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delicious new poetry
‘same spectral symphony’ — poetry by Julio César Villegas
Jan 1, 2026
‘same spectral symphony’ — poetry by Julio César Villegas
Jan 1, 2026
Jan 1, 2026
'I think I know why I am looking at roses' — poetry by Stephanie Victoire
Jan 1, 2026
'I think I know why I am looking at roses' — poetry by Stephanie Victoire
Jan 1, 2026
Jan 1, 2026
'All the trees are you' — poetry by Barbara Ungar
Jan 1, 2026
'All the trees are you' — poetry by Barbara Ungar
Jan 1, 2026
Jan 1, 2026
'girl straddles the axis  of ancient  and eternal' — poetry by Grace Dignazio
Jan 1, 2026
'girl straddles the axis of ancient and eternal' — poetry by Grace Dignazio
Jan 1, 2026
Jan 1, 2026
'Talk light with me' — poetry by Catherine Graham
Jan 1, 2026
'Talk light with me' — poetry by Catherine Graham
Jan 1, 2026
Jan 1, 2026
'How thy high horse hath fallen' — poetry by Madeline Blair
Jan 1, 2026
'How thy high horse hath fallen' — poetry by Madeline Blair
Jan 1, 2026
Jan 1, 2026
'a paradise called  Loneliness' — poetry by Adam Jon Miller
Jan 1, 2026
'a paradise called  Loneliness' — poetry by Adam Jon Miller
Jan 1, 2026
Jan 1, 2026
'Tell me I taste like hunger' — poetry by Jennifer Molnar
Jan 1, 2026
'Tell me I taste like hunger' — poetry by Jennifer Molnar
Jan 1, 2026
Jan 1, 2026
'I prayed to be released from my longing' — poetry by Michelle Reale
Jan 1, 2026
'I prayed to be released from my longing' — poetry by Michelle Reale
Jan 1, 2026
Jan 1, 2026
'Resurrection dance, a prelude' — poetry by V.C. Myers
Jan 1, 2026
'Resurrection dance, a prelude' — poetry by V.C. Myers
Jan 1, 2026
Jan 1, 2026
'It is noon and the sun is ill' — poetry by Raquel Dionísio Abrantes
Jan 1, 2026
'It is noon and the sun is ill' — poetry by Raquel Dionísio Abrantes
Jan 1, 2026
Jan 1, 2026
'every moon rolling fat through the night' — poetry by Zann Carter
Jan 1, 2026
'every moon rolling fat through the night' — poetry by Zann Carter
Jan 1, 2026
Jan 1, 2026
jan1.jpeg
Jan 1, 2026
'I have been monstrously good' — erasures by Lauren Davis
Jan 1, 2026
Jan 1, 2026
'The light slices the mouth' — poetry by Aakriti Kuntal
Jan 1, 2026
'The light slices the mouth' — poetry by Aakriti Kuntal
Jan 1, 2026
Jan 1, 2026
'quiet grandfathers  in dark tuxedos' — poetry by Scott Ferry
Dec 19, 2025
'quiet grandfathers in dark tuxedos' — poetry by Scott Ferry
Dec 19, 2025
Dec 19, 2025
'made a deal / with Azrael' — poetry by Triniti Wade
Dec 19, 2025
'made a deal / with Azrael' — poetry by Triniti Wade
Dec 19, 2025
Dec 19, 2025
'The birth of a body that never unraveled' — an excerpt by Hillary Leftwich
Dec 19, 2025
'The birth of a body that never unraveled' — an excerpt by Hillary Leftwich
Dec 19, 2025
Dec 19, 2025
'Time's metronome blank' — poetry by Rehan Qayoom
Dec 19, 2025
'Time's metronome blank' — poetry by Rehan Qayoom
Dec 19, 2025
Dec 19, 2025
'There is no choir on the mountain' — poetry by Dawn Tefft
Dec 19, 2025
'There is no choir on the mountain' — poetry by Dawn Tefft
Dec 19, 2025
Dec 19, 2025
'to anoint the robes' — poetry by Timothy Otte
Dec 19, 2025
'to anoint the robes' — poetry by Timothy Otte
Dec 19, 2025
Dec 19, 2025
'a stone portal in the woods' — RJ Equality Ingram
Dec 19, 2025
'a stone portal in the woods' — RJ Equality Ingram
Dec 19, 2025
Dec 19, 2025
'crooked castle wanting' — poetry by Lindsay D’Andrea
Dec 19, 2025
'crooked castle wanting' — poetry by Lindsay D’Andrea
Dec 19, 2025
Dec 19, 2025
'earth’s marble cage' — poetry by Annah Atane
Dec 19, 2025
'earth’s marble cage' — poetry by Annah Atane
Dec 19, 2025
Dec 19, 2025
'silent, Sunday morning' — poetry by Nathalie Spaans
Dec 19, 2025
'silent, Sunday morning' — poetry by Nathalie Spaans
Dec 19, 2025
Dec 19, 2025
'this strikes me as a Rorschach' — poetry by John Amen
Dec 19, 2025
'this strikes me as a Rorschach' — poetry by John Amen
Dec 19, 2025
Dec 19, 2025
'O, to bloom, to arch open' — poetry by Karen L. George
Dec 19, 2025
'O, to bloom, to arch open' — poetry by Karen L. George
Dec 19, 2025
Dec 19, 2025
'the sky violent' — poetry by Robert Warf
Dec 19, 2025
'the sky violent' — poetry by Robert Warf
Dec 19, 2025
Dec 19, 2025
'Love is a necessary duty' — poetry by Tabitha Dial
Dec 19, 2025
'Love is a necessary duty' — poetry by Tabitha Dial
Dec 19, 2025
Dec 19, 2025
'the doors of the night open' — poetry by Juan Armando Rojas (translated by Paula J. Lambert)
Nov 29, 2025
'the doors of the night open' — poetry by Juan Armando Rojas (translated by Paula J. Lambert)
Nov 29, 2025
Nov 29, 2025
'we can be forlorn women' — poetry by Stevie Belchak
Nov 29, 2025
'we can be forlorn women' — poetry by Stevie Belchak
Nov 29, 2025
Nov 29, 2025

Photo by Lisa Marie Basile

'light in my teeth' — poetry by Lisa Marie Oliver

August 11, 2025

Aubade with Light In My Teeth

Daybreak. Broken fever.
Drip of the eggshell sink. Light
in my teeth. Quavering smoke-brain,
mute steps. Panel of bright fronds,
pink orbs presses window panes.
Last night, the mimosa tree fell.
I did not hear it. How not to gorge.
How not to fear. I’m not afraid
he said before he died. Almost
last words. I did not understand
the way he was brought down
minus any thunder. How to respire.
How to describe a silk tree’s last
gasps. How to shrine the afterwards,
unquiet altar of branches traced
with morning. Cool brow.
Bark-husk. Honey. Resin.


12 questions
after Bhanu Kapil

On a mountain trail at the ocean we visit an alder with split trunks intertwined, call it ours.

*

Every day, I feed crows and hummingbirds. A seagull perches on my neighbor’s roof, watching hungrily. 200 miles from home. 144 hours as the bird flies.

*

In this metaphor I’m all three variations of birds.

*

After my lover dies, I visit the tree. I offer feathers, skin, hair, shells.

*

A pale whelk on the sand: apex, suture, whorl, rib, striations, outer lip, aperture, spire.

*

Memory is a heavy hooked beak.

*

I walk fully clothed into the ocean. Seagulls squat on wet sand, mired with rain. For one brief moment, I remember nothing.

*

Despite expectations and desire, there is nothing silent beneath a wave.

*

After he dies, I pull out my hair. It takes many days to break my teeth. Feed them to the seagulls. Throw each arm into the sea. These knees. My cleaved feet. Bury them under marram grass until all that remains is a useless engorged heart.

*

Rain all night. Fog shore. No partition between wave and sky.

*

A balcony with a view of basalt sea stack. He is too sick to leave the bed. I eat quietly to not wake him. I’ve never tasted anything so perfectly sweet.

*

Whenever I consume a huckleberry.


Lisa Marie Oliver is the author of "Birthroot" (Glass Lyre Press). Recent poems have appeared in Harbor Review, Tupelo Quarterly, Rust and Moth, and elsewhere. She lives in Portland, Oregon with her son. For more: lisamarieoliver.com

In august 2025, Poetry 2025 Tags Lisa Marie Oliver
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Pinterest

'a kind of devotion' — poetry by Elizabeth Sulis Kim

August 11, 2025

The bird


I saw the bird
heard
its high pitched trill
when I thought of a bird it’s what I saw
autumn
its cold-warm glow
the wind burnt my wet hair
or that’s how it seemed then
four years after the cat died
or rather,
was put out of her misery
in a room where nothing grew
it was late in the evening
hunger
no appetite we tasted the
bile at the
back of our
throats
death was uneventful
but the bird
flittered under my arm when I thought of it
disappeared into the thicket
in that shaded corner of town
months before I walked the crescent
glancing into the old houses
catching wafts of rose-tinted air
the Near East in the north
it always comes back again.
those petals were dew glazed and sweet
the bird came later when the flowers were gone
wet fir trees stirred
everything else garden mulch
and stone


The Heron
 

whenever I think of 
the heron
I think of 
the girl who traced the 
playground 
that now feels like a graveyard
hovered around its seams
weightless 
elated 
she stood on one leg
forgot to pray
or rather
thought her fasting 
a kind of devotion 
at the altar overlooking 
the precipice 
I wanted to be possessed by the 
same demoness 
or was she a haunting 
or a feeling 
or a spirit fuelled by light and air 
a body
borrowed:
something to overcome 
another mind-fuck myth: 
mind and body cannot be separated 
beyond the starving girl 
the heron stands on one leg
waiting for some thing
or other


Elizabeth Sulis Kim is an Edinburgh-based writer. Her writing has appeared in The Guardian, BBC Culture, Ambit, the LA Review of Books, the New Orleans Review, TANK, Stylist, Refinery29, Electric Literature, and Oh Comely, among others. She is the founding editor of Cunning Folk Magazine and edited Spiritus Mundi: Writings Borne from the Occult. 

In Poetry 2025, august 2025 Tags Elizabeth Sulis Kim
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photo by Lisa Marie Basile

'disappear into the honeysuckle’s undying' — poetry by Marcus Myers

August 4, 2025

Love Song (6)

When she turned away my shame spoke its face
Tanned from a can  wearing its awful straw hat
And rusted sideburns like curved knives
And in cocky seersucker suspenders sweaty 
Spiting in my inner ear you’re not you’re too
And it fingers while mouthing the Mark Twain
Through its cigar-chomped mustache 
A tooth-rotted
And tobacco-stained vernacular in the excavation
Of the mud-preserved vessel
I can’t unhear its jawbone’s gold fillings when it says
You’re a stupid mother 
A dumber father of your futures
When she left my shame acted
It found me in my private quarters
Barged on in and pulled a cleaver from a leather sleeve
Hidden beneath my jacket slung left of my heart
It got what it demanded 
A pound of our flesh 
The returns on our returns


Can We Stop Calling it Blue Bile 

 

If we haven’t spoken 
In many years, the air
Between the trees
Thick as greenbrier. 
If these blue marks are cuts.
If my boots are full.
If I’ve already stained the thigh 
Of each pant leg.
If our fretboard holds
A fan of fingerprints.
If also the cap’s brim.
If cuffs and shirt pocket.
When footprints trail off
From the square. Disappear
Into the honeysuckle’s undying
And reappear along the stream 
To the river and delta.
Then let’s call it a map
Of the blue trail.
The tune we made and how
We might teach them
To play it again. Instead
To play it green or orange.
The songbook anybody
Can take from the sky.


Marcus Myers lives in Kansas City, Missouri, where he teaches, advises advanced students, and serves as co-founding and managing editor of Bear Review. In 2022, the Poet Laureate of Missouri published one of his poems, alongside those by MO poets Mary Jo Bang, Hadara Bar-Nadav, Aliki Barnstone, John Gallaher, Jenny Molberg and others, as a tiny book to hand to “readers who say they don’t read poetry”. Author of the chapbook Cloud Sanctum (Bottlecap Press 2022), his poems have appeared in or are forthcoming from The Common, Contemporary Verse 2, The Florida Review, Fourteen Hills, The Los Angeles Review, Mid-American Review, Pleiades, Poetry South, RHINO, Salt Hill, Southeast Review, and other such journals. 

In august 2025, Poetry 2025 Tags Marcus Myers
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'In dreams it’s your hands I see' — poetry by Kirun Kapur

August 3, 2025


Raga of the Reports
(for my father)

When it snapped, the thread of time, that chime—
god’s veena string—a line of melody I called life, 

it ended. The moon creaked off its hinge, wind blew in 
the little coffins of my ears, 

my mouth opened, I found a field—
pathless, unpeopled, fireflies: off-on, off-off. 


*

In dreams it’s your hands I see—peeling pith from an orange, midair telling a story, stirring sugar into tea, gesturing the makhta, lifting a splinter from my good-girl feet. 

It’s your voice—the only one to say my name the way god says it. 

I say my name in rooms, chairs full, the air conditioned, lights livid as if for surgery. I sound like I’m importing myself. 

When I open my mouth, I see the quince is in its glory. When I open my
mouth I hope to find

that line of sound—my name, chime of you and me, of time,

a coral blossom. In the mind. In the mouth.
In the yard, a whole bush shaking with sparrows. 


*

When the doctor couldn’t look at me. When she read out the report I’d already read—
the quince was glorious. I smelled the perfumed air. I felt the little mind. My mind 

became a coffin, then a field. Do you have questions, asked the doctor in the moon? 
I closed my eyes and listened to you call my name. My god. In the chime that used to be my life. 


*

God said, let there be light. God said, let the flowers and the little coffins bloom. God said, time and fathers—all there is. You must open your mouth 

and speak the world. You must import yourself to the field called life.

I repeat my name. My date of birth. 

I went to bed a person. Woke up a patient that first time, 
your hand on my forehead declaring 

I had cold-body-fever, rubbing Ram Tel, god’s oil, over my scraped palms. 

I went to bed a person and woke up sweating on a train. 
Never eat the dessert, you used to say. The fields 

of rice streaked by. I dozed and woke to find a charpai 

full of turbaned men playing cards outside the window. I wondered. I woke again. Would you be at the station? At my bedside with a book? 

Your hands. I see them— 

I went to bed and a song went by
and now another man putting his hand on mine saying my name the wrong way, saying 

Dexamethasone, Isatuximab, Lenalidomide, I’m saying 

soon there will be lilacs. The quince has passed. I cut the last prickly branches. I wait for the lilac to choke me with perfume. 

*

Once you brought me to a holy man. He told me not to put my nose too close to his roses. I could inhale small bugs. But you said every tiny thing makes a song. The holy know 

the syllables. The songs of all the little living things. Thick silky roses hung over dry pavers in the mid-June heat. Gulab. Gulabi. The monsoon 

hadn’t come, yet there was this pink lushness. I think of it now 
pressing my face to my own not-yet lilacs. Who knows what’s inside

when you open your mouth. Your mind. When you will wake up 
a dry field of study. 

What kind of syllables are the doctor’s? Divine 
enough to fill the little coffins? Lush 

enough for all the little living things? 

*

When god spoke in her ear, filled her night with fireflies. When she was 
pronounced out of herself and into the field of care—

A dream of roses. A dream of hands on her forehead. Her god-name spinning her into the world.

*

Saraswati plays the veena. The whole world vibrates with sound. Oh, the sound of your name in the mouth of the ones who love you. Oh, the little melody 

of love. Of fear. Of fever. Of flowers about to bloom.  Listen, listen—
strings of the veena 

calling  

*

It’s too hot when the lilacs finally bloom. Smell so intense it feels 
like sound. 

*

In waiting rooms, I give my name, my date of birth. In moon rooms,
on lunar dates. In scanners, the lights blink on and off.  I listen to the hum—

*

The goddess plays the veena. Flowers bloom and bloom. 
Fingers picking out the melody. Fingers laying down the drone. 

The holy wrote: the human throat 
is a sareer veena—moan and hum 

of the universe inside you. The rhyme of time. Open your mouth 
to find the lilac after the quince, the song-flower of your mind. 

*

On the day I first put the chemicals in my veins— 

On the first day I use a medicine that will ruin my body to save my life,
learning to tune myself to that string of syllables

19 children are shot in a school.

This poem should stop. All the blood should stop in every vein. 

What’s the use?

The broken veena string, the smashed chime— 

all the gods and goddesses 
should be stricken from the page. 

We open our mouths—

horror error sorrow terror— 

We open and close our mouths—

The syllable sobs 
of life keep pouring into the light—

Name. Date of Birth. 

The child blinking into the field. The field 
filled with little coffins. 

How will we bear the song?
How can any other story go on?

We open our mouths 
and lay the flowers on the graves.

Off-on-off-off. Even today—

Stop, I say. Stop.

The notes have changed. The raga continues to play,

the nurse repeats the syllables of my life. A new music—

report after report. Name after name 

nothing stops

How can a song contain it?
How can a vein? 

It should not. 
I open my mouth 

and here’s the nurse with the needle
saying my name.

Here’s a father with an inconsolable bouquet.
Here’s a god-tune in my ear. Saying,

listen, listen—

you were always just a little variation 
of one little refrain 

listen, listen—

the monsoon after the white-hot June.


Kirun Kapur is a poet, editor, teacher and translator. She is the author of three books of poetry, Visiting Indira Gandhi’s Palmist (Elixir Press, 2015) which won the Arts & Letters Rumi Prize and the Antivenom Poetry Award; Women in the Waiting Room (Black Lawrence Press, 2020), a finalist for the National Poetry Series; and the chapbook All the Rivers in Paradise (UChicago Arts, 2022). Her work has appeared in Ploughshares , AGNI, Poetry International, Prairie Schooner and many other journals. She serves as editor at the Beloit Poetry Journal and teaches at Amherst College, where she is director of the Creative Writing Program.

In august 2025, Poetry 2025 Tags Kirun Kapur
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photo by lisa marie basile

'our gaze aqueous' — poems by Gioele Galea (translated by Abigail Ardelle Zammit)

August 3, 2025

08

Unyielding
in our head
the thought of water

and our gaze aqueous. 

Asking 
what our eyes bespeak   
is pointless. 

From water
no sound issues forth,
and no sound remains
in its hold.


Insistenti
ġo rasna
l-idea tal-ilma
u ħarsitna fluwida.
Nistaqsu
x’inhuma għajnejna
ma jrendix.
Mill-ilma
ma jqumx ħoss,
u ħoss ma jżommx
ġo ħoġru.


09

Look, everything has receded.

Down to sounds,
one by one,
falling dead
in our laps;
and there’s nothing to revive them,
not even our lips.

What could 
this water be, so still
as far as our sight can carry?  

Our eyes open,
as if within them 
the horizon awakes.  


Ara, kollox ċeda.
Sal-ħsejjes,
wieħed wieħed,
waqgħu mejta
f’ħoġorna;
u m’hemmx x’jirxuxtahom,
lanqas fommna.
Xi jkun
dan l-ilma mank imkemmex
sa fejn tagħtina l-ħarsa?
B’għajnejna miftuħin,
donnu ġo fihom
iqum ix-xefaq.


10

Yes,
you may
lose your eyes 
forever;
they might
never return
to your face.

If
the water takes them
the sky will swallow them up.

Have you ever
seen pools
not taken up 
by blueness?


Iva,
għandek mnejn
titlifhom għal dejjem
għajnejk;
għandhom mnejn
ma jerġgħux
lura f’wiċċek.
Jekk
jeħodhomlok l-ilma
jiblagħhomlok is-sema.
Qatt
rajt għadajjar
mhumiex meħuda
mill-kħula?


11

To renew
the mortified pool of your soul 
the sky sends water. 

Have you ever
seen it looking at you    
once more 
after rain?

Renewing you,
and letting go.
Lest you 
bind it through your gaze.


Biex iġedded
l-għadira umiljata ta’ ruħek
jibgħat l-ilma s-sema.
Qatt
rajtu jħares lejk
darb’oħra
wara x-xita?
Iġeddek,
u jitilqek.
Li ma tmurx
torbtu b’ħarstek.


12

What’s there 
to keep 
of your soul?

Water 
escapes 
from your hands
and the sun and wind
dry them up.

You’d be burying it
in a desert if you 
bury your face.
in your palms.


X’hemm
xi żżomm
minn ruħek?
Jaħrabl-ilma
minn idejk
u x-xemx u r-riħ
inixxfuhomlok.
Fil-pali,
tkun tidfnu ġo deżert
jekk tidfen wiċċek.


Gioele Galea read theology at the University of Malta. For fourteen years, he led a solitary life in a hermitage. He has published seven collections of poetry, including Ifrixli Ħdanek Beraħ (Malta: PalPrints Publications, 1996), Dija (Malta: Carmelite Institute, 2012), Bla Qiegħ' (Horizons, 2015), Għera (Malta: Horizons, 2018), Ilma (Malta: Horizons, 2022), al of which give witness to an uncompromising spiritual journey where bareness is as overwhelming as it is essential. Galea has also published two prize-winning hybrid memoirs, Tħabbat Xtaqtek (Malta: Horizons, 2017) u In-Nar Għandu Isem (Malta: Horizons, 2020). His poetry has been translated into English and Arabic. 

Abigail Ardelle Zammit is a Maltese writer, editor and educator whose poetry and reviews have appeared in international journals and anthologies including CounterText, Black Iris, Matter, Tupelo Quarterly, Boulevard, Gutter, Modern Poetry in Translation, Mslexia, Poetry International, The SHOp, Iota, Aesthetica, Ink, Sweat and Tears, High Window, O:JA&L, The Ekphrastic Review, Smokestack Lightning (Smokestack, 2021) and The Montreal Poetry Prize Anthology 2022 (Véhicule Press, 2023).  Abigail’s poetry collections are Leaves Borrowed from Human Flesh (Etruscan Press, Wilkes University, 2025), Portrait of a Woman with Sea Urchin (London: SPM, 2015) and Voices from the Land of Trees (UK: Smokestack, 2007).  She has co-authored two bilingual pamphlets (Half Spine, Half Wild Flower – Nofsi Spina, Nofsi Fjur Selvaġġ) and written A Seamus Heaney guidebook for high-school students. 

In Poetry 2025, august 2025 Tags Abigail Ardelle Zammit, Gioele Galea, Maltese poetry, In Translation, 2025 poetry
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Featured
'quiet grandfathers  in dark tuxedos' — poetry by Scott Ferry
'quiet grandfathers in dark tuxedos' — poetry by Scott Ferry
'made a deal / with Azrael' — poetry by Triniti Wade
'made a deal / with Azrael' — poetry by Triniti Wade
'The birth of a body that never unraveled' — an excerpt by Hillary Leftwich
'The birth of a body that never unraveled' — an excerpt by Hillary Leftwich
'Time's metronome blank' — poetry by Rehan Qayoom
'Time's metronome blank' — poetry by Rehan Qayoom
'There is no choir on the mountain' — poetry by Dawn Tefft
'There is no choir on the mountain' — poetry by Dawn Tefft
'to anoint the robes' — poetry by Timothy Otte
'to anoint the robes' — poetry by Timothy Otte
'a stone portal in the woods' — RJ Equality Ingram
'a stone portal in the woods' — RJ Equality Ingram
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'silent, Sunday morning' — poetry by Nathalie Spaans
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'this strikes me as a Rorschach' — poetry by John Amen
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'O, to bloom, to arch open' — poetry by Karen L. George
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'Love is a necessary duty' — poetry by Tabitha Dial
'the doors of the night open' — poetry by Juan Armando Rojas (translated by Paula J. Lambert)
'the doors of the night open' — poetry by Juan Armando Rojas (translated by Paula J. Lambert)
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'we can be forlorn women' — poetry by Stevie Belchak
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'Flowers are the offspring of longing' — poetry by Ellen Kombiyil
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