Category: Summer 2017 Poetry
Hedgehog Girl
by Vicki Feaver I was born bristling with prickles. My mother shaved me with a razor. When my prickles grew back: longer, thicker, sharper, she
The Surgeon’s Widow
by Vicki Feaver I dug all night in the company of moths — drawn from the dark to the bright beam of my torch — recovering first his skull, last,
On the latest discovery of an exoplanet.
by Pippa Goldschmidt Stutter–dots of light break up the sky, a bright Morse code that we love to crack. But even after we receive the
The (indirect) evidence for dark matter as inferred from the higher-than-predicted speed of galaxy rotations
by Pippa Goldschmidt The (indirect) evidence for dark matter as inferred from the higher-than-predicted speed of galaxy rotations i.m. Vera Rubin
A Course in Miracles
by Patricia Ace My cousin is taking a course in miracles. She rises at five to the cries of the birds, the tropical light bleaching the room
The Best Day of Your Life
by Patricia Ace The Best Day of Your Life 4th August 1962 You envied the girls who’d had to get married: their hasty ceremonies, their
Split
by Niall Campbell One night I was sitting by my inner life and it was such a little fire and, here and here, the snow was coming down. Doesn’t
Moth and Mother
by Niall Campbell The night he cried himself into our bed, I couldn’t find the clear road back to sleep so went for water — filling the glass
Midas
by Miriam Gamble Later he will dress for dinner, though for now he is embarrassed that the only thing he has to offer is the Lucozade we brought,
The Landing Window is Unspeakable
by Miriam Gamble There’s a turn in the stairs beyond which, in the darkness, you are terrified to go — the realm of the creaking life which