Today’s choice
Previous poems
Lola Dekhuijzen
my friends are many-legged
the silence is made up of the ticking
of the clock that matches the slow
drum of my heart. my sole companion
is the empty-eyed stranger who seems
to have gotten stuck inside the window,
her hand always pressed against mine,
only the thick glass between us.
the window is a derivative landscape
painting: streaks of blue for a sky,
splashes of brown and green that
make up an oak tree, slender arms
that hold up an orchestra of tiny
red robins. darker scribbles
crawl across the canvas too:
a mass of miniature stick figures
overflowing the tarmac campus
square like tiny, identical ants.
i wish i could cup some of that vast
blue expanse and bring it to this side
of the smudged glass where my fraying
single-size mattress, sheets woven
from cobwebs, is accompanied by
nothing but jumbled up roots that
have gotten to my head, are now
creeping into my nervous system
with nothing to impede them but
untouched textbooks, empty pizza
boxes and tiny, slimy creatures that
have found themselves a home.
Lola Dekhuijzen is a poet from Amsterdam, whose work explores themes of identity, trauma, and intimacy. She is interested in the ways art allows us to heal. IG: @imissyourgingerhair
Henry Wilkinson
I rolled an orange across daybreak;
I waited for the moon to ripen.
On the twelfth day of Christmas, we bring you KB Ballentine, J.S. Watts and Terry Dyson
as wind whispers your name.
Summer’s breaking down and a starker calling comes –
leaves saturated with sunset before surrendering.
On the eleventh day of Christmas, we bring you Helen Laycock, Ruth Aylett and Debbie Strange
we will meet again
on the other side
On the tenth day of Christmas, we bring you Jenny McRobert, Angela Topping and Maria C. McCarthy
The tree makes its way into the garden
looms at the window, a disconsolate ghost
On the ninth day of Christmas, we bring you Caroline Smith, Bec Mackenzie and David Keyworth
After the lunch he gets his folder
of Christmas games.
On the eighth day of Christmas, we bring you Em Gray, Abigail Ottley and Emma Simon
And now you’re half a spin of the world away,
somewhere I’ve never been, like Narnia . . .
On the seventh day of Christmas, we bring you Sue Burge, Erica Hesketh and Max Wallis
Once there was nothing sweeter than snow
On the sixth day of Christmas, we bring you Amy Rafferty, Tim Kiely and D.A.Prince
We pick up where you left off, searching still,
choosing random cards from a dealer’s deck:
twenty-one crows in a night-time tree,
deep within the dark, with all that chatter
On the fifth day of Christmas, we bring you Paul McGrane, Kevin Reid and Helen Evans
As regular as Santa Claus, she’d call
around at Christmas, the next-door neighbour
and my Sunday school teacher, Mrs Williams.