Today’s choice
Previous poems
Philip Rush
Rolled-Up Sleeves
Tom’s advice, mind you,
was to drink hot chocolate
last thing at night
on a garden bench
beneath the moon.
So, we sat there.
Our eyes grew accustomed
to monochrome
and to the unusual grammars
of darkness.
A hazel-nut or two
fell from the tall & leafy tree.
Occasionally
there was
a rustle in the hedge.
Our hot chocolate
perfumed the garden
with a touch of the exotic.
The air did not feel cold
on our bare arms.
Philip Rush was born in Middlesex. Big Purple Garden Paintings was short-listed for the Aldeburgh First Collection Prize; he has also collaborated with the photographer Andrew Fusek Peters. His most recent book of poems is Camera Obscura from The Garlic Press.
On the Eighth Day of Christmas we bring you D.A. Prince, Frances Boyle, Maggie Mackay
‘Redbreast’
‘Advent’
‘Ambulant’
On the Seventh Day of Christmas we bring you Pam Thompson, Mary Mulholland, Oliver Comins
‘Advice To One Who Is Single’
‘Mother Bear’
‘Yuletide Snapshot’
On the Sixth Day of Christmas we bring you Alison Binney, Kathy Pimlot, Elaine Westnott-O’Brien
‘Muscle Memory’
‘And then that first Christmas’
‘Month’s Mind’
On the Fifth Day of Christmas we bring you Helen Grant, Lydia Kennaway, Kath Mckay
‘Nest of Christmas’
‘Twelve Days’
‘Possibility of violence’
On the Fourth Day of Christmas we bring you Rob Walton, Abigail Ottley, Ian Parks
‘It’s the most’
‘Home Fires’
‘Christmas in Mexborough’
On the Third Day of Christmas we bring you Anne Symons, Lydia Macpherson, Sue Butler
‘Time of year’
‘The Winter Outing of the Woolhope Naturalists Field Club, December 1870’
‘A woman becomes a Goddess’
On the Second Day of Christmas we bring you Julie Maclean, Gill Connors, Ankit Raj Ojha
‘A Post-Colonial Cool Yule to y’All’
‘Little Town’
‘The Boy Next Door’
On the First Day of Christmas we bring you Sarah Davies, Sophia Argyris , Iris Anne Lewis
‘Not my partridge not my pear tree’
‘BROKE(N)’
‘The World Tilts’
Aoife Mclellan
Charcoal darkness shades late afternoon,
at the narrow edges of a chalk white snowfall.
Beams slide from our single lamp through the pane
onto soft-heaped mounds and frozen branches,