Today’s choice
Previous poems
Chris Hardy
Waking Up
The night before we left we smoked opium
for the first time and didn’t sleep.
In Brindisi we lay down in a corridor and slept
before the ferry took us to an island where
there was a warehouse for the mad.
(Now I know the mad are awake with dreams
like when my mother sat by me her grey hair
dyed black my mother never dyed her hair
she was telling me things might have been different).
We laid our sleeping bags zipped together
and slept above the bows where once I saw
dolphins racing faster than the ship.
They sleep in the surface, in the shallows.
On the island we slept hot afternoons.
A shepherd watched from his hillside camp
when we lay naked on the beach.
We were unafraid. He was a shepherd.
The chief of police invited us to tea
and showed how he could
watch our tent across the bay
through the telescope on his balcony.
Walking quietly back I was cursed
for going shirtless in the evening heat
by a woman driving a bull into a shed,
his cullion gourds swung by her knees.
After the goat dance wine we
held hands along the cliff path
so as not to fall to sleep in
the squid fishers’ floodlit sea.
The last night of the journey home we slept
in a barn, our breath froze round our lips,
back in the land of cold and opium at least
they’d said it was opium and we’d believed them
because we still believed.
Chris Hardy‘s poems have appeared widely in magazines and online. He was shortlisted in the 2024 National Poetry Competition and won the 2024 McLellan Poetry Prize. His new collection from Shoestring Press will be published later in 2025.
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.
On the fourth day of Christmas, we bring you Leusa Lloyd, Lydia Benson and Charlotte Johnson
It is always Christmas in the loft
On the third day of Christmas, we bring you K. S. Moore, Kate Noakes and Rachael Smart
Picture this:
little witch girl
in Alaskan wilderness.
On the second day of Christmas, we bring you Gill McEvoy, Rachel Burns and Cindy Botha
On the way to the registry office it snows, flecks of white like spittle hitting the steamed-up bus windows, I worry the petals from my wedding posy.
On the first day of Christmas, we bring you Hannah Linden, John White and Stephen Keeler
. . . Now the villages is
en fête: dressed for a party in the dark,
across the fields, along uneven paths . . .
Anna Chorlton
She curled emerald
tights about the core of
an oak
slumbering with thick bare
limbs.
John Greening
On Stage in a home-made model theatre, c.1967 Glued to your block, in paint and ink you wait for Ah, Sweet Mystery of Life to stop. Smell of hardboard and hot bakelite. The lino curtain’s ready to go up. At which, the straightened coat hanger is shoved and on you...
Anna Bowles
Nothing bad can happen on a plane.
Engine fires, earache, hijackers; but no new grief.
Kirsty Fox
Winged Kirsty Fox is a writer and artist specialising in ecopoetics. She writes lyric essays and poetry, and has had work published by Apricot Press, Arachne Press, and Streetcake Magazine. She has a Masters in Creative Writing and is currently studying...