Daily Verse
Week 1, May 2025

A Letter to the night
By Jenny Middleton 1st May 2025
You live inside so many metaphors that I’ve come to think of you as time’s dark truth. People have wrapped their secrets and deaths up in your skies and stars for millennia. You are a lover’s song or a thief’s stocking mask filling with a storm.
If I travel to north Svalbard in Norway this April, I’m told I will lose you for months and live in an endless day. I know, even without boarding a plane, that I’d miss you, even if local people did teach me how to kayak, and party beneath a midnight sun. I think I’d spend as much time dipping my oars into the water looking for your black shadow to grow upwards from the earth as I would tilting my face to the light.
back to back
pages finding you
in my books

Known & Unknown
by Alka Kansra 2nd May2025
Warm winter sun
Sitting in my garden
Wrapped in a shawl
Looking at the clear blue sky
Through the branches of a tree
A stray cloud here and there
Forming lovely patterns
My world is in stillness
I can see the known
Through my mind's window
I contemplate the unknown
Shiva's abode they say
Is beyond the clouds
Is beyond the blue sky
It is all elusive
I can feel his presence
In my moments of pause
So near yet so far
Known yet unknown
The moment passed
I am looking at the known
The new green foliage
Beautifying the branches
A time for change
A time for new growth
A time for progress
A time for new opportunities
Unknown sending the message
Through the known

Poems
By Kavita Ratna 7th May 2025

a blushing leaf
tenderness
of new beginnings

a glint of coral
on white petal
a free fall

gentle curves
of raw mangoes
tart childhood

Dreans in Storm Clouds
By Chitra Gopalakrishnan 8th May 2025
A blood-stained, blow torch sun
Spews lethal walls of flames
Sun lighting Delhi’s earth and skins
Into varying shades of brownness
Winds of dust, whorls of demonic mud
Billow futility into faces and souls
And mangle a lifetime of hope
To crumble people within its sandy pits
Then clouds clamour onto the horizon, rain pelts
It first splits trees and scatters rocks
Swollen skies then fling lustrous splendour to the ground
Forcing the saturated soil to encounter growth with a shock
As sprouts break their casings
To climax to the emergence of their deep life force
It becomes my city’s moment of embarking
To rejoice in its petrichor and the unfettered songs of koels

Through the seasons of my Soul
By Mehak Varun 5th May 2025
There was a time
when everything inside me
collapsed quietly.
Not with noise—
but with the heavy silence
of something that once burned,
now surrendering to ash.
Winter moved in slowly.
Not just outside my window,
but within my chest.
Every memory
like frost on glass—
beautiful,
but untouchable.
And yet,
beneath the frozen hurt,
something ancient waited.
Not ready,
just patient.
Spring never shouted.
It arrived like a breath I forgot I needed.
In the cracks of my grief,
green returned.
A single thought blooming
where pain once stood guard.
I didn’t trust it.
Still, I let it stay.
Summer wasn’t fireworks,
but warmth—
the kind that seeps into you
after years of cold shoulders and self-doubt.
The kind that teaches your skin
how to believe again.
And then came autumn—
my teacher.
The one who showed me
how to let go
of what once defined me.
Not as loss,
but as the next step
in remembering who I am.
I still melt,
some days more than others.
But I have learned
that falling apart
is sometimes the most honest way
to begin again.
Biographies of Poets
Jenny is a working mum and writes whenever she can amid the fun and chaos of family life. Her poetry is published in several printed anthologies, magazines and online poetry sites. Jenny lives in London with her husband, two children and two very lovely, crazy cats.

Alka Kansra retired from MCMDAV College for Women, Chandigarh as HOD Chemistry. A freelance writer with three Hindi poetry books and one English poetry book published. Translated one Hindi poetry book into English. Articles, stories, poems and book reviews in various papers and magazines. She has won a few awards recognising her Literary pursuits.
Mehak Varun, a writer, poet and artist, is the author of four books - THE Humane Quest vol 1, 2 & 3 and & I am Me. She has been bestowed with 100 Inspiring Authors of India award in Kolkata. She has also been honoured with the Women Of Influence 2019 award . Along with her books, her work has been published in various anthologies and she is recipient of various other prizes in poetry competitions
Kavita Ratna is a children's rights activist, poet and a theatre enthusiast. Sea Glass is her anthology of poems published by Red River. Her poems have appeared in The Kali Project: Invoking the Goddess within, A little book of serendipity, Muse India, The Wise Owl, Triveni Hakai India, Haiku in Action, the Scarlet Dragonfly, the Cold Moon Journal, Five Fleas Itchy poetry, the Haiku Dialogue, Stardust Haiku, Leaf (Journal of The Daily Haiku), and many others. She was on the Haiku panel at the Glass House Poetry Festival, Bangalore, 2024. She is also a Pushcart Prize nominee, 2024.
Chitra Gopalakrishnan, a New Delhi-based writer, uses her ardour for writing to break firewalls between nonfiction and fiction, narratology and psychoanalysis, marginalia and manuscript and tree-ism and capitalism.
Week 2, May 2025

Poems on Meltdown & renewal
By Steliana Voicu 8th May 2025

enjoying
my lemon icecream
at a greek tavern -
a bougainvillea chills only
on the gate`s blue

hot evening –
two sparrows sip water
by turn
from the hose
of air conditioning

in the twilight
a seagull explores
a string of shells -
so little time until
the incoming tide

Phoenix Chains
by Parminder Singh 9th May 2025
Like chai gone cold in cups of memory,
The heart's collapse begins with whispered doubts.
What once was whole now breaks in poetry,
As dreams deferred become our casting-outs.
The weight of choices made in twilight hours
Consumes the bridges carefully we built.
Our better selves, like rain-soaked paper flowers,
Dissolve in pools of what-could-be and guilt.
Yet from these ashes, strange new wings unfold—
A strength refined through fire's unforgiving test.
Some bonds transform but never truly cold,
In endings lie beginnings unexpressed.
We rise renewed from what we dare release,
Our meltdowns forge the path to inner peace.

From Dusk to Dawn
By Sushminder Jeet Kaur 10th May 2025
She stood,
Barefoot at the edge of her name—
Not Draupadi, not Shakuntala,
But someone who remembered Ahalya’s stillness turned to breath,
Heer’s voice burned beneath songs,
And Sita’s exile: a wilderness of stillness and pausing.
She had been written in the silence between verses,
Braided into stories without even being heard.
Her identity had become a cloak borrowed from myth,
Or a garment stitched by hand,
not her own.
No gods spoke.
Only the echoes of a girl
who had once swallowed the sun,
now cradling the ashes of light.
Like “Prometheus Unbound”,
She bore the fire in silence,
her will, chained to stone.
She was neither the reappearance nor the unfortunate icon.
But an echo, and unspoken suffering between stanzas of canon.
The world called her by titles adorned with reverence—
Patience, virtue, sacrifice—
But each word was a sacrament of erasure.
She remembered how Keats once sang of “negative capability”:
to remain in doubt and uncertainty---
But even that---she thought---was a privilege.
Her doubt was an inundation.
Where she sank into the knowing
that she herself had always been the spectator of her own life,
And never the soliloquy.
Her plunge was slow, not a Lear-like rage against the storm,
But the still crumbling of Cordelia’s silence—
A melting inward,
So complete that even her frame began to overlook
How to belong to her own self..
The rituals remained.
She lit lamps in hollow evenings,
Folded clothes like folded prayers,
And wore her bangles like manacles of inherited expectation.
And when she wept,
It was not for pain,
But for the memory of joy she had once been told to feel.
They mistook her decay for discipline.
But she knew—
The fire inside her was not devotion.
It was undoing.
It was Kali—not the goddess of rage,
But the goddess of necessary ends.
To become, she had to un-become.
Hence, she let herself dissolve.
Each cell---a note in a requiem she wrote without ink.
Each breath--- a farewell to the selves she had lived for others.
Her frame—
Not resurrected, but reclaimed.
Not Eve seeking forgiveness, but Lilith
Walking away from paradise and into the unknown.
She rose--not as myth--but as surface rediscovered.
She did not need
Gabriel’s trumpet or Tennyson’s tides.
Only her own hands, now steady, pressing soil into seed.
She began again.
And again, and again.
Each morning,
A stanza unfurling
From the torn manuscript of her past.
The woman she became
was not Aphrodite rising from the foam,
nor Cleopatra cloaked in seduction.
She was Draupadi, walking blood-stained
through a court of silence.
She was Durga,
Keeper of crossroads and quiet revolutions.
She no longer sought to be seen
But to see—
through mirrors,
through men,
through myths.
She fed on poetry,
Drinking the salt of Eliot’s Sea,
where “fear in a handful of dust” had once dried her mouth.
But now she tasted fire.
And when the world asked
How she emerged from such holy ruin,
She simply smiled, like a Sphinx who had rewritten the riddle.
No phoenix, no swan.
Just a woman—
Who melted down not to disappear
But to remember
That even ashes can whisper.

At Last
By Belinda Behne 14th May 2025
At last
the darkness
of a solo winter
eases into spring
Trees, no longer bare
are pregnant
with new green leaves
Cherries and crabapples
dress in pink and white lace
I smile and open with them
gently at first
Hoping
that the magnificent unfolding
into full bloom
may happen to me too
Biographies of Poets
Steliana Cristina Voicu lives in Ploieşti, Romania and loves painting, poetry, Japanese culture, photography and astronomy. Her haiku, tanka, haiga, poetry, short-prose have been published worldwide, including Asahi Haikuist Network, Daily Haiga, The Wise Owl-The Daily Verse, Under the Bashō, Chrysanthemum and others. She is founder and editor of Enchanted Garden Haiku Journal-Romania. instagram: steliana_voicu

Mr. Parminder Singh is an IT Professional-turned-educator, and has overall experience of over two decades in the fields of software development, project management, digitization and teaching. He currently works as Assistant Professor of English at Dev Samaj College for Women, Chandigarh. He specializes in Cultural Studies and Digital Humanities. He is a multilingual poet, translator, short-story writer, and has national and international publications. He has been a key contributor in setting up Panjab Digital Library. He has received Jathedar G. S. Tohra Award for his Punjabi translation of P. S. Sachdeva’s Appreciating Sikhism and has co-translated Sudeep Sen’s poetry into Punjabi titled Gau-Dhoorh Vela
Sushmindar Jeet Kaur loves reading and writing poetry and pens poetry in every spare minute that she gets. She is currently Associate Professor & Head at Gujranwala Guru Nanak Khalsa College, Civil Lines, Ludhiana
Belinda grew up in the midwest, but she has spent most of her adult life in the vibrant culture of New York City. Her first career, as a teacher of special education, led her to the love of art, literature and theatre. She has pursued her passions of acting, writing poetry and performing professional voice-overs for more than three decades. She currently enjoys living on the edge of a salt marsh, where life continues to inspire her in new ways. Her poems can be found in LEAF Journal, The Wise Owl, and The Scarlet Dragonfly.
Susan Burch began writing tanka poetry in April 2013. Then haiku, senryu, haibun, gembun, tanka prose, sedoka, sedoka prose, and cherita. When she writes, she lets the poem be what wants it to be. All the poems in this book wanted to be cherita, and were kept together on purpose, as a collection. None of them were previously published. Susan was the Vice President of The Tanka Society of America from 2017- 2024. She was also the Editor of Haiku in Action from 2023-2024. Susan resides in Hagerstown, Maryland, USA, with her amazing husband, Sexy Beast, and daughter, British Baby. She enjoys reading, doing puzzles, birding, and watching Dallas Cowboy Cheerleaders: Making the Team.

Week 3, May 2025

Revival choreography
By Ketaki Mazumdar 16th May 2025
I search in the melting heat for a fluid choreography,
where the soul can dance in the fire!
I search as heat empowers fruits to ripen,
I search for textures that define the fingertips of thoughts
that can race through water.
I search as I slowly melt…
for a fluency that encounters inspiration.
A world melts around me,
and I search with eyes half shut
burning for the dynamics
that rhythmically cools the alcoves of my heart.
I search in lethargic loops, paint the perfect narratives,
in a language that withstands dehydrated sandstorms…
but melts the tar on the road!
yet as the cool early dawn whispers, my wings stretch into life again…
revived by the coolness of the rain on my upturned face…
in a revival choreography
hydrating my soul.

Poems on Meltdown & renewal
By Fatma Zohra Habis 15th May 2025

green carpet
over the ashes of winter
snow melts

turning to ash
withered plants
rain comes late
your apology is useless
for my broken heart

silent message
in front of cemetery
a tree renews its leaves

Armature
By Sanjeev Sethi 18th May 2025
I mute and manage the mind with the organizational
abilities at my bidding. I drafted a thesis justifying
your deeds and deals. Relieved, I set a reticulate to relax.
But a part of me wishes to tear down the veneer. Whydid I set up this circus to convince myself? Why did this
awkwardness make an unseasonal stopover?
The fire within me strangely doesn’t singe. It fuels the kilnof creativity. Once the roti of considered opinion is ready,
it simmers and signals for an armistice.

Poems on Meltdown & Renewal
By Joanna Ashwell 20th May 2025

mirror waves
a moonset dream
stippled in reeds

rebecoming myself
the soft rain
brushes my skin

phoenix feather
one more chance
to discover flight

Symphony of Enchanting Terns
By Swati Basu Das 21st May 2025
And now, the summer water burbles by,
Clear, beneath the brilliant blue sky.
Caging her ruby heart, she rested,
As calm and frigid as a frozen lake.
The winter rime encroached on a soul so supple,
Where Achos once warbled a fable of ache.
Now, slowly and warmly
Under the Koh-i-Noor, it shimmers and burns
To a merry tale of love untold
And the symphony of enchanting Terns.
Biographies of Poets
Ketaki Mazumdar is an educationist and a poet. She is the recipient of many awards. Her poetry reflects her excitement with the beauty of nature, emotions, of grief, joy, love and also gently touches on the spirituality and mysticism of life.

Fatma Zohra Habis lives in Algeria. She love poetry and Japanese culture. Fatma's specialty is physics. Several haiku and tanka poems have been published around the world, such as The Enchanted Garden and The Sacred Dragonfly THE Daily foundation The LEAF journal
Sanjeev Sethi has authored eight books of poetry. Legato Without a Lisp is his latest (CLASSIX, New Delhi, September 2024). His poetry has been published in over thirty-five countries and has appeared in more than 500 journals, anthologies, and online literary venues. He edited Dreich Planet # 1 India, an anthology for Hybriddreich, Scotland, in December 2022. He is the joint winner of the Full Fat Collection Competition-Deux, organized by Hedgehog Poetry Press, UK. In 2023, he won the First Prize in a Poetry Competition by the National Defence Academy, Pune. He was conferred the 2023 Setu Award for Excellence. He lives in Mumbai, India.
Joanna Ashwell is a short form poet (from the UK) who writes Haiku, Tanka, Haibun, Cherita and other related forms. She has published four collections of poetry. Between Moonlight a collection of haiku was published by Hub Editions in 2006. Her tanka collection ‘Every Star’ was published by KDP on Amazon in 2023. Her Cherita collection ‘River Lanterns’ was published by 1-2-3 Press on Amazon in 2023. She currently serves on the selection team for the Canadian Tanka Journal GUSTS.
Born and raised in the City of Joy - Calcutta (India), Swati Basu Das lives in Oman. She is a journalist. Her articles and columns on current issues, culture, and travel are published in newspapers and magazines. Her short stories and flash fiction have appeared in FemAsia, Borderless Journal, and others. She's a post-graduate in English Literature and has obtained a master's degree in Journalism and a diploma in Public Relations. She has worked with dailies like Times of India, Hindustan Times, Statesman in India and currently writes columns and articles for newspapers and magazines in Oman. She relishes music, escapades, coffee and John Keats

Week 4, April 2025

Blessings of Going Green
By Sreelekha Chatterjee 21st April 2025
My old thoughts, pulsing with ebb and flow
of unending life’s kineses,
as well as my surroundings—
the multiform Nature—
toss up merrily, utterly altered.
Appearing anew along with Nature,
prelude to a world ascending—
fallow periods of winter transforming
onto flourishing neoteric existence,
the glory of the Lord that
every newly commenced living form provides.
Faith de novo when struggle purges,
suffering transmutes to healing,
death retells of life-giving.
For in every end, there is a beginning.
Amorous sillion in the fields await,
ready to accept the seeds of tomorrow.
Bathed in the brilliant luminance
are the birds soaring high and free
akin to our souls that resurrect from slumber—
hope for wondrous and beautiful hereafter.

Poems on Verdant Echoes
by Vijay Prasad 22nd April 2025

belching city i walk with green legs

her touch sets in motion the green in a leaf

touches her back a blade of grass

A Flower flew out of my hand
By Paramita Mukherjee 23rd April, 2025
Spring was in the air and nature had dressed up in green.
The banyan tree had a fresh coat of leaves.
The China Doll flowers were swaying, oh what a scene!
Parrots were vying for attention with the green leaves around.
The sparrows were searching for food in the lush green grass.
The squirrels were scampering on the trees, round and round.
In this verdant scene, the poet in me was mesmerised.
Suddenly a China Doll flower fell on my head,
I looked up at the tree surprised.
I picked up the flower with care,
The soft, pink flower so delicate and fine,
And all of a sudden, it flew out of my hand in the breezy fun fare.
I looked around at nature which was dazzling in sunshine
And looked at the flower which flew out of my hand.
How it danced and pranced in the green grass on that day divine.
Nature was rejoicing in newness that day,
It was bathed in the freshness of green.
The flower didn’t want to be trapped, so joined nature’s sway.

Puzzle
By Hester L Furey 25th April 2025
A rare free day of blue and gold
I walk to shake out the knots
Spring trees have spilled their yellow dust
I close my eyes against the sun
I open and find a universe
I rest my head against a rail
The ancient turtles have hidden
One can see to the bottom
In this neighborhood stream
I count fish and see
all that belongs
And all that does not

Haiku on Verdant Echoes
By Giuliana Ravagliaa 24th April 2025

early morning --
dancing in the wind
the song of the swallows

on the empty trunk
rosary of hope --
green ivy

new shoots --
the breath of time
beyond the threshold
Biographies of Poets

Sreelekha Chatterjee is a poet from New Delhi, India. Her poems have appeared in Madras Courier, Setu, Raw Lit, Verse-Virtual, The Wise Owl, Pena Literary Magazine, Ghudsavar Literary Magazine, Orenaug Mountain Poetry Journal, Poetry Catalog, Suburban Witchcraft Magazine, Creative Flight, Medusa’s Kitchen, Everscribe, and in the anthologies—Light & Dark (Bitterleaf Books, UK), Personal Freedom, The Harvest & the Reaping, Winter Glimmerings, and Whose Spirits Touch (Orenaug Mountain Publishing, USA), and Christmas-Winter Anthology Volume 4 (Black Bough Poetry, Wales, UK), among others.
Vijay Prasad is a poet from Patna, India. He is disappointingly interested in life. He has a passion for haiku, language, philosophy, and so on ... He is published in Bones, Under the Basho, tinywords, Failed Haiku, The Mumba Journal, Haiku Dialogue, Prune Juice, among others.
Dr. Paramita Mukherjee Mullick is a scientist, a literary curator and an award-winning poet. She has published 11 books and her books have been translated into 45 languages. Her latest awards being the “Ukiyoto Poet of the Year” in January this year, one of six women around India to receive an award themed, “Women: Breaking Barriers, Leading Futures, Shaping Change” last year and one of twenty recipients of the “Mumbai Woman Leadership Award 2024”. She promotes peace, multilingual and indigenous poetry. Through her poems she makes children and adults aware about conservation and climate change. Paramita heads two poetry and performance forums in Mumbai.
Giuliana Ravaglia was born in the province of Bologna (Italy), is a former primary school teacher and has a great love for poetry, especially haiku. His poems have been published on websites and online magazines: Otata, Troutswirl, ESUJ-H, Asahi Haikuist Network, The Mainichi, Scarlet Dragonfly Journal, Haikuuniverse, Cold Moon Journal, Akita International Haiku Network, The Bamboo Hut, Take 5ive, Haiku Corner, Memoirs of a Geisha, HaikuNetra, Haiku World, Failed Haiku among others. he received Honorable mention in Haiku EuroTop 100
Hester L. Furey is a poet and literary historian specializing in hidden histories and archival research. Furey has published many poems and essays in journals and encyclopedias. Representative full length works include a book of poems, Skeleton Woman Buys the Ticket (2019) and a reference book she compiled and edited, Dictionary of Literary Biography 345: American Radical and Reform Writers, Second Series. She lives in Atlanta with her black cat, Skillet.

Last Week, April 2025

Withered Spring
By Balesh Jindal 26th April 2025
Spring paces, then plods out
With hushed steps about.
Crinkled periwinkle
Droops
With a simple bow.
Roses, robust and rotund,
Pretend it's all well, yet stand
Stupidly stunned.
Azaleas, grand and grateful, peruse
Through reams of resigned reminiscences.
Riled with rancor, I grudge it all,
Browse through matters of memories,
Pensive and preoccupied.
Gaping and gasping at the
Analytical asters
Dead and died.
The smart skies, depraved and devoid
Of grace and goodwill
Lash with spates of fire of a
Million suns.
The proud Deodars
Singed and seared,
Sad and scathed, stand
In appalling acceptance as,
They all know, it's the
End of Spring.

Haiku
by Deborah Bennett 29th April 2025

first day of spring
clinging to the warehouse wall
yellow leaves

on pine branches
the frost turns to dew -
morning moon

how to compose
the March haiku -
frost flowers on the window

A stone
By Glenn Ingersoll 28th April, 2025
Ouch, said the stone
when the ant stomped on it,
thump thump thump
those stiff ant feet!
A stone nearby asked what was the matter.
This ant is hurting me!
said the stone.
I know what you mean, said the other stone.
For me it is not ants
but this terrible wind.
It gets into my cracks.
Why do you not cry out!
asked the ant-afflicted.
I do, said the other.
I sob and moan.
That was you? said the stone.
I thought it was the wind.
I felt so sorry for it.
Poor wind, I thought. How it hurts!

Poems
By Robert Witmer 30th April 2025

still
small voice
a measure
of sunrise

muffled light
the last leaves
auburn in the afternoon
tremble in a weary tree
a sleeping painter's white moustache

a summer breeze
lifts sparkling waves
the pure breath of music
a conch shell
in her small hands
Biographies of Poets






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