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Poem

Empires of Mind

Sarah Holland-Batt
Wednesday, 24 November 2021

Beside the fountain’s troupe of sun-bleached rubber ducks, / in the gardens, under a shade sail, / my father is crying about Winston Churchill. / Midway through a lunch of cremated schnitzel ...

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Published in December 2021, no. 438

‘Is You Is …’ V ‘Passionfruit’

Michael Farrell
Wednesday, 24 November 2021

We bring the horses back to their own fields because we like / To see them among purple hay as if they signify black seeds / A hoof can break any kind of feeling along a dramatic stretch / The gate is where I go to then proclaim my woes to his street ...

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Published in December 2021, no. 438

Aldinga Cliffs

Sarah Day
Monday, 25 October 2021

There’s no getting away from things. / There is driving, then walking miles / along a quiet coast on a rising tide – / with the back-of-the-mind consciousness / that in an hour or so the sea ...

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Published in November 2021, no. 437

Turning the Indiana Bell

Zenobia Frost
Monday, 25 October 2021

Imagine how the light / fell on their desks. / Clerks in rotation / elbowed into the ’30s / with their heated office / coffee unimpeded ...

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Published in November 2021, no. 437

Richard Mahony’s Most August Imagination

Ann Vickery
Wednesday, 22 September 2021

Before you could say Jack Robinson, I was posting / a letter in the box that looks like a lean-to / at the crepuscular end of the mind. The fire-fangled glow / from the South kept sending small birds into the air ...

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Published in October 2021, no. 436

Marionettes

Alex Skovron
Wednesday, 22 September 2021

It’s our runaway imaginings that seduce us / away from the meanwhiler pleasures: / even as we cross each i, dot every t, / we calibrate our fantasies like rare treasures, / false memory-to-be ...

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Published in October 2021, no. 436

Carpool

Damen O’Brien
Monday, 23 August 2021

Tuesday and Thursday afternoons, the rain blew you / into the backseat, steaming and boisterous, my quiet son / and you his not-friend-Dad-we-only-share-some-classes, / or late evenings, sunset dampening down the final lap ...

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Nth Wave

Tracy Ryan
Thursday, 19 August 2021

This time around / they say, we won’t / be at loggerheads, // we’ve understood / you can’t measure up, / we’ll do maths & spelling

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Words

Laurie Duggan
Monday, 26 July 2021

a poem is a house into which / words are inserted // permeable, vapour or rain / altering the light outside ...

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Published in August 2021, no. 434

Pastiche Eclogue with Randolph Stow’s ‘Ishmael’

John Kinsella
Monday, 26 July 2021

When Ishmael escaped from the closed Bible / on the dresser with family names that were // only tangentially yours, you looked to the emergency / site for inclemency and found fire was rapidly ...

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Published in August 2021, no. 434