Guest Poems

We love to read your poetry and, even though we receive over 1,000 poems per month, we always take time to read every single one.

A few of the poems we especially enjoyed and which were selected for publication in our Journal are reprinted below.

For more information, please see our Submissions page.

Guest Poems

Deborah H. Doolittle

Deborah H. Doolittle

Like Wordsworth in Wales

Who doesn’t like ruins? The old
stone shaped to make the landscape wild.

The fragmented walls, like thoughts, frame
the sky with Gothic windowpanes.

Now, blue is the preferred hue for
reflection that is wide enough.

Ivy climbs the parts of castles,
abbeys, crofter’s tumble-down huts

that jut from hillsides, ridgelines, and
hollowed out vales. Driving through Wales

is like diving into a deep
well of water from which we sip,

full of bitterness and regret
too tart and tangy to forget.

Don Rodgers

Don Rodgers

Magnolias

What do we make of magnolias?
Like beaks of exotic birds, their buds
break from bare branches, singing
themselves open into sculptural
pink and white waxworks of flames.

You were given a Magnolia Susan
one birthday. Not caring for our garden,
it managed one clutch of deep pink flowers
before abandoning the idea of further blooms
after an assault by a man re-doing the fence.

But it doesn’t matter much, I suppose.
Magnolias are mainly mnemonics:
whether denuded in winter, or dressed
in summer green, we tend to see them
the way we fancied they looked in the spring.

More Guest Poems

David Olsen

Lighthouse i.m. Cathy Young, R.N. (1953-2022) Smooth rounded pebbleschatter in turbulent surf,aspire to perfect spheres. Ribbons of uprooted kelpintertwine. Broken shellsbleach in the sun. Above the shingle,a promontory risesto reveal an obelisk of whitened...

Nick Pearson

Water He spends fifteen minutes bringing stuff in,makes himself at home on the bathroom flooras if he’s arrived at a favourite camp site. I hear him thinking behind the door,his expertise the commodity of silence. He reminds me of a person I’ve seen before,a...

Chiara Salomoni

Heartwood Sheltered by young cypressesand thick-leaved olive trees,a plum tree stands in my family garden. The knobby branches hold clustersof round, juicy plums in summerso heavy they twist. The smiling crop persists for a month at least;the taste is so sweet, it...

Myra Schneider

Brussel Sprouts When the February sky is weighty with clouds and the wind,a ferocious animal, knocks over fences and rickety sheds,rushes rubbish down streets, rocks trees madly,tears off their branches and crashes any it can to the ground, when the paper is packed...

Martyn Crucefix

‘when’             whenlike a falling flower-print cotton dress            has dropped its round spoor                        in the breathy silence...

Michael Henry

The Brownfields of England This “Go-Between” of a summerthe heatwave’s a marqueand hours and days repeat themselves          like a slo-mo film. This chameleon summera hare jogging in a fieldturns out to be a man       ...

Richard Lister

Turner’s flight Fishermen at sea, 1796 by JMW Turner As a youth he learnedhow watercolours spillthrough canvas grain and weight,now oils shiver in his hands.He paints the wavesclear enough to glow yet with such thump and throwthat they could snap apartthese men upon...

Martin Reed

Finisterre The lawn is browning, hydrangeas are leached,colours dried to taffeta,summer fading early. Parched.Last night we left a saucer of waterfor linnets who gather on the telegraph wire;insects have drowned in it overnight. Through a gap in the ferns beyond the...

Jennie E. Owen

Advice on Caving for Survivalor Marriage as an Extreme Sport Caving is a polarising sport: underground/marriageis one of those places you’re either happy or you’re not. As the leader, you will have to take control. Mistakescould rapidly escalate a situation into...

Simon Jackson

The Light You are composed of heavenly light and shade,arms raised like Caravaggio’s Saint Paulin his Conversion on the Road to Damascus.Your hands reach into the surgeon’s light.I am relegated to the shadowslike Saul’s servant, holding the horse’s head,a role of...

Ali Blythe

Still, still So being in loveis a lake. The worldturns upside down. We shatter itwhen we dive in. How darkit had to become. To see the unnumberedsparks on each shook swell. To feel their goldhooks fixed in us.

Christine Tainsh

Magritte The surreal was always problematic,shape-shifting and strangelike a helium balloonthrough melted stratospheresand haunting melodies stuck on a soft grooveand always lilting and lifting beyond itbut the artist chose itfor someone always has to bereaching above...

John Arnold

Footnotes My sock, turned inside outamong the laundry –woolly pile, soft to touch. So this is what my feet see,feel, as they walk my ways;then, pressure off, relax as I sit: nothing to concern them,no worries over money or relationships;cocooned from a harsh cold...

Stuart Handysides

You might think we would talk after Absent in the Spring. Mary Westmacott (Agatha Christie) A desert station home for several daysno view to speak of, only space our books already read, no outside worldno view to speak of, only space. One day the train will just...

B. Anne Adriaens

Pietà, inverted I meet you halfwayacross the wasteland of your mindto find you plonked on the ground,drawing circles in the dust.I sit down behind you,wrap myself around your frame,so small I could doubtyou gave birth to me – you,this shell I’m holding and rocking...