Today’s choice
Previous poems
Juliet Humphreys
Still Life
Though I am not a painter
this is to be a portrait
of my parents and my sister.
You don’t have a sister.
This is my mother speaking,
someone I did once have.
I picture my sister in the middle,
Dad shuffling along
to make her some space.
Try to look like you’re happy
I tell my parents, at least
pretend you’re not dead.
And you too, I say to my sister.
(I don’t know her name
and it seems rude now to ask.)
She nods vaguely and yawns
and checks the time on her phone,
like it matters when you’re not real.
Still they all gaze at me as though
I’m the one who doesn’t exist.
It’s all coming out wrong.
Primary colours, that’s what I told them
but look – Mum’s in fuchsia
and my sister’s dress is palest peach.
Have another go at the pink
my sister whispers
but no-one’s heard her speak before.
Dad glances first at her, then me
Can’t you make her louder?
I’m not sure I can.
She sounded loud enough to me
in my head. Anyway this is a picture,
it’s meant to be quiet.
My mother gets up to look
strutting over in her heels,
You never were very good at lies.
Mum, it’s a painting.
I know dear but just try,
her voice kinder than the one I knew.
She pulls off her shoes and sighs.
Since when did I wear these?
Why are you dressing us up to be different?
And her? she points to my sister.
Decked out like a dahlia.
Dad sighs and heads for the door.
I expected she’d be more like me,
I begin, but it’s clear
I haven’t thought this through.
Don’t look at me, my sister sneers at Mum,
none of this was my idea.
She turns on me. Are we even friends?
And it’s then that I take
the biggest brush I can find
and drown the bristles in the white.
I sweep it across the canvas like snow
coming in from the Arctic
on a northerly, sparing no one
and in the quiet I breathe
and the exhaled air unties
a chord, notes letting go.
That’s a nice image, Mum says,
the woman I’m like in too many ways,
these days only a voice
in my head. Now it really is just me
and an empty canvas.
It’s time to begin.
Juliet Humphreys is a former special needs teacher who lives in Uxbridge. Her poems have been placed and shortlisted in competitions and published in a range of magazines, in print and online including Orbis, The Rialto, The North and Ink Sweat and Tears.
Julian Dobson
You too I guess
have studied the surviving starlings
as they swoop and whistle
by the snack trailer at Moorfoot
Mark Czanik
I loved the tales Luke told me of starving writers,
and the sacrifices they made following their hearts.
Philip K Dick eating dog food. Bukowski’s candy bars.
Nigel King
My compass – its needle set with a sliver of blue stone – spins and spins. Breath mists my snow
goggles. I wipe them endlessly. Even in these thick seal-skin mitts my hands are frozen. I have been
no place as still as this.
Clare Bryden
seek justice
and you hold
a seashell to your ear
hear
Gail Webb
He cuts. I lie still, teach myself
to dream of St David’s Bay,
seaweed strewn on incoming tides,
surfers slice big waves in half.
Kim Cullen
I pull a dress over my head
calm foggy blue linen
sleeved in lavender,
press frizzed hair
Mark G. Pennington
Vigo in Autumn is still a furnace
the nightjars
roost on ram-tarmacked roads
and hot guapas carrying fish baskets
Ivan McGuinness
Begins
in a bubble
strained by chalk.
Where the brim-full hill cries,
weeping tracks merge
Elizabeth Wilson Davies
There are places in Wales I don’t go: reservoirs that are the subconscious of a people – R S Thomas
Cofiwch Dryweryn, that two-word protest,
white on blood-red background, landscaped in green,