Today’s choice

Previous poems

Stuart Henson

 

 

 

The Lost Light

Sometimes I’m surprised there’s light
in dark places, those corridors, those alleys
where you wouldn’t stray if you didn’t need

or here in this prefab house I walk past
once a week with the dog—left lost
at the end of a lane to go derelict

with the one long lamp and no shade
in a room set off from the world
by tea-coloured nets; just the one

dim bulb that hangs like a chrysalis
from a metre of flex, always on
in the dim brown room to so little effect.

Outside where the garden’s gone rank
there’s a site-safety fence on its concrete feet
that skirts the whole place, as if something

malign were just waiting and biding its time
till the small light goes out
and huge brightness comes battering in.

 

 

Stuart Henson’s most recent collection is Beautiful Monsters (Shoestring, 2022)   His pamphlet A Handful of Wasps was shortlisted for the Michael Marks Environmental Poet of the Year 2023-2024 award and is out from Shoestring in March.

Lara Mae Simpson and Siobhan Dunlop for Day 1 of our Pride Feature

How to Love the Word “Lesbian”

We took the bus in tutus & fairy wings,
gripped on to the cowboy hat
trying to fly from your curls in July’s breeze.
In Trafalgar Square, floats of rainbow
companies waltzed by & we rolled
our eyes, couldn’t see past tall men,

– Lara Mae Simpson (they/she)

On nights I am

a girl again
I am unemployable as
woman don’t do the
work beg  at corner
of ends on leg
too short for the cripwalk

-Noah Jacob

dreaming of the velvet goldmines

i want to be a skinny pretty boy rockstar
without the height or the coke habit
or needing to strictly be a boy at all

-Siobhan Dunlop (they/them)

Paul Stephenson

The Conversation

It’s been quite a while now and…
You know we get on like a house…
August twelfth, a year ago, can you…
I bet you thank your lucky…
Things have evolved, haven’t…
Can you believe we’re both still …

Hannah Linden

She gives me a word to look up
in a dictionary of obscure sorrows.

I, who try to decipher echoes from
other people’s reaction to my words

throw down a bucket into the well
recognise water when people tell me

Nelly Bryce

Longing curls its legs up on the sofa in our house.
There’s a dip there now.
How I long to turn us into a day trip.

You belong in that chair over there
asking what happened with that text
and where I bought this jumper,

Elizabeth Osmond

Difficult doctors don’t care about their patients,
They are filling up hospitals and GP practices with their difficult bodies.
They are often late to work and shuffle into handover . . .

Jim Murdoch

Some things we hold in trust,
some we forget we even own
and then there’re those items
we hang onto “just in case.”