
Photo by Andrea Walker
We hope spring (at least here in the Northern Hemisphere) is bringing life to life around you – and within you! Perhaps reading these fine revelations will bring some growth.
Issue 27 includes a few pieces with unusually long titles, a few multilingual offerings, and even a brand-new poetic form, the “In-Titled” poem. Please have a nice leisurely read. So much to soak up, like sunshine and rainfall. Nurture the unfolding of your spirit courtesy of this collection of fine work. Make it a great day.
Thanks for supporting Panoply.
Love, Andrea, Clara, and Jeff, Editors

Pray for Ukraine.
Contents
Beaufort Force 3: Forecast Breezy for Sunday – by Karla Linn Merrifield
Beauty – by Jan Wiezorek
Benedictions– by Sharon Whitehill
Brenda’s Nimbus – by Sterling Warner
Carousel – by Kristen Ray
Crossing the Line – by Margaret R. Sáraco
The Day After Tomorrow – by Linda Rocheleau
Doug – by Nathan Leslie
Erica Ventricosa (Italian Heather) – by Heather Nelson
Felix Culpa – by Michelle Holland
The First Daffodil of the Year – by J.M. Summers
Gardening at 70 – by Sandra DeRose
Guided (Granny Grills) – by Ellis Elliot
The Horned Owl Gathers – by Matthew James Friday
Lament Off the Lake – by Russell Rowland
leaks – by Eva Eliav
The Lettuce Bolts – by Joan Mazza
The Longest Talk – by Jackie Chou
Lyrical – by Robin Wright
Midnight Chat – by Michael Keshigian
Monarch in the Cornflowers (An Evocation of Bachelor’s Button Handpicked for the Buttonhole of Your Father’s Lapel) – by Jeannie E. Roberts
More Answers – by Richard L. Matta
A New York Corner – by Linda Lerner
On the Way Home – by Cheryl A. Rice
On/Off Schedule – by Nick Romeo
Oystercatcher, Are You Hammer or Spear? – by Gerald Yelle
The Pastoral – by Andrew Jeter
Plenty of Sun Left – by Susanna Rich
quand tu me manques – by Sara Cosgrove
Reading Psalm 121 through Mam-gu’s Spectacles – by Maura High
Roosters and Church Bells – by Gail Tirone
Sadako Sasaki (January 7, 1943 – October 25, 1955, Hiroshima, Japan) – by Jay Brecker
saudade (reprise) – by Steve Brisendine
A Ship in a Bottle – by CL Bledsoe
Shipwreak – by JW Burns
Should, Could, Would – by Sarp Sozdinler
The Smell of Gas Reminds Her of Sylvia Plath – by Dr. Catalina Florina Florescu
Soft Apocalypse – by Karl Sherlock
Stop to Think of It, This Fits Each of Us Tighter[1] – by Jonathan Yungkans
Tapestry – by John Copley Alter
Ten Instructions for Loving Amanda – by Marcelo Medone
Through Oklahoma – by Paul Dickey
to the color last night – by Corbett Buchly
Too Late (Zoo Elephant) – by Julie A. Dickson
Two in the Pew – by Angela Townsend
Ubi Sunt – by Linda Scheller
Upon discovering that my cat moves through multiple worlds leaving a trail of tumbled objects in significant patterns – by Robert Okaji
Van Gogh Speaks from His Deathbed – by Ellen Austin-Li
We Swallow 8 Spiders in A Lifetime – by Kashiana Singh
What I Wish for You – by Jeff Burt
When I Woke Up – by Bartholomew Barker
When Refunds are Automatically Processed – by John Dorroh
Where to Begin Again – by Claire Scott
White Magic – by Susan Coppock
Winter Travel – by Samn Stockwell
Writer’s Block is a Bitch – by Stephanie L. Harper
*In-titled Poem
(the “in”-titlement is the point… 🤓)
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Pingback: When I Woke Up in Panoply | Bartholomew Barker, Poet
Thanks for sharing with us and our readers!
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Pingback: When I Woke Up in Panoply – Zack
Pingback: Poem Live at Panoply | SLHARPERPOETRY
So much creativity, poetry meets three-dimensional chess. Proof that constraints cultivate creativity.
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Thanks for this issue I love Joan Mazza and was so pleased to find her poem bolted lettuce smong works by Julie D and Jackie Chou snd do many others Joan
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We love them all!
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Jeff, Which one is the inpoem? The new form Joan
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Writer’s Block is a Bitch – by Stephanie L. Harper. What an interesting self-imposed challenge! The idea itself is compelling, while the poem, with or without those constraints, is just charming!
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Pingback: May Newsletter | Margaret R. Sáraco
Thanks, Margaret. Our next reading period will begin in July. You can submit at any time, but we won’t begin reading until then. Best wishes, Andrea, Clara, and Jeff, Editors
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