Today’s choice

Previous poems

Colin Pink

 

 

 

Thorny (One Sided Conversations No4)
after seeing Akram Khan’s Giselle 18 Jan 2026

to embrace you is like clasping
a fist full of briars

if your mouth was an envelope
I’d lick it shut

you can push all you like against
the wall between

the living and the dead
but it won’t give

yet I hunger still
cannot forget the taste of you

your honeysuckle heart
is held in my grasp

and there is nowhere on earth
to put it down

 

 

Colin Pink co-chairs the Barnes & Chiswick poetry stanza. His books of poems are: Acrobats of Sound (2016), The Ventriloquist Dummy’s Lament (2019), Typicity (2021) and Wreck of the Jeanne Gougy (2021).

Julian Dobson

Street after street, ears bright to bass and tune
of two thudding feet, gradients of breathing. But rain

is brooding. Sparse headlights, ambient drone
of cars kissing tarmac, merging

Oliver Comins

Working the land on good days, after Easter,
people would hear the breaks occur at school,
children calling as they ran into the playground,
familiar skipping rhymes rising from the babble.

George Turner

Some days, the privilege of living isn’t enough.
The weight of the kettle is unbearable. You leave the teabag
forlorn in the mug, unpoured.

Clive Donovan

If I were a ghost
I think I would shrink
and perch on wooden poles
and deco shades – get a good view
of what I am supposed to be haunting

Seán Street

There was a time when I took my radio
into the night wood and tuned its pyracantha
needle along the dial through noise jungles
to silent darkness at the waveband’s end.