At Dinner
(after a sculpture by Eusebio Sempere)

You appear in the hallway,
a shimmying fish-skeleton,
your bones, tin-foil.

We fill each other’s wine glasses.
We try to hold a conversation.
Turn our backs on you.

In the end we switch off the hall light

But we can still hear your
susurrating scales,
turning, clock-wise,
widdershins. We can’t think.

All night you spin and shiver in our imaginations.

 

 

 

 

 

Pam Thompson is a poet, lecturer, reviewer and writing tutor based in Leicester. Her publications include The Japan Quiz ( Redbeck Press, 2009) and Show Date and Time, (Smith | Doorstop, 2006).  Pam has a PhD in Creative Writing and her second collection, Strange Fashion, was recently published by Pindrop Press. pamthompsonpoetry@wordpress.com