Poem of the day

Fungi

by Tamar Yoseloff

If we think dishonestly, or malignantly, our thoughts 

will die like evil fungi – dripping corrupt dew 

                                       John Ruskin, Proserpina

 

The smell –

wet anorak, fusty books, disturbed dust

of long unopened doors –

like the basement of your childhood,

beautiful scary darkness.

 

They poke

their tiny heads through dirt,

explorers from another age, and find

a world glassy with rain, a forest

thick with leaf mulch.

 

A good one,

if you’re starving, could save

your life. A bad one would kill you

after only one bite. Step on its poison head,

it billows black fumes.

 

Lost in the woods

and hungry, how to tell them apart?

You can trust the feel of flesh on your tongue,

good meat – you know it won’t hurt you,

you’re a bit of a witch yourself.

 

19 May

Malt loaf

by Gaia Holmes

It was the dark bread my mother fed me

to pacify my tears.

When I saw it on the kitchen table

I knew it meant departure.

She’d be slicing it into squares,

loading it with butter as he kissed me: as he

gently unhooked my hands from his neck

and walked out to the car.

She’d be laying it in a brown circle

on the big blue plate

as I watched the Renault rise over the hill.

 

She’d give it me with warm milk and honey.

The butter thickened in my mouth,

spread itself like wet silk in my throat.

I’d mould each slice into a small lump

until the raisins bled black juices

and my fingertips were slick with grease,

I’d squeeze it like the clay he let me play with:

the stuff we dug from river banks

spiced with bracken, loam and willow bark.

My mother would keep slicing and spreading

until I stopped crying: once I ate a whole loaf.

 

Now the spices seem too sinister for comfort.

The molasses jars my palette, reminds me

of tar, long roads and car doors slamming.

I do not like the taste of desertion.

 

18 May

Mango 1963

by Jacqueline Saphra

As I test the fruit for ripeness,

a certain give

beneath the fingertips

the way you taught me,

 

suddenly I'm looking up at you.

Your perfect legs,

your tiny waist,

your broken heart.

 

Pausing outside the greengrocer

you shiver in the February rain

beneath a canopy

of English grey.

 

You will not go on pushing

this cumbersome pram

up the endless hill, however hard

I cry. You are weighing up

 

the absurd cost

of one small piece of Africa,

the cold storage taste of home

and working on your best smile.

 

16 May

Playing House

by Fred D'Aguair

We collected brown branches

Fallen from coconut palms

Propped them against a tree

For a center post in a tent

 

You brought a pinch of salt

I grabbed two handfuls of rice

You found a match I found a tin pot

We struck up a fire between stones

 

Half-filled the pot with water

Brought it to the boil

Added the salt and I licked

Grains stuck to your palm

 

Dumped in the rice after we

Picked it clean of stalks

Watched the pot though

We knew all about watched pots

 

And for plates we used dasheen

Leaves and for spoons our

Fingers and we talked with

Our mouths full about children

 

How many we would have

And the ratio of boys to girls

You wanted more girls

I preferred more boys

 

And that would have been that

Were it not for the tiredness

After a meal that necessitated

Sleep in our little tent of coconut

 

Branches and the two of us

Curled up together as we

Imagined we would be

When we grew big and began

 

All this building of a house

And cooking and planning

For children in earnest

But for now we sleep

16 May

untitled

by Deirdre Van Outersterp

15 May

Rose

by Aqeel Ali

The Rose grows gracefully in nature,

breathing the pure fresh air,

drinking the cool rainwater.

The rose is a delight to look at,

it brings a joy to my heart.

The rose gives a wonderful scent,

the rose I believe should be protected,

the rose should not be frightened.

The rose should be allowed the space, time and freedom to grow,

the rose should not be left isolated or alone.

Is there such a rose in your family?

 

14 May

Brooch

by Yuko Minamikawa Adams

She received a brooch from a boyfriend. 

She smiled, and promised to always wear it. 

After he left, she went to her bedroom, 

looked herself in the mirror, 

then swallowed the brooch. 

Silver bubbles tingled her throat and landed on her heart. 

Her heart is made of purple velvet, 

decorated with jewellery. 

When her heart beats, 

shadows of silver blink in her breast.