Today’s choice

Previous poems

Tom Blake

 

 

 

After Gaston Bachelard and Sabrina Carpenter

We were the housing and the housed,
meaning nothing except that
we were always occupied,
or to put it simply never out.

After a while we walked like we were on stilts
made from string and sweetcorn tins.
We milled ginger biscuits
in our sheets.

We saw the dream house up in the distance
even when the curtains were closed.
Half the battle was not to doodle crenellations
on those final blueprints.

The house grew so large around us
that I could cat out on the bottom stair
waiting for you to pass over me,
an unmoored tower.

I promise none of this is a metaphor.

 

 

Tom Blake is a poet and music journalist who has two chapbooks out with The Red Ceilings Press: Ƨ (2023) and Peach Epoch (2025). His poems have appeared in Anthropocene and Perverse, and he is a regular contributor to KLOF magazine. Insta: tom_blake17

Kath Mckay

How to become two-dimensional

Die. You’re soon reduced to a photograph.
Lugubrious Co-op undertakers will zip you in a bag
and keep you cold . . .

Jasmine Gibbs

This morning – Blackstar,
Bowie, those jazz swan songs
sputtering from the CD player,
wild trumpets that convulse
through negative space