The Chumpion Of Lost Causes

Sharmila is so naïve

She can’t pick between prudence and courage

She flogs dead horses

She allows herself to be found traipsing through the tulips

She’s a slow unlearner

She loves her unteacher

She wants 364 unbirthdays

What she resists persists

She depotentiates herself, silly goose,

Until her soul screams,”STOP”

 

Sonali Gurpur

 

 

Sonali Gurpur writes poetry and fiction. Her poems were recently picked for the ‘Commended’ and ‘Highly Commended’ categories of the Margaret Reid Prize for Traditional Verse, and for the city wide reading at the Austin International Poetry Festival. Her short story “See With Your Eyes Not Just Your Heart” was finalist at Glimmertrain.

Enchantment

be one and see this rose with me

she will snare and tear all that

care enough to be bold and hold;

all told, beauty reins with pain,

 

with a heart that will start and dart;

a tart, not a weed, she will need,

indeed, but inspire a choir and

a fire of want, she will taunt

 

a soul to pluck and tuck; she may

bring luck to a lover; discover

and uncover her scent; content

in her enchantment as she vies to die

 

Corinna Fulton

From Darkness Into Light

by Kim Farleigh

The glass roof left rectangular light on the sand, the swaying bull swaying beside the light, as if listening to music, death’s orchestra calling, the bull’s left back leg in front of the leg it should have been next to, blood dripping from its nostrils, a gold rectangle of light next to where the bull was swaying, swaying to an irresistible calling, the sword sticking out of the bull’s back, the matador’s triumphant hand shaking before the bull’s face, the bull falling into light, a courageous bull that had run in straight lines.

The bull got dragged by horses around the ring, the crowd applauding a being whose courage had taken it from darkness to light, the bull floating through that light.

A blizzard of fluttering, white handkerchiefs erupted around the ring, an expression of appreciation for both man and bull, fabrics like butterflies escaping towards light.

Kim’s stories have appeared, or are forthcoming, in Whiskey Island, Southerly, Island, Mudjob, Write From Wrong, Sleet, Negative Suck, The Red Fez, Red Ochre Lit, Haggard & Halloo, Down in the Dirt, The Camel Saloon, Feathertale, Descant, The Houston Literary Review, The Sand Journal, Full of Crow and Unlikely Stories.

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