Today’s choice

Previous poems

T. N. Kennedy

 

 

Creators

Where your ancestor collected bottles
amber dark as bog-steeped river water
swaddling them in peachy doll flesh putty
studding them with countless periwinkles
gorse yellow, sorrel orange, figwort brown
lamp stands to cast a circle of low light
for daughters to read by, and cultivate
imaginings of worlds beyond the field
so you collect those poems which reveal
life at its most intense and solitary
turning them on when you most need to feel
your progress through the years is not empty
Where creation leads, how could they know
It takes a century to make a poet

 

 

 

T. N. Kennedy is a poet of Irish heritage living in London with her family and familiars. She enjoys wild swimming and collects pink sunglasses.
Substack: @apostilian

Catherine O’Brien

When all is quiet save for the silky rustling of an autumn breeze
let that love show.

When your patience is darkness-dappled and as weary as an exhausted scholar
let that love show.

Marianne Habeshaw

session in the woods. Someone took a feather
to the hairdressers. Gum cross-sectioned
my cheek; he forgot about removal to kiss.
Had to avoid tree roots, placed us on green.
He mentioned his bullied niece kept reaching
for her blanket; Mr. Smith is quaking regression,

Fergal O’Dwyer

but sunlight streaming in
through impractically curtainless windows;
my skin, made-up in golden light,
looking taught from affluence
and vitamins.

Like they do in films,

Hattie Graham

wait for the witch who comes to pick wild garlic.
Together we can be brave and
pull the green bits from her teeth.
Wandering the glen with
nothing in our pockets, we can search
for the place where fairies still live.
No one will find us there,
not even the old grey bell they ring at tea time.

George Parker

I make broth, feel odd wiping it off your face
moments after swiping through bodies, preferences,
dates. Sunset-orange forget-me-nots mar the napkin cloth

Adam Horovitz

Such stillness in the air. The attic window
is a cupped ear set to alert the house to subtle
shifts in atmosphere: auguries; signs; any tiny
notice of cataclysmic change. . .

Jenny Mitchell

      What Part of Me? Sun demands a front row seat above the graveyard through the trees when my mother’s placed in soil, surrounded by her friends’ small talk – She must have sent the rays for us. Women in their Sunday best, men in greying suits...