Today’s choice

Previous poems

Iris Anne Lewis

 

 

 

A moonless night when lanterns are shuttered

The track leads through thickets, threaded with eyes.
Elusive scraps of dreams, they gleam, flicker out.

Long dead stars pierce the canopy
with pinpricks of white, cold and exact.

I stumble through woods, the path
thick with leafmould, my footsteps muffled.

Something unseen scuttles in the undergrowth.
A harsh bark, owls’ wings brush the air.

Night retreats, dawn flushes the sky. The sun
splashes through trees, braids dark with light.

Leaves cast dancing shade on the path. I walk on,
the woods lit green and singing.

 

 

 

Iris Anne Lewis is widely published. Featured in Black Bough Poetry and Poetry Wales she has won or been placed in many competitions. Her first collection Amber is available from Amazon or contact her on @irisannelewis.bskysocial or X @irisannelewis.

B. Anne Adriaens

      symptoms she is aggregate concrete and grit held together in a human shape lying on her side knees drawn up flesh tensing to stone and tendons in flames the weight of her body pressed into the mattress leaves a shallow hollow once she’s gone a...

Ansuya Patel

Think what it must have been like for her
fasting from sunrise to moonrise, to wake up
 
three hours before dawn, bathe, apply sindoor
on the parting of her hair line . . .