Today’s choice

Previous poems

Martin Rieser

 

 

 

…tell it slant

The river is an old demon
& my heart is an infirm creature
The river is sure of its way
& my heart is capable of lies.
The river is incapable of lies
& my heart is beating,  beat on beat.
The river flows from high to low
& my heart is on its own journey.
The river is a twisted truth.

The mountain is indifferent
& truth is best told slant.
The mountain looks down on us all
& truth is there to knock us sideways.
The mountain has an old white head.
& truth holds us to its heart
The mountain will save or kill
& truth is moving through the world.
The mountain wishes for nothing
& truth is never silent.
The truth is going to set us free
& the mountain will wear away.

 

 

Martin Rieser is both a poet and visual artist. His interactive installations based on his poetry have been shown around the world, He runs the Stanza poetry group in Bristol. Published: Poetry Review, Magma 74, Morphrog 22; Poetry kit;  Primers Volume 3, Artlyst Anthology 2020. Alchemy Spoon 2022, Ink Sweat and Tears 2019/2023, Shortlisted: Frosted Fire 2019 /2022, Charles Causeley Prize 2020;;  runner up Norman Nicholson 2020,; Winner of the Hastings Poetry Competition 2021.

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...

L Kiew

Land has dried its eyes, grown hard
hands and interrogates each arrival:
Where are you from, really from?

Helen Evans

Things I did then that I hadn’t done before
 
Asked the neighbours if they wanted anything in my online weekly shop and
Bought yeast, flour, long-life milk and 70-per-cent-alcohol hand sanitiser and
Cut my own hair, even the bits round the back I couldn’t see, and

Kirsty Crawford

Elizabeth is hiding in the cupboard under the sink
Small enough to fold between cream cleaner and floor polish
Too big to keep elbows away from wire wool