Today’s choice

Previous poems

Kate Bailey

 

 

 

Us and Them

They’ve mended the park fence again,
patched it over with the usual ugly metalwork,
like a riot barricade.

That’ll keep them out –
the delinquents,
the ne’er-do-wells,

who break in and sit on the grass in the dark
and watch the moon,
the dirty buggers!

Next week it will be prised away
to leave a gap the width of a person.
Another incursion.

And those scum-of-the-earth
lying under softly budding trees,
counting the stars.

 

 

Kate Bailey is a violinist, but she has always loved words. She has two grown-up daughters, and lives in Oxford with her husband and pacifist cat. Her writing has been published in the Frogmore Papers and the Fish anthology.

Jacob Burgess Rollo

      Jacob Burgess Rollo is a poet and prose writer based in Dorset, his work is featured in From the Lighthouse and Avant Cardigan, a zine he founded with friends. He has an English Literature BA from Durham and is going on to study for a master's in...

Ruth Lexton

It is late at night and the kettle is boiling,
a quire of steam fanning out in the white kitchen
you are holding me as if I were your girl again

Holly Magill

. . .you’re swallowed whole
into this cocoon: pine-scent, antibac and the dry
whoosh of his heater – lean your careworn bones into
synthetic leather snug, . . .

Ruth Aylett

God had been playing computer games
for a chunk of eternity when he became aware
he’d left creation in the oven for a long time