Today’s choice
Previous poems
Chrissy Banks and Antony Owen (from the IS&T archives) for Holocaust Memorial Day
Now I Lay Me Down to Sleep
Goodnight moon, goodnight stars,
goodnight cherry, pear, apple tree.
Goodnight pond, stop wriggling, newts,
stop zipping the water, water-boatmen.
Goodnight, glossy horses on the hill,
rabbits in the field, white owl,
hungry and flying still. Goodnight
pigeon, head tucked under your wing.
Goodnight cars and vans on the road outside.
Time to shut off engines, grab some rest.
Goodnight Danny, Dylan. Put away
your books, leave those other worlds for now.
Goodnight Lenny. Still your football legs,
calm your curious senses. Lay your head
on the pillow and sleep. Goodnight little Cece.
Take off your princess dress, your crown.
Can you feel a pea under the mattress?
You’ll never tell if you don’t lie down.
Good night children of Syria, Gaza, Ukraine,
Jerusalem. Close your eyes if you can.
The stars shine on you all.
The moon sees everything.
Song for a yellow star belt
In the square
they are beating men to classical music
last year they danced in this spot, the same children watched.In the square
a local orchestra kneels before its composer
he is made to throttle the defiant celloist with piano strings.
All things pass,
ignore the old shoemaker covering the breasts of his dead wife,
in five years, he will watch from the patisserie as kids chalk hopscotch.
All things pass,
like the twitching general damned by the sleight seamstress.
He thought she closed her eyes but she snared him in a blink shot.
In the orchestra,
a solitary flutist set free an excerpt of the murdered crescendo.
I swear a whole crowd gathered in the square to hear it soar like black fireworks.
With five collections of poetry focusing on conflict Antony Owen is a well respected writer known for investigative poetry which took him to Hiroshima in 2015 to interview atomic bomb survivors. His subsequent collection, The Nagasaki Elder (V.Press) was shortlisted for a Ted Hughes Award in 2017
‘Song for a yellow star belt’ was first published on 27th January 2020. ‘Post-Atomic Glossaries: New and Selected Poems‘ was published by Broken Sleep Books in 2024.
Karen Hodgson Pryce
All at sea on a serenity of sheep,
we played monopoly, box tatty and frail.
Its missing chance cards, no get-out-of-jail.
Nicole Knoppová
Mami, I find myself wishing your memory
were a bird of prey—
red-tailed hawk or black vulture . . .
Ali Murphy
One Winter’s Line
Between underpants and saggy bra,
she hangs her fallopian tubes out to dry.
Harry Gunston
night knocks inside my dream
at the end of the world
death house
where sawdust covers everything.
Isobel Williams
If you’re asking how to get invited
To draw at a sex club . . .
Clare Currie on Mother’s Day
After learning about the maternal instincts of seals, I took to listing postpartum offensives
Charlie Hill
What was he running from?
Well what have you got:
the blood-soaked news of course,
theme parks, leaf blowers, HR,
but also the language . . .
Jane Wilkinson on International Women’s Day
Queen Conch
My spirit animal is a sovereign sea snail. A part-time anchoress,
anchored to her cell.
Jenny Moroney
Clogged heavens
the aeroplanes criss-cross through
what was imagined there