Today’s choice

Previous poems

Gill Horitz

 

 

 

Cyclamen

I woke to workers with blades
along the verge, yellow-jacketed
to signify contracted rights
to hack and scythe died-back
bracken and living saplings
to a brown shrivel.

What a story to be part of,
forlorn in the telling
of nature diminished
by men being masterful.

But remember their look
before the blades,
petals of quiet white
circle a deeper plot.

 

 

Gill Horitz’s poetry & essays have been published in magazines and anthologies, and a short story in Cheatin’ Heart, published by Serpent’s Tail.  Her pamphlet All the Different Darknesses’was published by Cinnamon Press. Gill lives in Wimborne, Dorset.  gillhoritz.cargo.site

Tim Brookes

In the charity shop I try on a coat
flocked with fake shearling,
shaved-soft almost: fibres
fired onto plastic to fool the wrist.

Kim Waters

You’re a character, a Roman numeral,
an internet meme. Descendant
from a peasant’s crook or cattle prod,
you’re the twelfth letter of the alphabet,

Sylvie Jane Lewis

Being quiet and easily tired by being alive among people, I take
the cowardly route to community. I curate a digital garden of oddity.

At best my phone is a menagerie of queers: trinket makers, amateur
playwrights, witches, and, over and over again, my own personal monarchy.

Magnus McDowall

We rolled out on Seven Sisters Road,
two crates of Tyskie empty in my stairwell.

We were talking from the chest, walking backwards
crackling air above our heads like streetlights

Sarah Boyd

He’s a house of cards, a delicately balanced pyramid
held together by hearing aids and dusty bifocals and
wobbling dentures and ageing pacemaker and
shirt with three buttons missing in action and