Friday 30 May 2014

The Mosquito


While I munch 
my sensible snack
of carrot sticks 
and cheese,
the ambassador of hunger
sucks what he craves
from my hot blood.

Tuesday 20 May 2014

Cigarette Break


He leans against the trunk of the winter tree,
holds his cigarette like a Tibetan horn,
and trumpets his breath into the frozen air.
His old life burns, becomes ash,
becomes the snow at his feet.
He is readying himself to return
to the world of buildings and cars
and, most of all, to the world of people,
with their red faces and their smiling eyes.


Sunday 18 May 2014

Folding The Twilight


Hands circling,
gathering the ancient air,
my mother folds the twilight
into night.


Saturday 17 May 2014

Village Rain


There is no rain,
my grandpa said,
like the rain in my village.
It made diamonds out of cobblestones
and turned the rooftops silver.


Saturday 10 May 2014

She Will Be A River


The father drives,
distant as a mountain, 
silent as a mountain is silent,
rich with the secrets 
that sit beside him.

The daughter asks:
Where were you born? 
What’s your favourite food? 
He answers with facts, 
each word a lie.
She hears whispers 
from the empty seats:
He was born 
on the outskirts of death.
His heart longs 
for honeycake at midnight.

She has decided: 
she will be a river, 
will rush along 
through the open fields 
like an oracle, 
telling everyone her secrets. 
They will look 
into her clear waters 
and see the pebbles 
and the stones, 
the piles of ash 
and the mounds of gold.


Friday 2 May 2014

Blackout Poetry

One of my favourite new forms, which I am returning to again and again, is Blackout Poetry, also known as Erasure Poetry. I was inspired by the work of poet and cartoonist Austin Kleon and devoured his book Newspaper Blackout in almost one sitting. The idea is to take a newspaper article and to create a poem by choosing the words you want to keep, blacking out the rest with a marker. It sounds relatively simple. In fact, it almost feels like cheating! After all, the words are already there, aren't they?

I was amazed to discover how challenging it can be to work within such limitations: a selection of words in a fixed position on the page. But this sense of constriction also allows for a great feeling of surprise when something unusual emerges. It's also refreshing to come to the writing of a poem with no idea of what the poem will be. I feel less like a poet and more like an archaeologist approaching a dig, using a marker instead of a spade to unearth the fragments that I hope will make up some sort of whole. But what will it be? A king's burial chamber? Some ancient coins? A bottle of diet coke? The results can be silly and absurd or deep and profound. Often it is all those things at the same time. Why not grab a newspaper and try one yourself?


For more blackout poems, click here.