A redshift of foxes
Almost running
over a fox cub
with black holes
in its eyes
loosens
something in your head,
and you start
seeing the night sky
everywhere:
spiral galaxies
of sausages at
the Italian grill,
a bedspread of
the Milky Way
hypnotising you
to sleep,
every chemtrail
another shooting
star, the red
giant of blood orange
sorbet, and the
craquelure of a lunar
surface on the
morning's boiled egg.
This is the
universe's trick:
to make you
obsessed with it
until everything
starts to pull away,
with not even
gravity able to solve
the resulting
wound bright like redshift,
a song of
summer.
Porcupine
Homesick for a
life you never lived
makes you dizzy
like a wasp in cider;
content to
foxtrot with the sunshine
making honey of
everything it touches
while displaying
your quills. O porcupine,
can't you see I
am no walking oven?
The unbaked day
is proofed, but carries
the pock marks
and blemishes of an eggshell’s
lunar map. A
hint of powder blush, clichéd blue,
masks the cold
gnawing at the hours.
Whatever your
quiver is aiming for
no longer blares
its heat, is settled like the sun
snug in its
spirit level bubble.
Losing My Religion
On The Grand Union Canal
With apologies to
William Carlos Williams
Absolutely
nothing
relies on a
canal
the colour of
matcha,
a supermarket
trolley
peeking its head
out
of the water
like Nessie,
or the
prophylactic
of a thrown out
Sainsbury's bag.
Sorry, Will.
My Balconies
Almost every
balcony was stockpiled
with enough rain
to outdo Noah.
One balcony
choked on trains
delivering
grief. The Swiss chard
made its own
grave that year.
Another
overlooked chessboard
apartment blocks
waiting
for a checkmate.
The cat played
stuntman while
the flowers
drowned
themselves out of anxiety.
The pre-war
estate delivered
only the fallout
of a breaking marriage.
Nothing grew but
stones. Optimistic
as always, I'm
confident the marigolds
in my latest
balcony will stay the course.
Look how they've
resisted the rain.
Arm wrestled
away gales. Give them
a few years and
the sun will be at
their beck and
call.
Bluebells
The woods clutch
them
like
overprotective parents
while Peter Pan
clouds
cling to the
treetops.
Hues of blue.
Spring's cliché.
The postcard
hurries along.
CHRISTIAN WARD
CHRISTIAN WARD: Longlisted for the
2023 National Poetry Competition, Christian Ward's poetry has appeared in
Acumen, Dream Catcher, Free the Verse, Loch Raven Review, The Shore and The
Westchester Review. He won the first 2024 London Independent Story Prize for
poetry and the 2024 Maria Edgeworth Festival Poetry Competition.
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