Guest Poem by Sara Davis

Sara Davis lives in Kent. Having retired from the NHS Sara began writing poetry and is a member of Roundel Poets in Tonbridge. Sara won the Autumn Voices poetry prize in 2024 and was shortlisted for the Canterbury Festival Poet of the Year in 2023. Her work has been published in South Poetry Magazine, New Contexts and The Dawntreader as well as collections such as Catching the Shards and United for Ukraine. This poem is from Acumen 112.

Carousel

Set free – the horses leap out to grass
pause – sit onto angular hocks
stretch stiffness from limbs cramped too long
then snorting – high stepping they buck – run – drop
roll over and over – ease rigid spines
mask paint-bright colours in scuffles of dust.

Heads dipped to graze – they crop rhythmically
followed by shadows on matchstick legs.
Some lie asleep fluting their herby breath
round bellies exposed – while others watch
their eyes wide circles – chiselled ears raised
at jingle jangle notes from a summer fair.

Moving with the sun they drift into shade
rest head to tail – switching at clustered flies.
In order – one by one – they go to drink
dipping dark muzzles into clear water
sucking deep – raising sculpted heads
to shake away a rainbow of drops.

At twilight the horses play – necks entwined
two colts squeal – rise – wrestle chest to chest.
Together the herd runs – fast – now faster
as hurdy-gurdy tunes surge skywards.
They wheel bounding – plunging over the meadow
to lift and fly – spinning across the moon.