The 2012 Aldeburgh Poetry Festival runs for the 2nd-4th November, and this week, Ink Sweat & Tears is featuring poems on the theme ‘Poetry as a Lifeline’ which is the subject of the IS&T-supported Discussions and Short Takes this year.   Find out more about the Aldeburgh Poetry Festival here

 

 
Geometry

 

Remember how, one night not long ago

you told our daughter what you’d read

about infinity? I couldn’t understand,

although you drew a diagram

to show that two parallel lines,

if left to run forever, will eventually meet.

Remember when she came home

crying the next day covered in shame.

In front of everyone her teacher

had dismissed her father’s proof.

But I believe you. If you and I had never met

that rainy night in Camden Town,

if that night had never been,

that’s where we’d be, each walking the line

towards infinity, searching for the place

where the impossible can happen

and two parallel lines collide.

 

 

Jacqueline Saphra‘s first collection, The Kitchen of Lovely Contraptions (flipped eye), developed with the support of The Arts Council of England, was shortlisted for the Aldeburgh First Collection Prize 2011.  ‘Geometry’ appears in The Kitchen of Lovely Contraptions.

 

 

 

Ring of Fire

 

She’s lost track of her many hiding places

winter coat pocket   trunk of summer outfits

under the stairs   behind the royal wedding plate

television or sofa cushions   amidst tins

of tomatoes and chicken soup   school pleats

and towels waiting to be washed and ironed.

 

She has tucked a poem into each bottle

like a cry for rescue washing up on shore

explaining why the house is mottled

in pink and green   why she’s pilfered

pocket money   why her man needs throttling

for all the promises he’s never delivered.

 

In hopes of quitting she tries weekly meetings

but each time leaves high off the fumes

the others have breathed. Back home she opens

another   the rhymes coming fast and furious

how the black ducks strut out of the pen

like a gaggle of aunties on their way to a funeral

 

how foxes prey upon the guinea fowl

each night while the cock keeps his hens

in line   fields are allowed to lie fallow

ponies unable to bear the children

are sold on   like a paper boat caught in the flow

of the stream to the canal and beyond            .

 

Giddy as a schoolgirl bouncing off walls

she has the sudden strength to muck out stables

and silage the grain  to write a poem that will

sell so well she can put aside this terrible

habit and live a peaceful life   no delay

to having dinner ready and waiting on the table.

 

Home from school the children find her

passed out on the floor encircled in an array

of bottles like a protective ring of fire.

 

 

 

Charles Lauder Jr’s poems have appeared internationally, including such journals as Stand, Poetry Salzburg Review, The SHOp, California Quarterly, Texas Observer, Agenda, Poetry Nottingham International, Hearing Voices, and Under the Radar. His pamphlet, Bleeds, was published in 2012 (Crystal Clear Creators).  ‘Ring of Fire’ has previously appeared in Stand