“March of Intellect No. 2” by William Heath (1794 – 1840), Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum
In a cartoon made in England in March 1828, entitled “March of Intellect, No. 2,” there are many fantastical aerial machines including some bizarre ones, such as a volcano propelling a flight, but there is not a single shape of a modern airplane with widely outstretched wings and a narrow, elongated body. Our imagination often fails to foreshadow what is truly coming…
The humble beginnings of aerial flight are mostly associated with balloons, that from scientific wonders devolved into hobbies of afficionados and children’s toys. To illustrate this, the first Poetry Letter of the 250th anniversary year of our great nation, I picked some historical images of balloons, and added my photos from the Balloon Fiesta in Albuquerque, New Mexico. It is good to know how far we have gone since the humble beginnings of exiles seeking freedom far from their oppressive homelands. Was everything perfect from the start? No. Is everything perfect now? No. Was it worth it to create the world’s first republic, based on “inalienable rights of Life, Liberty, and pursuit of Happiness”? Certainly. The Declaration of Independence and the U.S. Constitution are shining lights for the world… even if having needed a multitude of Amendments.
Here, we present the fruit of poets’ pursuit of creative freedom and happiness: the winners of Monthly Contests of 2025. The featured poet Nancy Murphy, and reviews of three poetry books will be posted in Part II. Enjoy!
Maja Trochimczyk, CSPS President
WINNERS OF CSPS MONTHLY POETRY CONTESTS IN 2025
The hard-working, insightful, and sharp-eyed Alice Pero, Monthly Contest Judge, selected the following poems and poets as winner of prizes in our Monthly Contests in 2025.
① January: Nature, Landscape.
1st Prize: Lorraine Jeffery, “Next Gen Storm Dance”
② February: Love.
1st Prize: Richard T. Ringley, “Translation”
③ March: Open, Free Subject.
1st Prize: Jeff Graham, “Winter(')s(')”.
2nd Prize: David Anderson, “No Breeze”
3rd Prize: Katharyn Howd Machan, “Laura Pearce: Redwing, 1888”
④ April: Mythology, Dreams, Other Universes.
1st Prize: Katharyn Howd Machan, “Helen”
⑤ May: Personification, Portraits.
1st Prize: Carla Schick, "What Is Stolen Will Never Be Returned"
⑥ June: The Supernatural.
1st Prize: Rebecca Clayton ,”If I Were a God”
2nd Prize: Richard Ringley, “Kumi Ho and the Night of the Waning Moon”
⑦ July: Childhood, Memoirs.
1st Prize: John Monagle, “Communion”
2nd Prize: Lorraine Jeffery, “My Quiet Grandmother”
⑧ August: Places, Poems of Location.
1st Prize: Peter Ludwin, “Terezin Concentration Camp, Bohemia”
2nd Prize: Laura Grevel, “Geodetic Survey Three-Dimensional Changes in Crustal Motion at mm Scale”
3rd Prize: Michael Shoemaker, “The Gift of a Lane”
⑨ September: Colors, Music, Dance.
1st Prize: Katharyn Howd Machan, “During Music”
2nd Prize: Lorraine Jeffery, “Coda”
3rd Prize: Kathryn Schmeiser, ”A Chance to Dance”
⑩ October: Humor, Satire.
1st Prize: Katharyn Howd Machan, "People Often Ask"
⑪ November: Family, Friendship, Relationships.
1st Prize: Bill Glose, “Devotion”
⑫ December: Back Down to Earth (Time, Seasons).
1st Prize: John W. Crawford, "Do Not Go Gentle--A January Morning"
2nd Prize: Katharyn Howd Machan, "We Gather for Bells"
TranslationAh, mon amie,I have walked these streetsnaked in thought,this old city that clings to mein cobblestone dreams.I have gathered the odd expressionin semi-coherent French:Mon FrancaisN’est pas tres bonJe ne sais pas; Ca ne fait rien.The coffeehouses emotesuch wonderful smells,a croissant with creama moment alone.This quiet questis calming me,is healing and healing…Ah, come with me.For in my tight winter coat,I have walked these streets,more naked than nude -thinking of you.
White atop haygrey.Winter's unpassable.White atop white.Horses long now gone.Yes, after I had gone.No, before my arrival.Winter passes to winter.White atop white atop.Distant hoofclick.Winter passes t6 winter's passing;winter passes to winters past.*Sundays come and go; weeks pass.Lambs grown old now.Winter nears winter.Snowdrift; therefore, I am.Woolen sky; therefore, I drift.Shepherd and shepherded of and byglances upon the vast.Winter greets winter greeted.Could it be that I?*Fleshliness of snow, chill of blossoms,chill of flesh, blossoms of snow.Days and I grown abruptly older.Days and I known only by the days.Blossoms that mantle the snow as they landare too brief for their sakes,do not fall for their sakes alone.*White fields black with last harvest's stubble.White fields white with white of field.Stutter-step past and as the unseen,toward as from (and along and across)a milkfilm of cornea (mine and not,yet otherwise).Or say, I eye my I's.White fields green with sleep.Adrift, I shift my gaze adrift.
No Breezethe sky fades, luminous, cloud-free,beyond the horizon of city treeson this side of the fence lies leaf litter,crinkled, curled, dry, colorlesspast the fence, straw-colored grassno longer lit by the descending sunfences left in the field no longer visiblebirds chirp and settle to a bare rustleno breeze moves the windchimesunder distant trees, car headlightsturn and vanish into the darkthe sky loses its pale sheenthe coming night claims it all
Laura Pearce: Redwing, 1888When the Gypsies came, your grandmothermade me promise not to go to the woodswhere fires blazed and music playedand dark-eyed women danced in coins.She said they'd steal a girl like mewith golden hair and flower skinand make me beg in filthy clothesand feed me scraps of moldy bread.But the second night the moon rose yellowand full, and lilacs filled the air.I couldn't stay; silently I slippedthrough the gate, blue shawl a shieldagainst my family's eyes. I ranthrough the town's spring-heavy streetsto where the Gypsies camped, new greenof trees a canopy of lace.He saw me first, the fiddler, his bowpoised in firelight, black hair a curveof crow's wing on his brow. I knewhe knew I'd come to them, to him,for music, night, the sound and smellof waking earth, brush of pale mothsat my mouth, cry and ache of stringsstretched taut across old polished wood.Only fifteen, and such knowledge! SlowlyI let the blue shawl fall, and slowlyI stepped near as he smiled and playedthe song I had long felt in dreamand never heard and always known.Slowly I moved; then the tempo quickened,my feet flickering shadows on grounddancing, dancing to the Gypsy's touch.How long? The May stars whirled a courseof new-born constellations, storiesit's taken me years to recall. And after,he led me to his mother's tent, and spoke.She brought a tea of sassafras and mint,perhaps, some spice I've yet to taste again,and traced her fingers on my palmand stroked my hair. Both stroked my hair.What else? I left behind the shawl,took home instead a fine-spun scarfshe offered from, a chest. Yes-the samethat's always hung above your bed,blue with that single golden coinsewn in you used to call your star.Remember, when they try to tell you Gypsiesare no good. Remember, when you dance.
Helen
They say it was my face. No:let me tell you about marriage.Silences and swords, a stone house,my women whispering around medull as bees. For years before he touchedour doorsill, I dreamt his voice;the silver gifts he brought were tinymirrors of the girl I'd held insidetoo long. Soon I turned willing handsto weave for him, each thread a pieceof secret song. The peacock blue, the purpleheart of pansies, red a cry of sunsetting over unclimbed hills. I askedto go with him. I knew he watched mewalk across cool tile, my feet in sandalsI yearned to kick awayso I could run to him unboundby safe convention. Strange strong guest,reluctant to offend the man he knewI didn't love, whose hospitalitywas heartless, rote, a hand that dropscoins in a beggar's cup without a glance.One morning when the sun rose whiteand helplessly again I moved to standbeside him where the swans swim slow,he took my hand in his and nodded yes.All time burst to blossom and Iknew what it was to be the rose.Swift ships, sting of salty air, my hairwrapped around his fingers in the dark:we could have lived forever in that placeof travel, seabirds wailing overhead,the men around us eyeing me like somepure stolen chance-how could they know?—and myhopes free as any muscled gleaming fishleaping higher than those blue and bitter waves.
What Is Stolen Will Never Be ReturnedRemember when we swayedour hips side to sidein perfect rhythmso that a piece of circular plasticmoved through an infinite path?We made it seem so easyeven in memory.I was only four, notthe graceful girlmy mother wantedBut I knew how to travelaround the worldwith my hips linked to a hula hoopshort strong legs neatly placedBetter than climbing treesor sneaking out onto a fire escapeto watch the skyline at dusk.I dropped itsearching for the next gameGone. The wet weeded lawncould not have hiddenthe hoop’s golden flecks.I refusedto imagine how my precious hoopwould lookSevered from my bodyThen from a distance I hearhey boy where’dyour toy go?I lookedall around could they meanme?Running stampedes on cementa glint of my bodytrapped in an endless loopof stolen goods
If I Were a GodThe glass is smooth and the water clear.There’s something simple to be found here.If I were a god, and the world inside,I’d soothe the green surface and quiet the tide.And all that is mottled and of the mind,the ivy that shakes, makes dryads blind,I’d rip up the roots and leave breath behind.The glass is gone and the water freeto run through my fingers and to the sea.If I were a god, and the world without,I’d trust it to truth and to turn about.
Kumi Ho and the Nightof the Waning Moon(A Kumiho is a creature that appears in Korean folktales. The creature is described as a nine-tailed fox. The creature transforms itself into a beautiful woman that seduces men to consume their flesh.)
She wore a cross of goldthat fell between her craggy breastsand when they started to disrobe, she thought:It’s for the bestShe laid upon a matthen raised her legs into the air.He slipped into an Asian dream. She strokedher long dark hair.She turned her head to weepas the moon waned and darkness grew.She whispered, “Please forgive me now for whatI need to do.”She held him tight and fellconfusion seeped upon his faceShe felt the weight of flesh and doubt dissolvedwithout a trace.Soon it began to rainon dusty roads and dusty men.And when his ghost had disappeared, she feltat ease again.
CommunionMother lifts me to her shoulderand follows the man to the aisle.All the big people around us moveforward in slow separate lines.A few big people sit.Others kneel. All are silent.I look where mother is facing.A bigger,older man in a multi-color robestands between two boys dressed in white.As both lines approach them,the older man placesa thing white treat on their tongues,which they receive, walk to the sidein opposite directions. With the same hand,each touches the top of their heads,descends to the belly, then one shoulderbefore crossing to the other.I turn around and smileat the smiling woman behind us.Mother gets close enough for me to hearthe man in the robe say something.Each person in line responds in kindbefore the treat is placed on the tongue.The man makes the same soundsto my mother who has the same response.She closes her eyes. The treatplaced on her tongue must be really tasty.With the same hand as others,she touches her brow, her belly,the shoulder on which I’m restingbefore the other.Then she turns and walks away.I reach for the treatgetting further beyond my grasp.
My Quiet Grandmother
They were one—the kitchen, my grandmotherand the black wood stove.A kitchen thick with browning butterand silence.No opinions in anopinionated family.No anger, no hateful staresno scathing wordsbut—no spontaneous laughterHer eyes smiled at childrenand grandchildrenand she lied once about who brokethe door on the black oven.“I did it,” she said toprotect her young daughterfrom his wrath.This woman of work—who was she?Why so parsimoniouswith her smiles and laughter?Did she have her ownhopes and dreams?Did she reheat the remainsof her wishes onthe stove of her soul?My grandmother, the stoveand the kitchen.She died at fifty one.Was her life left lingeringin the ashes?
Terezin Concentration Camp, BohemiaNear the railway spurbones still cry for water.And the ashes?Who can say what roots they nourish,what borders they have crossed?Here the ship never sails,the shawl cannot cover.Tell me silence isn’t the loudest voice.When the open mouth forgets itself,the straw man drinks his shadow.And the moon?Gracing a wanted poster,an impossible price on its head.Coal-faced, it shuns the cattle carsrolling east on tracks of tallow.Absence. Isn’t that the surestfootprint of a crime?The song the mockingbird teaches its young?This rain grazes the skin like rust.
The Gift of a LaneIn Lyme Regis, UK, lies a lane of no remarka shortcut, a get around, a no-honk, no-horn walk awayto meet and chat with fellow neighborsand friends from around the world.Sherborne Lane has a giving naturewhere children play and run alongsidethe River Lim to the stone-studded seachasing chanting seagulls.Steepled in fragrant, flowered descentlovely, demure, narrow, intimate as a whisper,it is where in Saxon timespack horses plodded with a heavy loadand slowly yieldedto salt processing and fishing nets.Holiday cottages are waiting, to letsubmersed in wonder and purple breeze wisteria.
CodaMusic begins in wateran overture to petrichorthe rondo arriving in a soft drizzlean allegro patter of rain on leaves.A vibrato creekburbling its wayover slick pebblesand down tothe waterfall'sglissando anatonal balladcascading tothe symphonic riversloshing the bankswith vibratoon its way tothe oceansthat sing the world's lullabiesin the rustic lilt of seafoam.Old hushless drums a pulsating song astreble waves seek a shoreover the bass harmonyof hallelujah choruses.
A Chance to Dance
I drift on the beach, fasterthan a morning stroll, almostdance with a solitarysandpiper before wingsspread, legs push awayfrom warmed grains. Stillthere, I search not forshells, broken or wholebut for dreams tuckedin algae clumps, a splayedwhite feather, broken bitsof smooth edged blueglass. I hum with waves,toes lifting from sand, feetmoving to the beat of waterclapping hands with ebbsand flows. I dancealone with the sea,a feather blowingon my hat. I glide,a bird whirlinglegs circlingfeet risingarms roundingThe sea grasps my hand
People Often Ask
Look into a crystal of Iceland sparand you can see the secretof the trilobite’s vision..~ Richard Fortey
Are trilobites still alive today?They wear wellies even when it isn't raining. They use
burnbershoots. Broken ones.
What killed the trilobites?When is the last timeyou ate uncooked frozen pizza?Are trilobites extinct?Extinct but not a failure.Most achieve perfect scores on standardized testseven when they've lost their glasses.Are trilobite fossils rare?Keep looking: dragons turned them into jewelry even though they
are not gold.Are trilobites dangerous?Imagine a bartender at 2 a.m. when you have no
money to pay.Can trilobites swim?Bikinis---polka dot, of course.Or naked if the wind at dawn is soft.Who can love a trilobite?No one--unless your name is Winifredor, sometimes, maybe George.
Devotion
Dawn is kneelingin the garden, as ifpraying the deerwill allow dayliliesand Indian hawthornto bloom in fullbefore gnawingdown to their stems.Above her head,a dance of butterflieswobbles like a halo.How could I not thinkabout grace?I’m still standing bythe sliding door witha coffee mug in handwhen she comesback to the house,steps tentativeon uneven groundas she leans heavilyon her cane, faceand arms smearedwith streaks of dirt,gloves grippedin one handlike a prizeshe’s just won.
Do Not Go Gentle—A January MorningIt was the coldest night of winter—eighteen degrees at six that morning.Some of the past days had been balmyand many days had seen heavy rains,the wettest late fall on record for years.Some flowers in fact had budded out of season.An azalea bloom, one purple petunia blossom,and some red begonias were hanging on one by onereaching for the sun for one more burst of energy.Two mornings before the ultra cold spellI noticed the wild running-rose bush by the front gateshowing three new small red buds, brimming with life.Next day, they were all in bloomand on the morning of the death-making coldthey were still there, clinging on in the intense weatherlike an unsuspecting victim, breathing its last breath.There they stood in the bright morning sun—a glowing red trinity—three red roses, defying the odds, surrounded bydrooping green stems and rusty brown leaves,screaming with life, making a mockery of dormant winter,saying to the world, as Dylan had said long before,“Do not go gentle into that dark night.”
John W. Crawford, First Prize, December 2025
We Gather for BellsDark days, long nights: yet lighthappens among us with red candlesand music rising from pull and pauseto praise the pulse we carry withinas we brave season’s weight. Solstice!Let us embrace the peaceful placeof roots at rest, of seeds asleep,of ice a sure and steady promiseas we wait for new birth. DanceI offer and urge to allwho fear that winter kills and stills:
find full rhythm in body’s joyto be alive as clappers clang,brass and bronze, silversending the boldest, brightest songto call our hands and hips to movein celebration of our thanksfor sloping valleys, snow-deep hills.Published in Abandoned MineKatharyn Howd Machan, Second Prize, December 2025


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