Today’s choice
Previous poems
Gill Connors for International Women’s Day
Anne Askew & Amber Heard
Plain speaking
a woman of few words, is a gift of God (Sirach 26:14)
Rack and stretch her, loosen flesh
from bone. A jointed bird will not squawk.
Each turn and pull will tighten
the denial in her lips.
Pop the sockets of her shoulders and her hips.
She’ll howl in a tongue you do not know.
Twist her limbs from their hinges.
She will not let a single name breed
from her screams. She has known worse
than this, a woman’s body’s made for pain.
When she is broken, when you have wrenched
the last of her, but still you are no wiser,
carry her. Chain her upright to a chair, bring a crowd
to see her suffer. Light the taper
She will burn her body slumped and beat
snapped upright by the noose of
paparazzi flash
listen to the crackle of a virtual match
the Tik-Tok of the minutes
counting down
her face on every paper the rustling chatter
look at him fleshed out
a monster of a pirate swagger and joust
his face swollen and puffed yet hard and proud
and the crowd
their stones and sticks
ready for the fix of an internet high
hands him the light
Gill Connors is from North Yorkshire where she lives and works. She is working on a third collection which will be the result of her PhD, on the subject of the links and parallels between sixteenth century and twenty-first century women. She is a managing editor of Yaffle and Yaffle’s Nest.
Shamik Banerjee
Much like a burnt-out farmer flumping down
upon his ache-allaying, tender bed
Rose Lennard
Each year we climbed to that place high above the ruins.
Melanie Tibbs
People came to find out what ‘Garage Sale’ meant
in a small village landlocked county early burning comet tail
of Thatcher’s Britain.
Alfie Nawaid
a cowboy is that split second of doubt between victim
and victor, quick whipcrack out the corner of the mouth,
Stuart Rawlinson
I’m nineteen, I’m ancient.
I am so hungover
one of my eyes has fallen out…
Susie Wilson
Ceilings don’t hold water well.
Burst a pipe at the top
of an apartment block
to test this theory, if you will.
Andy Breckenridge
Abertawe After Richard Siken For CHD Tell me about the time I mansplained that Swansea is the English for Abertawe and means town at the mouth of the River Tawe. And about when, from the hill above Rhossili beach Lundy Island’s spectral mass...
Mark Wyatt
Daedalus
Plato loved his incessant questioning
of the natural world’s engineering
Sue Wallace-Shaddad
I tempt you with morsels
of soft-skinned peach, a pear sliced
in quarters, pipless and skinless.