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Tuesday 24 November 2009

This Poem Is Not About Caving

There's no point in opening my eyes.
The water, ankle level down here,
laps into my boots making my feet swell.
The walls inch toward my skin,
stone encasing me entirely.

Breath bounces back
off the walls in front.
The slim space far outweighs
any effect of touching;
pressing with absence.

My eyes might
even be open,
I just can't tell.

Saturday 21 November 2009

Empty Pages

Soft and cracked your pages
sprawl with black significant
lines. Intertwining

brown stories of grease,
feathers-maps of clumsy
touches: the time you tried

to put me on your shoulders
even though I was getting
far too big to lift.

"You should play the piano"
you said "with delicate hands
like that."

Sunday 15 November 2009

Ladybirds

The scratching sound again.
It crawls into the walls
bringing in black ladybirds.
Forcing their hard shells
through the gaps, they brim

under the paper before
bursting out, into
the room. Just the sight of them,
little bubblewrap
collections in the corners,

makes me so embarrassed.
Finding them upside-down
on the windowsills, I know I am
the reason they are here.
I want to press their backs

to feel the wet insides;
I find them nestled in
the bristles of my toothbrush,
rooting out the legs
stuck between my teeth

I smear them on my lips
and taste a shame I've yet
to make. However hard I try
they will not stay away,
these black and staining ladybirds.

Lying Together

We started out the same. In equal rows,
straight and even lines, we sat. Men
on the left and women the right, shoes still on.
The dull background ache of bleach stained
the beds. Each of us divided, though
the curtains were open their isolating potential
severed us just as well. Except for the smell
the air feels more like a library in here, or even,

perhaps, a church - that nervous silence which
only the staff feel free to break; here
it's the nurses' feet, walking from bed to bed
that fleck the awkward tension with their busy,
punctual pacing. Yet even here, while I sit
alone to wait, I see your eyes have met.

By early afternoon you're sharing a bed.
It's chaste of course, in a room with twenty others
and hourly vitals checks, to fuck would be
more than impressive... or not, if you got away
with it. So instead you watch Sex And The City
and lie together on the single beige mattress.
"How novel you found each other there," I hear
your friends and family say, "that place of sickness

and death, it's ever so romantic". But as
the noise of your DVD fades to a silence
saying more than you ever could, my jealousy
fades with it, safe in the knowledge that you're
as isolated as I am, alone on my bed;
I've just given up your pretenses.