Today’s choice
Previous poems
Brian Kirk
Reflex
That was the time you caught
the mumps and I was half
afraid I’d catch it too.
Or it was measles and it was
me who had it, lying in bed
for days reading the bible –
children’s version, illustrated –
where the devil was all red
and had pig’s feet and horns
and Jesus wore James Brolin’s
beard and laundered robes
in the desert. They must have
been impossible to keep clean,
living on locusts and wild honey
and God knows what –
or was that John the Baptist,
the one who came before, who
wasn’t good enough to tie his sandals?
Like the one you lost that day
at the beach when the tide
came rushing in and we had
to gather up our stuff and run
to the dunes. I stood on broken glass
and you had to pick tiny slivers
out of my foot with a pen-knife
and I accidentally blackened
your eye when my foot shot
out in reflex defence. Or it was
Winter and I was sick again,
dreaming under a blanket
of thick snow – no, that can’t be right –
it never lasted, turning to slush
overnight, like everything else.
Brian Kirk has published two collections with Salmon Poetry, After The Fall (2017) and Hare’s Breath (2023) and a short fiction chapbook It’s Not Me It’s You (Southword Editions, 2019). www.briankirkwriter.com.
Philip Dunkerley
We leave early, drive for two and a half hours,
park, find the church where you were married.
Marc Janssen
The sky opens
Blinking its single slackened eye.
Sigune Schnabel tr. Simon Lèbe
She cut letters out of me,
which quietly and unnoticed
danced red poems.
Pat Edwards
He is in white-out, stopped in his tracks,
dying for the comfort of a fag.
He makes a chalice around the flame,
hands becoming shield so he can light up.
Pamilerin Jacob
Annette the gap-toothed,
You kissed a man & I was born. You gave him
your laughter & he built an empire,
Fatihah Quadri Eniola
There is an album of all the men
your mother have loved. It sits every
night in the deep silence of the
basement.
Nathan Evans
If they ask where I am, tell them: I am
wintering. I have secreted small acorns
of sadness in crevices of gnarled limbs
and shall be savouring their bitternesses
on the back of my tongue until the days
lengthen.
Jim Ferguson
we can travel anywhere
she winks, but let’s rest here
in amongst these words
a moment can take a while
Gabrielle Meadows
I am tearing the peel from an orange gently and somewhere
Far away a tree falls in a forest and we
don’t hear it but the ground does and the birds do
