JAZZING UP THE EMPIRE SUITE


We are painting over your past today,
with sweeping statements hide its pock-marked face.
The paper scoured for loopholes, rips and flaws,
we’ve felt for cracks and polyfilla plugged them,

then sanded smooth the seams to barely notice.
So thinking all’s wiped clean, we’re primed to start;
but first must argue out which tone will turn
the smear of bilious pink to sunlit room,

a place where you may set yourself apart.
The favoured pigment spreads, blots out betrayal;
for truth gets brushed in corners, hard to reach
those angles overhead and at our feet.

Our sights are set on coverage, wall-to-wall,
no under-bubble or peeling edges.
Yet this is a rush-to-judgement job:
you’ll choose the gloss, add final touches, later.
 
iii. 2019
 
 

Handbook for 2021: the Bread and Roses Poetry Award Anthology

Didn't We Have a Lovely Time?

 
To guess the welcome that awaits
you may retrace our steps,
find the terraced door, which we set out from

set in the pinched dimensions
of two-up, two-down with bath out back,
along the street with corner store

where once romance was near
as packets of crisps – your favourite flavour,
the kind they no longer make.

Always leaving later than planned
to explore some water’s edge,
by stream and tide settling on nicknames:

Sweet Pea and Stick Boy
assault the boundary of playgrounds,
walk beyond a pushchair’s limit

scamper past museum explanations,
try costumes on instead.
We spread out our picnic

go underground for the first time,
taking rides, feeding geese and goats,
making a day of it.

All outings have their ending,
each different yet the same:
most exit through the gift shop,

trying not to dilly-dally
over pocket money limits.                        
Our share of souvenirs

are the stories heading home;
for if you leave the way you came
you will return to light.



ii. 2019