the blue slate skies  - the wild cedar grows.
Limestone posts ghost the Smoky Hills- burnt  white by sun.
The river brown, sluggish- like mud swallows nesting.
In sunburnt bison pastures - herefords dot the smoky hills.
Dead cottonwoods choke the dirty brown of the Saline River.
The creeks are dry twigs - spilling drought into the land.
Baseball in Thunderstorm
Sun setting to the west where dark blankets lie upon the land.
Wind turbines reflecting like white spotlights, bubbling up,
then flattening out in the darkling sky
like a white ball slamming into brown leather.
The American flag stiff and straight
as the front moves through the baseball field.
Wind gusts throws red dirt into our eyes, coats our throats,
and explodes the stadium lights in left field.
The ball gets lost in a scramble of dirt, players,
and umpires, between shortstop and second base.
When it settles with a fist thrown down, and a slam of rain,
Players run for yellow buses, and parents to dusty pickup trucks.
God’s Handmaiden
The hand, warm and calloused
gently grasped my small fingers,
stroking them in a gentle beat 
to the sounds of the pastor's voice
sending love 
coursing through my body.

Those hands could dig a hole 
in the garden, pick the mulberries
and pears, take the apricots
and make jam. 
Sitting with her snapping beans
looking out the picture window 
at the trumpet vine blooming orange
along the porch posts.
 
Later I’d eat the green beans with bacon
and have a dish of ice cream with strawberries.
Her still voice whispers prayers 
between the line dried sheets 
and the basket quilt, snuggling me asleep.
A Baseball Lunch
Thursday, 
5:30pm,
meeting daddy for lunch,
where I’ll tell him about the baseball game in Lucas.

I’ll ask,

“Did you play on that field?”  

I’ll explain my confusion about errors
and did they have a 10 run rule?

“Tell me again about the time Satchel Page played in Sylvan Grove. 

 Did you get to see him play?”

I brought you my flowers to show from my work. 
The ham and cheese sandwich, 
bought at the home convenience store is soggy.

“I don’t think you would like it”.

“ I’d leave the flowers for you
 but I’m afraid the wind would blow them away.”

Plastic fields of flowers.
Polished granite stones stand strong.
Spring wheat sways in wind.


Barbara A Meier( Pseudonym) is a writer living in Lincoln, KS. She has been published in The Poeming Pigeon, Pure Slush, Metonym, Young Ravens Literary Review, and The Bangor Literary Journal.

She has three chapbooks published: “Wildfire LAL 6”, from Ghost City Press, “Getting Through Gold Beach”, from Writing Knights Press, and  “Sylvan Grove”, from The Poetry Box. She loves all things ancient.  She works in a second-grade classroom and in her free time she likes to drive the dirt roads around Lincoln.


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If you would like to be part of the Rural Fiction Magazine family, follow this link to the submissions guidelines. If you like contemporary dark stories and poems, you may also want to check out The Chamber Magazine.


“Autumn” Poem by Sarah Das Gupta

"Autumn" Poem by Sarah Das Gupta: 
 Sarah Das Gupta is a retired teacher from Cambridge, UK.Her work has been published in 12 countries: US, UK, Canada, Australia, India, Germany  and others
The beeches form an archway of fire
the road leads into an inferno
bonfires burn the dead leaves
thoughts of summer flare and die
autumn mists shroud the future

From his hospital bed
he looks at the gilded trees
the grass flecked with gold
the squirrels bury secret hoards
for a Spring which seems uncertain

Autumn that old trickster
In its hazy, languid warmth
The bees think summer is eternal
Ripe round apples ready to fall
Mimic a forgotten Eden

On the dark elms black rooks roost
the dead rise from neglected graves
witches lurk in thick forest gloom
in haunted castles chained skeletons rattle
the world’s horrors are eclipsed for a day

The landscape is dancing into winter
the rich browns of ploughed fields
framed by the flaming hedgerows of gold
darkly dour yews stand untouched by burning beech
the setting sun a red smudge on the darkening horizon

Sarah Das Gupta is a retired teacher from Cambridge, UK.Her work has been published in 12 countries: US, UK, Canada, Australia, India, Germany and others.


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If you would like to be part of the Rural Fiction Magazine family, follow this link to the submissions guidelines. If you like contemporary dark stories and poems, you may also want to check out The Chamber Magazine.


Four Poems by John Grey

Four Poems by John Grey:  John Grey is an Australian poet, US resident, recently published in Stand, Santa Fe Literary Review, and Lost Pilots. Latest books, ”Between Two Fires”, “Covert” and “Memory Outside The Head” are available through Amazon. Work upcoming in the Seventh Quarry, La Presa and California Quarterly..
Early Morning on the Farm
Fog shrouds the farm.
Horses in the far field
are like a mirage -
some snow,
grizzled gray trees,
the frozen snort
of a stallion -
it doesn't take much to blur.

Jane's on her way
to the chicken coop.
A flake
lands on her cheek,
a cold, damp, wake-up.

The world is in-between.
The wind is strangely warm.
The coop wire chills.
She's sixteen -
the child, the woman,
more mirages
for uncertain vision.

Hens scatter at her approach.
The rooster rears its comb and crows -
wattles flap, brown feathers flutter,
the day's first certainty.
A Farmer Dreams
Rain-splitter shares dreams with
cool fingered splendor,
one vagueness splattering the roof,
the other touching his hard skin tender.

One moment, he's young enough
for the thrums of memory,
the woman beside him,
shedding years like undergarments.
Then he's land, groggy from drought appeased,
trickles in cracks, floods in crannies,
dust sweetly laid, mud dripping from his thoughts.

He's half awake. His wife is snoring.
He can't wait to get out on the land again.
There's been a shift in pleasure
Life of the Amish Farmer
Humidity overheats
and bursts like a boil.
Heavy thunder, hail,
torrential rain and cooling.
The Milky Way drawn
by a single farm light
dangles out of the black.
By day, tobacco bends to the harvest.
The corn is holding green.
Esther and Daniel are blessed
with a new arrival, Lena.
The burial service for Lydia Yoder
is at 2.00 A.M.

We begin with the weather,
simple thrumming heartbeat.
Then, drawn to the sky,
witness our faith
awakened by its symbols.
The work, of course, is our Gelassenheit,
our sweaty submission,
a God tutoring to muscle,
to heavy footprints in the earth
and head bent low.

In practical epiphany,
the corn fields bind the air we breathe
like veins.
The child is born,
ripens everything.
An old woman dies
so crops won't have to.

Jenna on the Farm
Her face is still smooth
despite the long days in the sun.
The skin below her eyes
has cracked like land in drought
but the cheeks are fine as sand,
brown with just a trace of red
and the lips are unlined,
from years of more doing than talking.
Only the eyes
say the work was hard and wearying.
The back is ironing-board straight
and the neck high and proud,
but the eyes, once again,
a pale and bruised green,
speak the language
of bending and scouring and digging.
Maybe she looked in the mirror one time
and it was all too beautiful
for what her eyes were telling her.
Or maybe it was all like the eyes
and the rest had nowhere else to turn
but lovely.

John Grey is an Australian poet, US resident, recently published in Stand, Santa Fe Literary Review, and Lost Pilots. Latest books, ”Between Two Fires”, “Covert” and  “Memory Outside The Head” are available through Amazon. Work upcoming in the Seventh Quarry, La Presa and California Quarterly..


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If you would like to be part of the Rural Fiction Magazine family, follow this link to the submissions guidelines. If you like contemporary dark stories and poems, you may also want to check out The Chamber Magazine.


“Imbolic” Poem by Sinead McGuigan

Sinead Mcguigan, a poet and psychology graduate from University College Dublin Ireland writes poetry that explores the human condition and the deepest emotions connected to experience.  Sinead wrote her first solo collection A Gift and a Curse while recovering from cancer; her new book Unbound is also available on Amazon. Sinead's  main interests are travel concerts and art. She often collaborates with artists and have appeared alongside their work in many publications. You can find her work @sineadmcgpoetry on Instagram and Facebook. 
She shreds her flesh 
to offer it to the moon 
She offers peace 
as darkness leaves 
spring scatters magic seeds 
to the festival of the imbolc 
she is no longer a slave 
to the underworld 
stretches through the earth 
giving women fertility 
in a promised land 
She holds charms of the divine
glittering gold in their wombs 
holy wells filling dead eyes 
with unrest 
dazzled by the moon 
she weaves freedom into the 
heart of every woman 
She is a goddess of grace and beauty 
She is a goddess of poetry

Sinead Mcguigan, a poet and psychology graduate from University College Dublin Ireland writes poetry that explores the human condition and the deepest emotions connected to experience.  Sinead wrote her first solo collection A Gift and a Curse while recovering from cancer; her new book Unbound is also available on Amazon. Sinead’s  main interests are travel concerts and art. She often collaborates with artists and have appeared alongside their work in many publications. You can find her work @sineadmcgpoetry on Instagram and Facebook. 


Please share this to give it maximum distribution. 

If you would like to be part of the Rural Fiction Magazine family, follow this link to the submissions guidelines. If you like contemporary dark stories and poems, you may also want to check out The Chamber Magazine.


Three Poems by Benjamin Macnair

Ben Macnair is an award-winning poet and playwright from Staffordshire in the United Kingdom. Follow him on Twitter @ benmacnair

Zoo

Humanity is never perfect,
but it is all we’ve got.
Imperfect skin,
eyes, red, bloodshot.

Memories are never perfect,
so many times misremembered,
so many people forgotten
but they are all we’ve got.

The cages are never perfect,
windblown, and never swept,
so many counsels’ betrayed,
fewer secrets kept.

The keepers are never perfect,
so much death,
creatures long extinct.

The hammers, the smelting iron,
the pliers, and the welding masks,
always checked,
safety first, first and last.

Downhill

Careful now,
parents shout,
as teenagers leave the house,
and their fleeting traces in the snow,
their trays, shining in the cold winter sun.

At the top of the hill, they look down.
Gathered, no-one thinks is this a good idea?
They don’t think about the concussion,
the potential risk to bones, to limbs,
as they slide down the steep hill,
toboggans with no steering,
and as they reach something like
terminal velocity, at the bottom
they come sliding to a halt,
eager to kick the snow from their feet,
shake blood back into frozen hands,
determined, they look up at the hill,
and do it all again.

Crown Shyness

The tops of trees keep their distance,
although the branches sometimes touch.
And we too can keep our distance,
when things get to be a bit too much.

Coral never grows in unclean water,
the infrastructure needs millions of cell to grow,
but we only see the surface, 
not what goes on below.

All of the unnoticed work, 
the underappreciated people,
making things tick over,
keeping the beast alive,
they need to be noticed,
to be nurtured,
if things are to survive.

Ben Macnair is an award-winning poet and playwright from Staffordshire in the United Kingdom. Follow him on Twitter @ benmacnair


Please share this to give it maximum distribution. 

If you would like to be part of the Rural Fiction Magazine family, follow this link to the submissions guidelines. If you like contemporary dark stories and poems, you may also want to check out The Chamber Magazine.