by Helen Ivory | Mar 17, 2021 | Featured, Poetry
Lockdown: A Portrait To protect your skin, Lockdown wears a shapeless cotton dress. Lockdown thinks it used to be navy, but sunlight has bleached it a drab, nameless blue – leaving no patches of vibrant colour, it is uniform in its lifelessness....
by Helen Ivory | Mar 16, 2021 | Featured, Poetry
Bus train bus 1. Fuse White lights in ash trees in a community green space remind me what that week did. I see the mechanics now because I’m in the front seat of the upper deck of the 97 with the lego brick of the stop bell a childish...
by Helen Ivory | Mar 15, 2021 | Featured, Haibun, Tanka, Haiku & Haiga, Poetry
Haiku * small boy under his feet skyscraper shadows * kitchen table at the master’s place a tiny spider * evening forest not quite big enough for all the shadows * Samo Kreutz lives in Ljubljana, Slovenia. Besides haiku (which...
by Helen Ivory | Mar 14, 2021 | Featured, Poetry
Happiness in my lockdown sock drawer Test-tubes, conical flasks and molecules. Back to A Level Chemistry with Mr Cartwright we learn about magnetism with marker pen examples. A moon lander, planets and a telescope and I am back in my childhood...
by Helen Ivory | Mar 13, 2021 | Featured, Poetry
Mrs McNab All of a sudden, would Mrs McNab see that the house was ready, one of the young ladies wrote…Virginia Woolf, To the Lighthouse. She comes as summoned, care taker with a leer, a lurch, a grinding of boots on shingle, tears cobweb veils of...