Today’s choice
Previous poems
Seán Street
Creation Radio
There was a time when I took my radio
into the night wood and tuned its pyracantha
needle along the dial through noise jungles
to silent darkness at the waveband’s end.
First there was nothing, or at least my ears
couldn’t hear it, just the sea-shore non-stillness
of rushing static, but as the hours passed, that
phased out and in its place came something between
voices singing, a whispering, and the sound
of flowing like the sap inside me as my veins
streamed blood, pulsing, a low throb and beat behind
bark , and from deep under leaf mould and roots,
and all around, the slow breathing of sleeping
creatures, the soft stillness of curled voles and birds.
It went on through the night, growing’s ‘live’ broadcast,
and then sang to itself beyond first light under
morning’s first songs in the stirring of branches,
but by then my small radio’s batteries
were too weak to pick it up, the daytime
stations too brutal and the sunshine too loud.
While it lasted though there was something in what
I heard that I was sure I knew but couldn’t
remember, something that had always been there,
although much fainter now, more distant.
In the darkness at the end of the dial
beyond babel, an ancient music seeded
from forest loam, and I understood then
and always after, that once the song stopped,
while it would be always unforgettable,
it would be forever unrecoverable.
Seán Street’s most recent collection is Running Out of Time (Shoestring Press, March 2024). Prose includes works on Gerard Manley Hopkins and the Dymock Poets, and several studies of sound poetics, the latest being Wild Track: Sound, Text and the Idea of Birdsong, published in July 2023 by Bloomsbury Academic. He is emeritus professor at Bournemouth University and now lives in Liverpool.
Kirsty Fox
Winged Kirsty Fox is a writer and artist specialising in ecopoetics. She writes lyric essays and poetry, and has had work published by Apricot Press, Arachne Press, and Streetcake Magazine. She has a Masters in Creative Writing and is currently studying...
Jason Ryberg
Sometimes I’d swear that
the ancient box fan I’ve hauled
around with me for
years is a receiver for
the conversations of ghosts
Peter Wallis
Dead in a chest,
are folded matinee jackets, bonnets, bootees and mitts.
Tissue sighs like the sea at Lowestoft,
always Third week in August
Amanda Bell
We clipped a window through the currant, sat on folding chairs with keep-cups,
wrapped in blankets as we yelled through the prescribed two-metre gap.
Then took to mending – darning socks and patching favourite denims
Anna Maughan
Illness had left me
brittle as frost, icicle-thin
swaddled in borrowed warmth
Angeliki Ampelogianni
on marble tiles bird like
I am a pin measuring drops in the toilet bowl
A W Earl
Doors
My parents’ house became a place of closed white doors,
where sound hung spare and echoes found no junk
or clutter to rest themselves upon.
Finola Scott
Winter dusk soughs in, dark
clouds threaten, tangle her wool.
Huw Gwynn-Jones
Black is the colour inside black light on
blackened brick and slats