Today’s choice

Previous poems

Miriam Swales

 

 

 

Dinosaur Footprints
Tennyson Monument (The Needles), Isle of Wight

I’m waiting for news I don’t want to talk about
and scrolling through old photos to escape.
After some swipes, I see you walking away.

From my perspective, the path looks up – wide
and long – towards a monument on the green hillside.
I pause here; I take it in.

Your face is turned to the concrete cross
above a golden carpet – trod out before you
by poets and pilgrims.

And somehow there is something ethereal –
even prophetic in this facsimile.
Before the St Beuno’s retreat and the quiet.

It was the day we decided to try The Needles
and to hunt for fossils on the Isle of Wight.
The ones we now keep in our garden.

We had no spades, just claws for hands
and determined eyes.
And we took what we could find.

The dinosaur footprints were too big to carry –
or we would have (children that we are).
Now, our bucket-fostered fossils are

planted and unassuming by the front door –
next to the California poppies.
And we wait each year to see if they’ll grow

like the Dahlias you always call Lazarus,
like the lavender you cut back most years,
or the seedlings from the packet your mother gave you.

I stood at the bottom of the hill that day
watching you with our faithful dog
slowly ascend from every angle – feeling

the sun, the breeze, the firm ground by the cliffs –
trying to treasure the moment and capture it.
Bottle it inside for moments like these.

 

 

Miriam Swales is an American/British writer and English teacher. She is also a mindfulness teacher with interests in spirituality and mental health. She is a late bloomer and is currently seeking 100 rejections.

Jeanette Burton

What is this, a family outing?

Yes, dad, that’s exactly what this is, I want to say to him
as I open the car door, climb into the front seat,
remembering those marvellous trips to the tip at Loscoe.

CS Crowe

      Lines He lived next to the funeral home with his three daughters. A cherry picker beeps in the distance. I cannot see it, but I know the light is red. Who brings roses to a funeral? Rain rolls down window glass, but not here, only somewhere in the...

Carole Bromley

I don’t know why I went,
I’d already heard about the time
a colleague’s husband turned up
at the staff barbecue and punched him.