Today’s choice
Previous poems
Graham Clifford
The Still Face Experiment
You must have seen that Youtube clip
where a mother lets her face go dead.
Her toddler carries on burbling for twenty to thirty seconds
until she realises there is nothing coming back to her.
First it is surprise, even laughing as this must be a game
but forty seconds in and here come attempts to engage
to coax a response because this is a new kind of quiet,
one which has a hard-wired Plan B for slumping and cold blue flesh.
She makes head bobs and reaches out to touch the cheeks
and nose with strong sticky fingers, the tone
at fifty seconds is rising like a kettle, like the pressure cooker
that covered our kitchen walls with condensation and fumed.
One minute in and the pitch incrementally lifts and she is
frantic and crying and pulling at herself outside because it hurts inside
postural control is lost, she bites her own hand and this is now uncomfortable
to watch. We watch. She dissolves and stops. All she wants is this,
the relief when her mother’s face softens at two minutes fifteen
and they hug and talk and she is lifted from the interview room
into a university campus garden, in Boston in the sunny seventies
and the mother promises she will never, ever
do that again, she was simply trusting in knowledge and engaged
in the spirit of enquiry and all available research told her
just a couple of minutes would not cause lasting damage.
Graham Clifford is author of five collections of poetry. His work has been chiselled into paving slabs, translated into Romanian and German, is found on the Poetry Archive, was rejected by The New Yorker and anthologised by publishers including Faber and Broken Sleep Books. https://grahamcliffordpoetry.com/
Freyr Thorvaldsson
A candle eats away at air
At the same rate that we do
Konstandinos (Dino) Mahoney
A teacher guides his pupils past headless marble torsos,
dusty cabinets of tiny Attic coins, pockmarked stylobates,
to a large clay pithos . . .
Maggie Brookes-Butt
For you, with your toddler bendiness,
the squat is a natural, easy position
while I hurt-strain, thinking of miners
crouched outside their front doors
Sally Michaelson
Heads under bonnets
mechanics catch a wiff
of a girl passing
Carmen Marcus
extract from The Keen Is ar scath a Chéile a mhaireann na daoine: It is in the shadow of each other we live. Watching with the dying. Travelling with the dead. Phyllida Anam-Áire; The Celtic Book of Dying, Findhorn Press, Vermont, 2022 Àite...
Nina Parmenter
When The Threat of Hell Failed
God created the lanyard,
Bel Wallace
Month by month I felt my muscles harden
these hefty horns grew from my long skull
Stephen Keeler
Something about arriving somewhere new
just as afternoon is leaving . . .
Geraldine Stoneham
The silence and peace of this place
creeps through on birdsong.