Counting Sheep

 

Single figures and your imagination

has them as vague outlines,

the cracked artex of the ceiling

standing in for a fence.

 

Double figures and you’ve mapped out

the rest of the farm, a swathe

of woodland over the bedroom door

just to the right of a duckpond in the shape

 

of that irritating patch of mould

unshifted by sugar soap and elbow grease.

Three figures and they’re bounding

all over the place, clouting the lightshade

 

and worrying the coving. You’ve lost count.

You give up on sleep, wander downstairs

for a glass of water, leave them

in their endless parade above your bed.

 

 

 

 

Neil Fulwood was born in 1972, the son of a truck driver and the grandson of a miner. Nobody’s quite figured out where the whole poetry thing came from. Neil is married, holds down a day job and subsidises several public houses. He hopes one day to be recognised in the New Year’s honours list for his tireless efforts in this respect.