After a long break, Poppy Road is accepting submissions once again! Please send in your wonderful poems or flash fiction.
December 1, 2025
October 15, 2023
Avery's Insight / A Slow Fullness by Anna Citrino
Avery’s Insight
Avery, 1934, age 41Chugwater, Wyoming
I look in the mirror and notice how small my eyes are.
I could never make an engine like my brother Leith,
am not good at math like Carson.
Since I can remember, worlds have spun beyond what I
make sense of. Mr. Hubble recently announced he’s found
other galaxies. Ours isn’t the only one.
Whirling stardust, giant holes in the sky, spacious gaps
between starlight. Worlds lie hidden inside what’s seen.
The stars on Orion’s belt could be galaxies.
I know how to turn a plow to till. Focusing on one row
at a time is the way I move through a pasture, as well as
how I make it through the world. Sometimes when I’m
preparing a field in the morning beneath the bowl of sky,
the plow moving rhythmically through the soil, the world
turns into a kind of music, and I sense everything is dancing
to a melody just beyond what I can hear. I look at the horizon
and sense I’m a pebble in a field that can be turned by a plow.
Everything is larger than anyone will ever understand.
Avery, 1952, age 59
Chugwater, Wyoming
"For cryin' out loud, you’re as slow as molasses in January.”
How many times had I heard someone tell me that?
It’s not a secret. I’m not like others.
Never was good at school,
but I didn’t cry about being slow.
While others burrowed into mines
to cut coal, calculated numbers, or hauled stone
for railroad bed, I’ve risen each day to light
spilled across fields, clouds lazing by.
Nearly sixty years I’ve walked this earth.
Despite its drought and ice, despite a world
rattled in war’s despair, and jolts from aging bones
as I bump along gravel roads, I inhale
the wheat’s slow, ripening as it rustles
in the sky’s blue arms.
Every day the world ripples with wind.
Grit mixes with cloud.
There’s no need to forgive myself
for what I couldn’t change.
I’ve received my daily bread.
I pick a few wheat kernels,
rub them in my hand.
It’s a good world to give myself to.
October 9, 2023
A Postcard from Milford Haven by Robert Nisbet
for those in peril on the sea.”
Those stormy mornings, we’d sing that hymn.
The fathers of many of the school
were out there, trawlers taut against
the seas of Finisterre, Tiree. And,
as the singing swung into the heaves
and hollows of its verse, my blunt
neck-hairs tingled with the sharing of
fear. Those men would ship Atlantic seas,
hake, cod and herring, nets of fish, splash
prize in to the hold, into the dock,
and later drink, play dominoes, for days,
in the Alma, the Kitchener, the Heart of Oak.
Other times, during a trip, in Segadelli’s,
whose warm café tables looked out
across the dock and out to sea,
the women would scent storm, and,
like the clouds, they’d gather, cluster, mutter.
*This poem appeared in Roundyhouse in 2010
October 5, 2023
A Symphony of Movement by Michael L. Newell
by a fiery sunset, a woman invented
a loose-limbed dance, filled
with leaps, twirls, bends, and swirls,
as her long black hair unfurled
in rising and falling wind,
and I stopped some distance away
to witness and celebrate the woman's
ecstatic movement and marriage
with the elements, and allow all I saw
to become imprinted in my mind, to forever
remind me of how one person can both praise
and meld oneself to world's magnificence.
October 3, 2023
Ruby Slippers / Drywall by Alfred Fournier
Before Dorothy tapped those shoes three times,
her world was askew with wonder.
Whether or not she believed
there was a powerful old man
who held the key to her return,
arm-in-arm she skipped along that golden road,
each friend flawed with God-given grace
ready to defend her innocence and hope,
going all the way to the emerald gates
through darkness, dreams and poppies.
When the world sends its flying monkeys your way,
remember who you are.
Somewhere on the other side of sleep
shines a dream more real than this one.
When the Good Witch says,
You’ve had the power all along,
dropping the prop of her wand to her side,
you’ll see your greatest strength has always been
the pluck you thought you were missing.
Drywall
If you knew your long-dead mother was sleeping
in the hotel room adjacent to yours,
not in the wind-swept hills of her girlhood,
nor some grim castle tower gnawed by rain
into a state of decay, but just beyond thin layers
of drywall where every sound you make
reverberates,
across creaking floorboards, lower the volume
on that 360 speaker you take everywhere,
keep the TV news to a whisper? When you wake
in the famine of night, residue of childhood fears
brooding like a dark forest inside you,
place your palm flat against the wall. Listen
for the bounty that lives within silence.
Let sorrow dip and rise like a nighthawk inside you.
October 1, 2023
Room of Forget by Diane Webster
Rooster crowed … crowed … crowed;
I dragged … dragged … dragged
myself awake; forgot I had died.
This room is not my room.
Perhaps a motel room.
Am I on vacation?
Where’s my wife? The bed indents
only one merry-old-soul form.
Our picture hangs on the wall,
but it’s not my wall -- white,
too white like my skinny legs.
My pants feel right; my shoes fit,
but why am I here? Where am I?
Someone knocks on my door and enters.
“Time for breakfast, Riley. Are you ready?”
Riley fumbles for his cane and shuffles
down the hall to the dining room filled
with residents looking at him
for someone familiar. Should he know them?
Rooster crows in the distance,
but no one hears; no one remembers…
again … and again … and again.
September 25, 2023
Leaving by Jennifer Nichols
