After


When you go to the supermarket

place my head in your wire basket

as you wander the aisles of meat.

Be careful my hair does not brush

the sign of two for the price of one.

Let check-out girls catch my eye.

 

Keep me close and always visible,

you never know when you will need

to raise me up as a bloody trophy,

to rouse shoppers from their torpor.

Never take lightly the authority given

when you show what victory means.

 

Guard me from thieves.

If I were stolen how could you prove

that a god and right and butchery are,

and always will be, on your side?

Insure me, but a policy of like for like

may cost far more than you can pay.

 

Post my decapitation up on YouTube,

followers want to see the neck bowed,

the thought severed from the deed.

Become the poster-girl for deliverance,

the strong woman’s role in pay-back,

the lesson about listening to a deity.

 

Artists never see the flicker in the eyes

as you hack and saw through bone.

‘Two blows’ was their hyped publicity.

Most portray the moment before,

the moment after; the moment itself

disappears up the magician’s sleeve.

 

Speak softly to me at three a.m.

Whisper sweet names you gave me.

Tell me other secrets; I know

about the knife you use to prise

my fingers from your heart,

the axe I take to your soul.

 

After the ‘Black Painting’ Judith and Holifernes by Goya

Tom de Freston has been the Leverhulme Artist in Residence at Cambridge University and the Levy Plumb Artist in Residence at Christ’s College. Tom has had a numerous solo shows in London and Cambridge.

Andrea Porter’s collection A Season of Small Insanities is published by Salt. This poem is taken from her upcoming book in collaboration with Tom de Freston to be published by Gatehouse Press.