Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
rhiannon-clare
rhiannon-clare
I like to sit down.
A lone slipper Diary I wrote aged 18 (Unread, too piercing) Battered biscuit tin I’d kept for years (in the hope it would prove useful (it didn’t)) Takeaway plastics (covered in grease and crusted rice) Receipts (seconds after I am given them) Poo explosion stained leggings aged 6-9 months at the Horniman Museum on 1st August 2020 (Jack’s 31st birthday) My phone (an accident, obviously) into the bin at the hospital while I was in labour (retrieved soon after by a kindly HCA) Green peppers from every meal in which they’ve been served to me (red and yellow are fine) Opportunities (various, for various reasons) A half used tube of e45 at least 5 years old (not mine, left by an ex boyfriend) Eggshells, broken so a witch can’t use them for a sailboat (now I take care to leave them seaworthy) Probably 20 pairs of cheap headphones (pocket knotted and wires exposed) My potential (sorry Nan) A makeup brush my toddler put in the (unflushed) toilet Unopened bank statements (not even shredded) Mystery unlabelled freezer meal (too scared to defrost, could be literally anything from anytime ) Tote bag stained with damson juice (used as emergency foraging bag one autumn, furtively collected from a stranger's driveway) Old, bobbly tights (constricting yet baggy in all the wrong places) Uni Laptop from 2012 (riddled with viruses from streaming tv shows by the hundred, and thousands of limewire songs) My childhood dream to become a stain glass windows maker (not so much thrown away as abandoned due to not being a real career) And the second slipper, found a week later
0
Aug 16, 2022
Aug 16, 2022 at 5:17 PM UTC
A (Non-Exhaustive) List of Things I Have Thrown Away That I Hope Are Not Waiting for Me Somewhere, Like A Collection of Shame
A lone slipper Diary I wrote aged 18 (Unread, too piercing) Battered biscuit tin I’d kept for years (in the hope it would prove useful (it didn’t)) Takeaway plastics (covered in grease and crusted rice) Receipts (seconds after I am given them) Poo explosion stained leggings aged 6-9 months at the Horniman Museum on 1st August 2020 (Jack’s 31st birthday) My phone (an accident, obviously) into the bin at the hospital while I was in labour (retrieved soon after by a kindly HCA) Green peppers from every meal in which they’ve been served to me (red and yellow are fine) Opportunities (various, for various reasons) A half used tube of e45 at least 5 years old (not mine, left by an ex boyfriend) Eggshells, broken so a witch can’t use them for a sailboat (now I take care to leave them seaworthy) Probably 20 pairs of cheap headphones (pocket knotted and wires exposed) My potential (sorry Nan) A makeup brush my toddler put in the (unflushed) toilet Unopened bank statements (not even shredded) Mystery unlabelled freezer meal (too scared to defrost, could be literally anything from anytime ) Tote bag stained with damson juice (used as emergency foraging bag one autumn, furtively collected from a stranger's driveway) Old, bobbly tights (constricting yet baggy in all the wrong places) Uni Laptop from 2012 (riddled with viruses from streaming tv shows by the hundred, and thousands of limewire songs) My childhood dream to become a stain glass windows maker (not so much thrown away as abandoned due to not being a real career) And the second slipper, found a week later
Continue reading...
21
A summer evening in late June, light paling into dusk and colours lessen Rattles from the kitchen as the ritual teas are prepared I sit making a cardigan for a baby’s birth- Knowing what it is to be a mother, I think of she who will carefully fasten the buttons She who will, like me, cry at the news nowadays and lay her hands on a softly breathing body to find peace Here I sit, fingers hitching and flicking the yarn between needles Knitting is a kind of prayer Each stitch a supplication. Each turn a fresh appeal: Let this mother meet her baby. Let this mother meet herself, arriving The prayer grows, row by row This mothering is an unhealable wound This mothering is a cardigan, made to fasten.
0
Aug 16, 2022
Aug 16, 2022 at 4:59 PM UTC
Orison, in grey alpaca
I take Rowan to pick blackberries. I knew where they’d be Up through the allotments beyond the windmill, brambles hanging heavy in the sunshine We each carry what we could find in the kitchen: me a jug, he a plastic box. He clutches it to his chest with both hands, stepping carefully over cracks in the pavement. Here then, The clutches of fruit perch like children sitting on a gate. Rosehips and sloes peep yet through the leaves, biding their time. I say, look at the colours. Green then red and then finally shiny, glowing, deepest purple. And oh how the fattest fall just so into your hand, as if they have been waiting Soft bubbles bursting with juice Our fingers and chins turn pink I give him the biggest and sweetest. I like the **** ones, sharp as a high summer sky. The evening sun sends our shadows on and on As I stop to watch him he grows, transforming right in front of me, long fingers and a wide wide grin, daisy faced, I must tilt My head to meet his eye. Now his hands find the furthest blackberries just beyond my reach.
0
Aug 24, 2020
Aug 24, 2020 at 12:23 PM UTC
Margate, August 2024
It is hard to get at the green kernel of anything. Most truths do not lie open and ready, most must be cracked with the teeth: splintering shell and flaking husks that lodge in the throat. We know that the greasy salted heart of the matter suffers too. What is edible can be salvaged. All else is waste. (All day the secret sat in my mouth heavy on my tongue, waiting to drop.) In the dark, watching a glittering tower block of sugar slowly fall into itself, collapsing so deliciously into sublime black. At the last, each crystal submits to the swallowing tar, as they must, as they were made to. But all is not lost. Shoulder to shoulder, the projection flickering light and shadow onto our faces; obscure features now altered, now defined by the swinging loop of the video. (Who can find the pulse of a darkened room, say for certain that this, yes this was the exact place and this was the exact moment-) We emerge different people. It is later. I have dug to the bottom and eaten every one, my pockets littered with smooth hulls and grains, dust- the day almost over, dusk tucking away the grey skies and all the city's lights dampened by mist; it is too cold for this- But words sometimes spill themselves: Every year I take out my grief and shake it, try it on for size like a winter jacket. It still fits and its pockets are overflowing with shells.
0
May 3, 2015
May 3, 2015 at 9:53 AM UTC
Pistachios
It is a strange thing this, to consider the world in hasty whirling throes of autumnal grace, it walks a yellow train of leaves, swathed in a veil of misted mornings. The world is marrying the season. There is a potent force that gathers like iron to iron, blood to blood: it bids me to yield to its altering wheeling might purer than light I have seen the heavens change and a vapid world, without you in it.
0
Jan 1, 2015
Jan 1, 2015 at 8:22 PM UTC
October
I looked to the sky and it spelled out your each gesture, the clouds were your hands, moving with a silent ease to earth, spilling down to touch me. There is much I wish I could pluck from my heart and my bones and construct for us our own city. But it is you who will be building, and maybe my words are the bricks you will use new worlds, places of beauty and wonder. I feel myself turning to gold, an ancient effigy to all that love beholds; an advocate of you. A living tribute to the glow that surrounds my each move, it is all all for you. I have stumbled from the cave and found you there. But I do not think a lifetime would be enough, (though you are a talisman that protects me from all ill wishes) a lifetime is too short to return this charm this hope: the shining compass under my skin that points always to you.
0
Jan 1, 2015
Jan 1, 2015 at 1:15 PM UTC
New North (2009)
First, garlic. Dig your nails into its flaking paper, pink and beige like magnolia petals parched in the gutter. Peel back the skin and crush the weighted bud with the heel of your hand on your favourite knife. It has been waiting for this. The thick expectent smell sits up on the chopping board, looks up at you like an old friend. It has burrowed itself into the skin of your hands and lingers there it will not be washed away, instead it quietly clings to your fingers, flavouring letters on your keyboard, the edge of the banister, every light switch in the house. The pulped clove is scattered into a scraped frying pan, your grandmother's; it was never non-stick. The stuck parts were always the best bit, and so it goes, the oil and creamy crumbs find the same spots, engineered over forty years. Some were accidents. All were happy. Yours were ambition-led experiments. The thumbs in the brown recipe book were never your thumbs, the dried-out sedimentary edges were never your mishaps but still it is a bible of sorts, providing answers but never asking questions. Later after dinner when everything is cleared away and nobody can tell that you had been cooking at all bring your fingertips to your nose and inhale the remaining relic of your meal, a letter to yourself, the end notes enduring but faint now, lastly lastly garlic.
0
Jan 1, 2015
Jan 1, 2015 at 1:03 PM UTC
This Poem is Not a Recipe
There were Chinese lanterns at New Year when it was so cold the fireworks froze in the air, bursts of red and silver beside the dazzling lights of London. From our perch on Parliament Hill we stood, anonymous in the crowd, looking down at the giddy world and at the final minute of the year it was just you and I and then it started to snow. Families let off the slow moving lanterns, children held them tight in their hands- but they were pulling, pulling caught by the night wind, their ghostly silhouettes drifted up and up, til they became stars themselves to us. They were moments of peace against the busy noise of the city, softly golden, trustingly floating further and further. I didn't know that you too would soon be gone and nothing I could say would change your mind. If I had thought to then I would have made a wish on each lantern I saw rising like a thousand spirit kings above the earth. I would have wished and wished, and sent my heart out there too: I will always remember the soft chills of snow beginning to fall and the quiet beauty of those Chinese lanterns. I will remember your hand slipping into mine, and the silent slide of that year into the past, yes, I will remember.
0
Jan 1, 2015
Jan 1, 2015 at 12:54 PM UTC
Parliament Hill
Of all the stories we tell ourselves late at night before bed, before sleep speaking solemnly into the dark *There were gales the night you were born* the family folklore unpacked, gently handled exclaimed over again and again every retelling a buff to bring out the shine- Yes there are some stories we tell and others we keep the deep hints and murmurs of What Really Happened. The indelicate hows and whys of your sixteen year old self giving birth on the bathroom floor. There are more than two sides to this tale. More corners, more edges: a prism reflecting light at any angle. But all of this was your own making. Those years were carefully picked over, censored, books with whole chapters black struck through. No, these are not the halcyon echoes of your childhood- no gold topped milk, no reading by the light in the hall. No cast iron, no Christmas mornings. No hedgerows, no collecting the hens at dusk. These are the bitter pips, the hanging nails and paper cuts. The inedible core of the matter: What was said to you was said. What was done to you was done. And you you were always too clever by half for the skimmed, six-of-one versions of events, played out like lazy Sunday morning television. The truth is always smaller and greyer than we imagine. We think of memories as ribbons tying the past together, but for you they are stones filling up your pockets and every year the river runs a little higher.
0
Jan 1, 2015
Jan 1, 2015 at 12:34 PM UTC
Family Folklore