Today’s choice

Previous poems

Sue Proffitt

 

 

 

All of it

It’s thirty-four years since you let go
and we were pulled on downstream,

a Sunday then too. My brother texts me:
remembering happy times with father.

Yes, but how to separate them
from the rest, and do I want to?

You and I have had many talks since you died.
By the river, late afternoon golden light,

I saw you on the other side come down to the bank
to greet me,  how you stood in silence,

listened to everything I had to say,
all the jagged unfinished business

and many times since – Samhain,
when the dead slip in easily,

you’re always the first I light a candle to,
feel it necessary, again, to tell you

the truth of you, unfiltered:
generous, selfish, excessive in every way,

a wake of unhappiness dragging behind you,
how you drank it down, dragged us under too.

We survived but we’re marked as survivors are,
water-stained, have had to find our own ways

out of the river, and mine is never to look away,
to see all of it, because that’s where you are,

surfacing towards me  – in all of it.
Loved not in spite of, but through.

 

 

Sue Proffitt lives by the coast in South Devon. She has an M.A. (Creative Writing), is a Hawthornden Fellow and has been published in  many magazines and competitions. She has two poetry collections:  Open After Dark (Oversteps, 2017) and  The Lock-Picker (Palewell Press, 2021). She is working on her third collection.

Pamilerin Jacob

Annette the gap-toothed,
You kissed a man & I was born. You gave him
your laughter & he built an empire,

Nathan Evans

If they ask where I am, tell them: I am
wintering. I have secreted small acorns
of sadness in crevices of gnarled limbs
and shall be savouring their bitternesses
on the back of my tongue until the days
lengthen.

Jim Ferguson

we can travel anywhere
she winks, but let’s rest here
in amongst these words
a moment can take a while

Gabrielle Meadows

I am tearing the peel from an orange gently and somewhere
Far away a tree falls in a forest and we
don’t hear it but the ground does and the birds do

Hongwei Bao

Every five minutes it does its job,
hoovers every inch of her memory,
declutters all pains and sorrows.

Gary Day

And once the father frowned
As the boy struggled to fasten
The drawbridge on his fort.
‘He’ll never be any good
With his hands’ he declared,
As if the boy wasn’t there.

Royal Rhodes

Perhaps the friends of Lazarus, who died
and slipped his shroud, on seeing him might swoon
or rush to hear the tales of that beyond
they hoped and feared to face.