Today’s choice
Previous poems
Paul Moclair
Postscript
Dusk on the third day of the Buddhist feast
of Obon and toro nagashi gets underway
across Japan. Their shore leave over,
the spirits of the dead are bid farewell
until that time next year, when ritual
grants them reprieve again. The candle boats
are set afloat, the surface of the rivers lit,
flotillas flicker off into the dark, and on.
These images come back to me the week
after my mother’s death, listening as she reads
her favourite poems. I edit each recording
with the same detached respect
the undertaker showed washing her body.
I drain each clip of hiss and static,
nip and trim all hum and crackle, soothe popped plosives,
then ensure that each caesura’s uniform,
bind them in crisp audio winding sheets
and set them sailing off through cyberspace.
It’s now a waiting game. Her future lies
in someone else’s hands – an accidental
necromancer trawling YouTube for a poem,
whose choice summons my mother’s voice
to flicker back to life again, and warm
a stranger’s room somewhere. Till then
she’s neither here nor there.
For months no radar sifting those cold seas,
identifies the drifting ghost ship fleet.
And then a hit! A woman writing from
Newcastle (not my mother’s home beneath
the Mournes but its namesake across the water).
has chanced upon her reading Heaney’s Postscript.
She proffers comfort, signs off simply ‘Dawn’.
Paul Moclair is from Northern Ireland. He completed an MA in Writing Poetry at the Seamus Heaney Centre, QUB in 2025. He has been published in The Ogham Stone, Dodging The Rain and in two Poetry In Motion Community anthologies.
Alan Hardy
Made a list.
A record.
The dishes she ate.
Monuments visited.
In Paris.
Susana Arrieta
Tempting death with every cobblestoned step
his face was a collection of broken records
Peter Leight
There’s more waste than we use for the things we ordinarily use waste for, such as piling it on barges and sending them out to sea, tucking it under the surface like a layer of insulation . . .
John Grey
there are some lives
lived poolside
and others that
mostly consist of
a bent back in a field –
Adam Flint
All summer automatic exits remain
open, and no one leaves or boards.
David Van-Cauter
You are pleased to see me
in my gothic T-shirt –
those bats, you say, have been your friends.
Mark Wyatt
yes of course/ it was idyllic, reclining (pint of/ cider in hand) poolside in the harvesting/ sunlight
Catherine Shonack
when confronted with vast, endlessness of the ocean
who wouldn’t go mad?
Ansuya Patel
Women scrape coins from their purse,
count pennies, one lifts up a watermelon
in mid-air like raising a newborn to light.