Tuesday, September 23, 2025

"fantastic this one dream no make it seven" by Isabella Mori

 

Image courtesy of Joan Marie, 
creator of the Cult of Weimar Tarot

fantastic this one dream no make it seven

her fingers dance among the glasses as if they were a piano. she's had vermouth from the cocktail glass, cognac from the snifter, rosé from the flute, beer from the mug but enough of that. now she drinks vodka from the wine glass, scotch where you'd pour the highball and beaujolais out of the jug. satisfied, she waves to the bartender, her voice steady like an anvil. "now the absinthe, mon cher. the whole teapot."

message in a bottle
how much reality
does one person need

~

Isabella Mori writes pretty much everything that's not nailed down:  Fiction (a 15th century monk whose best friend is a comfrey plant), nonfiction ("All the way from the eocene on Highway 400"), and poetry (lots of haiku!). Their great love is hybrid work, like in their latest book, "Believe Me," which combines poetry, stories, interviews and research. They run Canada's most unusual poetry prize, Muriel's Journey, which has as an "entry fee" that poets document their volunteer work. Isabella calls themselves a Christian-Buddhist Pagan and has a special relationship with Hekate.

Monday, September 22, 2025

A Haiga by John Hawkhead

 


~

John Hawkhead has been writing short-form poetry for over 30 years, publishing three books of haiku & senryu in that time. He lives in the South West of England.

Sunday, September 21, 2025

"The Origins of Perfume" by Katherine E Winnick


The Origins of Perfume

What are the origins of perfume?

The word "perfume" today is used to describe scented mixtures and is derived from the Latin word "per fumus," meaning 'through smoke'. Many ancient perfumes were made by extracting natural oils from plants through pressing and steaming. The oil was then burned to scent the air.

Perfume is simply a mastery of some of the most frequent scents and the artful combination thereof to produce a unique smell for the individual.

To understand perfume, we would need to start at its inception back in the time of the ancient Egyptians. Egyptians were responsible for the origin of perfume with the earliest records dating from 2000BC, where incense was offered at the burial of mummies and perfume was believed to be the sweat of the sun god Ra.

Other origins of perfume are thought to be of Mesopotamia and Cyprus. With the Egyptians incorporating perfume into their culture, the ancient Chinese, Hindus, Israelites, Cathagielians and Greeks followed suit, and perfume itself was further refined by the Romans, Persians and Arabs. Perfume and perfumery also existed in East Asia, but its fragrances were incense-based.

The oldest perfumes ever found were discovered by archaeologists in Cyprus. They were over four thousand years old. A cuneiform tablet from Mesopotamia, dating back more than 3000 years, identifies a woman called Tapputt as the first recorded perfume maker. Perfumes could also be found in India at this time.

Persian and Arab chemists started codifying the production of perfume, and its use spread through the world of classical antiquity. The earliest use of the perfume bottle is Egyptian and dates back to 1000BC. The Egyptians invented glass, and perfume bottles were amongst the first common uses for glass.

The rise of Christianity saw the decline in the use of perfume for much of the dark ages. It was the Muslim world that kept the traditions of perfume alive at this time. In France, there was an explosive interest for perfume in the 16th century amongst the upper classes and nobles. The court of Louis XV perfumed everything from gloves to furniture.

Eau de cologne was invented in the 18th century, helping the perfume industry to boom yet further.

But it was the Hungarians who ultimately introduced the first modern perfume, made of scented oils blended in an alcohol solution, and was made in 1370 at the command of Queen Elizabeth of Hungary and was known throughout Europe as "Hungarian Water."

Perfume Creation

Although there are numerous flowers that are used in perfumes, some are more frequently chosen for their strong fragrance. The most popular flowers include roses, jasmine, violets, lillies, orange flowers and plumeria. Others that are used include lavender, magnolia, moonflower, chamomile and sweet pea.

Natural ingredients including flowers listed above as well as grasses, spices, fruit, wood, roots, resins, balsams, leaves, gum and even animal secretions are used in the manufacture of perfume as well as resources like alcohol, petrochemicals, coal and coal tar as preservatives. The amount of alcohol that is added to the blended oils to obtain the desired scent determines whether the liquid will be a cologne, perfume or Eau de toilette.

Cologne is the least potent of the three; it contains the most alcohol and up to 10% essential oils. Eau de toilette has up to 15% essential oils and contains less alcohol than cologne. Perfume, containing the least alcohol, has the strongest scent of up to 40% essential oils.

Extraction Methods

It is the oil from flowers and plant material that is used to make perfume. To separate the oil from the plant parts, it must be extracted. There are various methods to do this. The easiest method is 'expressing,' during which plants are basically squeezed until the oil releases. Maceration and enfleurage are other way to extract plant oils. These methods use warmed fats or grease to extract the oils. This process is called steam distillation. An example of why perfume is so expensive is that a 15mm bottle of French perfume requires the oil that's extracted from about 660 roses.

The Aging Process

After the oils are extracted, blended and mixed with alcohol in the desired concoction, it is ready for the aging process. For this period of time, the perfume is set aside in a cool, dark space, undisturbed for up to a year. This process binds the alcohol and oils together. The scent also increases with the aging process. Once tested by an expert, this is the time any additional blending or adjustments can be made. 

~

Katherine E Winnick is a British poet with an Eastern philosophical outlook on life due to her upbringing in the third world. Her senryu collection, My Hennaed Hand (Alien Buddha Press, 2023) is available internationally on Amazon.

Saturday, September 20, 2025

A Senryu by Shane Coppage

 

witching hour—
the soft cacophony
of old bones

~

Shane Coppage is a poet and artist. His poetry has been published in various journals and anthologies, most recently Frogpond and Wales Haiku Journal. He lives in Cincinnati, Ohio with his growing family.

Friday, September 19, 2025

"Technical Interview #517" by Colleen M. Farrelly

 

Technical Interview #517

They say another day, another dollar. I waste half a dollar on interviews. Their problem states that a dollar and ten cents will buy a ball and bat.

Ouija widgets
I conjure
my software code

~

Colleen M. Farrelly is a mathematician and haibun poet who's been exploring the universe through mathematics and physics since childhood. She's an amalgam of mystic Jewish/Catholic traditions and mathematician-philosophers like Blaise Pascal, with a deep appreciation for meditation and what she learned about public health and spiritual health from South African village shamans in the mid-2000s.

Thursday, September 18, 2025

A Senryu by John Hawkhead

 

trapped inside
a crusting salt circle
middle-age demons

~

John Hawkhead has been writing short-form poetry for over 30 years, publishing three books of haiku & senryu in that time. He lives in the South West of England.

Tuesday, September 16, 2025

"Over and Out" by Nolcha Fox

 

Over and Out

I look out the window that
my dreams did not wash clean.

I see the bench where we first met
is empty and decayed.

I know the bridge we used to walk
has nothing left to say.

It keeps for me a wilted rose
from my wedding bouquet.

~

Nolcha Fox's poems have been curated in print and online journals. A best-selling author, her poetry books are available on Amazon and Dancing Girl Press. Nominated for Best of the Net and Pushcart Prize multiple times. Editor of Chewers by Masticadores and LatinosUSA.

Website:  https://writingaddiction2.wordpress.com/ and https://nolchafox2.wixsite.com/nolcha-s-written-wor/blog

Facebook:  https://www.facebook.com/nolcha.fox/




Sunday, September 14, 2025

A Senryu by Rowan Beckett Minor

 

sudden thunder
swallows the daylight . . .
my black candle flickers

~

Rowan Beckett Minor (they/them) is a disabled Melungeon poet and hoodoo practitioner from Prince, WV, who currently resides in Cleveland, OH. They have been featured in:  MayflyA New Resonance 12, as a confluence journal Fellow (2024-2025), as a presenter for Haiku North America (2019, 2021), and co-judge for the HSA Brady Senryu Contest (2022). Rowan is honored to have served as HSA Midwest Regional Coordinator in 2024.

Friday, September 12, 2025

A Senryu by Jerome Berglund

 

underworld
. . . do you come
here often?

~

Jerome Berglund has had a lifelong interest in angels, demons, hoodoo, voodoo, saints, sinners, spiritual ritual, occult practices, and supernatural phenomena. His lineage includes victims of the Salem witch hunts. Many haiku, haiga and haibun he's written have been exhibited or are forthcoming online and in print, most recently in bottle rockets, Frogpond, and Presence. His firth full-length collections of poetry were released by Setu, Meat for Tea, Motus Audax Press, and a mixed media chapbook showcasing his fine art photography is available now from Fevers of the Mind.


Tuesday, September 9, 2025

"Flower Moon" by Christina Chin

 

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Christina is a painter and a haiku poet. A three-time Pushcart Prize 2025 Nominee. She is a four-time recipient of Top 100 in the mDAC Summit Contests. They were exhibited at the Palo Alto Art Center, California. She is also the sole haiku contributor for the MusArt book of Randall Vemer's paintings, published by ArtReach Publication, Portland, Oregon. Among her awards are 1st prize, 34th Annual Cherry Blossom Sakura Festival Haiku Contest; 1st prize, 8th Setouchi Matsuyama Photohaiku Contest; and two City Soka Saitama's haiku prizes. She is published in numerous exclusive journals and anthologies, including Japan's prestigious monthly Haikukai Magazine.

Saturday, September 6, 2025

A Senryu by Isabella Mori


hail hypnogogia
hekate speaks to me
of rustling leaves

~

Isabella Mori writes pretty much everything that's not nailed down: Fiction (a 15th century monk whose best friend is a comfrey plant), nonfiction ("All the way from the Eocene on Highway 400"), and poetry (lots of haiku!). Their great love is hybrid work, like in their latest book, "Believe Me," which combines poetry, stories, interviews and research. They run Canada's most unusual poetry prize, Muriel's Journey, which has an "entry fee" that poets document their volunteer work. Isabella calls themselves a Christian-Buddhist Pagan and has a special relationship with Hekate.