Today’s choice

Previous poems

Gareth Writer-Davies

 

 

 

In the Dales
after John Ashbery

it’s a special kind of empty
the footed earth, saluting the sky

so much to see
I took a photograph of you

posed in the window seat
punchy red slippers

blurring rock and field
the same window in five years?

jenny wren says yes, the crows caw no
what do they know

as days go by
certain details are already hazy

and new succeeds new
as we spread over the vast stone barns

of Swale and Wensley
and there we are, older certainly

walking to the monument
where there is no monument

the upper left corner of the sky
a history of what might have been

 

 

Gareth Writer-Davies: Hawthornden Fellow (2019). Shortlisted for the Bridport Prize (2014 and 2017) and the Erbacce Prize (2014). Commended in the Prole Laureate Competition (2015) and Prole Laureate for 2017. Commended in the Welsh Poetry Competition (2015) and Highly Commended in 2011. His pamphlet Bodies was published in 2015 followed by Cry Baby in 2017, The Lover’s Pinch in 2018, The End in 2019 and Wysg in 2022.

Jean O’Brien

Winter soil is hard and hoar crusted,
birds peck with blunted beaks,
pushing up are the blind green pods
of what will soon be yellow daffodils,
given light and air.

Jean Atkin

We scoured the parish tip most weeks, when we were kids.
We clambered it in wellies.  Ferals, we scavenged
in the debris of the adults’ lives.

Lesley Curwen

Her feet snagged in a cleverly-placed net
my sister waits for him to untangle her,
to hold her head still between thick fingers . . .

From the Archives: In Memory of Jean Cardy

      Denizens Mice live in the London Tube. A train leaves and small pieces of sooty black detach themselves from the sooty black walls and forage for crumbs in the rubbish under the rails that are death to man. You can’t see their feet move. They...

Tina Cole

Mr. Pig modelling his best Sunday suit of farmyard smells,
flees from the cook’s cleaver to find himself a sow.