Today’s choice

Previous poems

Hélène Demetriades

 

 

By the Horns

At breakfast my man sticks a purple
magnolia bud in my soft boiled egg.
The flower opens, distilling to lilac.

On my autumn birthday he wrings
the necks of seven swallow-wings
to gift me the witch’s butter

wobbling like an orange nebula
above their nest –

Beyond the forest a doeling wire-snags
on the wrong side of the fence
tryingtosucklefrom nanny’s bulging udder.

Billy paws the turf, aiming his horns
at me like drop handlebars.

 

 

Hélène Demetriades has been longlisted in The National, 2023, and highly commended in the International Fool for Chapbook Award, 2023 & 24. Her debut collection The Plumb Line was published by Hedgehog Press in 2022. She won The Silver Wyvern, 2022, and has poems forthcoming in Magma and The Interpreter’s House. www.helenedemetriadespoetry.

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.”

Andrew McDonnell on Father’s Day

      Somewhere to get to The light is growing in the East the headlights skim the road that runs beside the flooded fields we’re a month off blossom when it comes I will drape myself in the year’s renewal and ask how many times I will see my little...

Anna Lewis

With the neon-splashed night at the window
I counted each contraction down, obediently,
as my mother had told me to do.

Karin Molde

      Fortuna rolls the dice in Tumahole Free State, South Africa I have never seen a baby so tiny outside a womb. You hold her jigsaw of bones in a blanket, afraid to scatter the pieces in case they’d sail like seeds onto the road. A dung beetle rolls...

Robin Houghton

I’m looking through a lattice of magnolia 

not yet ready to blow open its thousand furring buds—
every year the same urgency—