Wombwell Rainbow Ekphrastic Challenge Day 9

sarahsouthwest's avatarSarah writes poems

after the mines

TC9 Early shift

Afterwards, after the town died
in a cloud of coaldust,
and was reborn, a little more
corporate, a little less itself,
after all that, my brother met them:
big men. Men who’d wrestled
with the world, gone down
into the dark places, juggled
earth and fire and water,
strong men, proud men,
screwing the tops on lipsticks.
You have to work. Coal isn’t king.
Money rules. Cash wins everything.

Paul at the Wombwell Rainbow is doing a month long ekphrastic challenge for November. If you haven’t been over there yet, you should check it out. There’s some great poetry there. This is my poem for the image Early Shift by Terry Chipp.

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November Ekphrastic Challenge: Day 9

Jane Dougherty's avatarJane Dougherty Writes

The painting I chose to write to for Paul Brookes’ challenge is I speak, but you do not listen by P.A. Morbid.

i speak, but You do not listen P A Morbid

The voices no one hears

The great green and blue that spins
and has spun its dreaming stories
and changed its face with the passing millennia
speaks in a hundred thousand tongues.

It sings in bird throats, river running,
wind sighing, the roaring of the waves,
cat growl, wolf howl
and the opening of a rose.

Yet we have never heard a word
of the eternal song that blazes in sun-glory
and the racing green of sap;

we spin our own story spiked with tears
and the barbs and thorns of razor wire.

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Day Nine: Welcome to a special ekphrastic challenge for November. Artworks from Terry Chipp, Marcel Herms, MJ Saucer, P A Morbid, the inspiration for writers, Gaynor Kane, Peach Delphine, Sally O’Dowd, sonja benskin mesher, Anindita Sengupta, Liam Michael Stainsby, Helen Allison, Sarah Connor, Sarah Reeson, Holly York, Jane Dougherty, Gayle J Greenlea, Susan Darlington, Lydia Wist, Dai Fry, and myself. November 9th.

Day Nine

MJS9

TC9 Early shift
Early Shift by Terry Chipp
MH9 Comparison of five males, mixed media on paper, 29,7 x 21 cm, 2020

Comparison of five males by Marcel Herms

Early Shift

Smell of sunlight soap, and singing
voices going down pit lift.
Home time coughing up phlegm

-Gaynor Kane

The voices no one hears

The great green and blue that spins
and has spun its dreaming stories
and changed its face with the passing millennia
speaks in a hundred thousand tongues.

It sings in bird throats, river running,
wind sighing, the roaring of the waves,
cat growl, wolf howl
and the opening of a rose.

Yet we have never heard a word
of the eternal song that blazes in sun-glory
and the racing green of sap;

we spin our own story spiked with tears
and the barbs and thorns of razor wire.

-Jane Dougherty

(Early Shift:TC)

“Take Care and Have a Routine”

1
From the dark:
Leave home
Walk
Wait
Ride the train
Wait
Ride the bus
Walk
Trip over a fallen tree
Walk
arrive

2
At the harbour:
Sit
Talk
Listen
Give
Support
Accept
Laugh
Cry
Walk
Laugh
Sit

3
From the light:
Leave
Walk
Skirt the danger
Wait
Ride the train
Walk
Arrive home

(Rubbish Tip: MJS)

“The Skip”

Not always literal
A state of mind
Soars over and onwards

This is one of The Skips
Don’t mind the bodies
They’re used to the squeeze

-Lydia Wist

EARLY SHIFT

Gravity squeezed
those eyes tight
from oval to disc,
colour to dark.
Yet where
is the finger point,
one inch away.
Tight, claustrophobic,
breathe hot air in
black sauna’s crime.
My sweat bound
clothes rub against
arterial tunnels
tight and bent.
Tasting the dust,
coal choked
never forgotten.
And in time,
thoughts get louder
more insistent,
percussive-persuasive.
A million tons of
rock creaking.
Smell movement,
shift and displacement.
Run into splintered
panic, just run.
From this pit of
pick axed tunnels,
soon to be
entombed.
In the mind a
babble is rising,
confusion and jumble.
Listen, far above,
tells the beginnings
of the last terror.
And in a thousand years
the archaeologist’s trowel
will unearth a scream,
a foot wide
tattooed blue and black.

-© Dai Fry 8th November 2020.

comparison of five males, SWD

Not anatomically correct
specimens, of course. Who said
they were the same species? They might
have been things thrown away in plastic
bags, black, blue, white
beneath isosceles of light
atop a square of black garnished
with tree. A base of trash flecked green
in Ozark, AL. The younger ones,
stuffed toys, a mule-eared fawn and Snoopy,
three evolving stages of childhood
scrawl, bottom to top black
and white, not nearly enough blood.

-Holly York

LOST CHILDREN

Dressed in orange and brown,
we hid in autumn woods
and were never seen again.

We called out to our parents
when they beat the path for clues
but our voices went unheard.

Now we run and shake trees
until leaves tumble with laughter,
skip with the dying rays of sun.

-Susan Darlington

Early Shift

Maybe it was a ‘little angel or a little god’
— flash of white, oscillation of wings,
good omen in the dark of night
500 meters down — mystery for two miners
who paused to marvel at their messenger,
seconds before the rock slab buckled behind
them and the tunnel ahead crumpled
in a wall of debris. Tiny saviour, far from the
ephemera of purple flowers in the desert,
delivered on currents of air? Or a miracle?
In the flickering light of campfires across
Chile, stories are told of the small butterfly
who saved the lives of 31 men.

-Gayle J. Greenlea

day 9.

:: you know ::

five men

those men who desire
who speak in three voices

is all i will say here, you know who you are
***
time is upon us as he writes
the old way
dust from the fire

he weaves
remembering the beginning
of it all

ash escapes his brain
into solitude

days left

three voices
rise until just one
is heard

…sbm…

Junk.

I walk along the track marks
from yesterday’s wreck –
and I leave the porch light on.
I am waiting here in the blistering
wind. For your shape – in the dark.
I’m finding it impossible to let go,
I occupy the nightmare spaces,
and wonder, silently, on
how I got here?
And what now?-

-Liam Stainsby

MH9 Comparison of five males

We would categorize prospects
by lunch orders, tuna melt,
cheeseburger, cheeseburger, shrimp
poboy, rib eye sandwich,
she had the knack of knowing,
my preferences were more chaotic,
there were rules, guidelines, received
wisdom, but we swam at the bottom
of the river, feeling our way
in the deep dark,
the five at the counter
eyeballing us, nudging each other
had the look of donuts, cheeseburgers
and tall boys, but laundered,
the bait offered taken, as we left
she said “the fishhook is as good
as love, sugar, as good as love”.

-Peach Delphine

TC9 Early shift

Here in the flatlands, caves
and tunnels are flooded
aquifer being so near,
we watched on tv
as men entered a maw
of darkness, so small
against the haunch of mountain,
Granny said it gave her the shivers
” Those poor men going down
into darkness”
Then the narrator began talking
of silica, of dust and black lung,
the cough, Granny
turned to me ” It’s as if they’re filled
with the grave from the inside,
coughing up death”

-Peach Delphine

MJS9

Our abundance overflows,
turkey buzzards dumpster
diving, a feeding box
for sky and wood,
by night possum and racoons
come for our cast offs,
excess of our disposable lives,
yellow jackets and bees
heavy presence of flies,
those nearest sun, living
at elevation of cumulus
descending now, ripping
open plastic bags, not hide
and fur, some consumption
is cleansing, like fire,
our abundance chokes us
overwhelming thicket, sky
even the ocean beyond,
waves emulsifying plastic.
-Peach Delphine

TC9

after the mines

Afterwards, after the town died
in a cloud of coaldust,
and was reborn, a little more
corporate, a little less itself,
after all that, my brother met them:
big men. Men who’d wrestled
with the world, gone down
into the dark places, juggled
earth and fire and water,
strong men, proud men,
screwing the tops on lipsticks.
You have to work. Coal isn’t king.
Money rules. Cash wins everything.

-Sarah Connor

MJS9
Trashed

There’s nothing precious here.
I could walk all day, work all day,
and still there’d be nothing –
an empty bottle, a blank-eyed doll,
a dirty nappy. Gather it up.
People lived here, but they’ve gone,
leaving behind old toys, crisp packets,
fag ends, one red glove.
Shovel it, bag it, throw it.
They’ve all moved on,
they itched for it, sweated for it.
They took the path
between the trees, past the last houses,
heading west, looking for light,
the last of the light. Heading home.

-Sarah Connor

Early Shift Comparison

each, different ages
lamp-lit morning;
presenting selves
descending, calling
skull-scratched portrait
black dust written

-Sarah Reeson

Bios and Links

-Terry Chipp

grew up in Thurnscoe and ia now living in Doncaster via Wath Grammar school, Doncaster Art College, Bede College in Durham and 30 years teaching.

He sold his first painting at the Goldthorpe Welfare Hall annual exhibition at the age of 17 and he haven’t stopped painting since.

He escaped the classroom 20 years ago to devote more time to his artwork.  Since then he has set up his own studio in Doncaster, exhibited across the north of England as a member of the Leeds Fine Artists group and had his painting demonstrations featured on the SAA’s Painting and drawing TV channel.  Further afield he has accepted invitations to work with international artists’ groups in Spain, Macedonia, Montenegro and USA where his paintings are held in public and private collections. In 2018 he had a solo exhibition in Warsaw, Poland and a joint exhibition in Germany.

His pictures cover a wide range of styles and subjects from abstract to photo-realism though he frequently returns to his main loves of landscape and people.

Visitors are welcome at his studio in the old Art College on Church View, Doncaster.

e-mail:  terry@terrychipp.co.uk

Facebook:  Terry Chipp Fine Art Painting

Instagram: @chippko.art

-Marcel Herms

is a Dutch visual artist. He is also one of the two men behind the publishing house Petrichor. Freedom is very important in the visual work of Marcel Herms. In his paintings he can express who he really is in complete freedom. Without the social barriers of everyday life.
There is a strong relationship with music. Like music, Herms’ art is about autonomy, freedom, passion, color and rhythm. You can hear the rhythm of the colors, the rhythm of the brushstrokes, the raging cry of the pencil, the subtle melody of a collage. The figures in his paintings rotate around you in shock, they are heavily abstracted, making it unclear what they are doing. Sometimes they look like people, monsters, children or animals, or something in between. Sometimes they disappear to be replaced immediately or to take on a different guise. The paintings invite the viewer to join this journey. Free-spirited.

He collaborates with many different authors, poets, visual artists and audio artists from around the world and his work is published by many different publishers.

www.marcelherms.nl

www.uitgeverijpetrichor.nl

-Jane Dougherty

writes novels, short stories and lots of poems. Among her publications is her first chapbook of poetry, thicker than water. She is also a regular contributor to Visual Verse and the Ekphrastic Review. You can find her on twitter @MJDougherty33 and on her blog https://janedougherty.wordpress.com/

-Peach Delphine

is a queer poet from Tampa, Florida. Infatuated with what remains of the undeveloped Gulf coast. Former cook. Has had poems in Cypress Press, Feral Poetry, IceFloe Press, Petrichor. Can be found on Twitter@Peach Delphine

-Dai Fry

is a poet living on the south coast of England. Originally from Swansea. Wales was and still is a huge influence on everything. My pen is my brush. Twitter:  

@thnargg

Web: http://seekingthedarklight.co.uk

-Susan Darlington

Susan Darlington’s poetry regularly explores the female experience through nature-based symbolism and stories of transformation. It has been published in Fragmented Voices, Algebra Of Owls, Dreams Walking, and Anti-Heroin Chic among others. Her debut collection, ‘Under The Devil’s Moon’, was published by Penniless Press Publications (2015). Follow her @S_sanDarlington    

-Holly York

lives in Atlanta, Georgia with her two large, frightening lapdogs. A PhD in French language and literature, she has retired from teaching French to university students, as well as from fierce competition in martial arts and distance running. She has produced the chapbooks Backwards Through the Rekroy Wen, Scapes, and Postcard Poetry 2020. When she isn’t hard at work writing poems in English, she might be found reading them in French to her long-suffering grandchildren, who don’t yet speak French.

-Gayle J. Greenlea

is an award-winning poet and counselor for survivors of sexual and gender-related violence. Her poem, “Wonderland”, received the Australian Poetry Prod Award in 2011. She shortlisted and longlisted for the Fish Poetry Prize in 2013, and debuted her first novel Zero Gravity at the KGB Literary Bar in Manhattan in 2016. Her work has been published in St. Julian Press, Rebelle Society, A Time to Speak, Astronomy Magazine, Headline Poetry and Press and The Australian Health Review.

-Helen Allison

lives in the North East of Scotland. Her first poetry collection ‘ Tree standing small’ was published in 2018 with Clochoderick Press. Her work has appeared in journals and magazines in print and online and she is working towards a second collection.

-Lydia Wist

Like someone who tries out hats or other samples before making a final decision, experimenting with different ideas and techniques is how Lydia spends some of her time. This allows for other portions of time to speak through the lens of fiction, creative nonfiction and art. You can find her work at Cargo Collective , Lydia Wist Creative and on Twitter @Lydiawist.

Website links:

https://cargocollective.com/lydiawist

https://www.facebook.com/lydiawistcreative/

-Sarah Connor

lives in the wild, wet, south-west of England, surrounded by mud and apple trees. She writes poems to make sense of the world, and would rather weed than wash up.

-sonja benskin mesher

-Liam Stainsby

holds a bachelor in English Literature and Creative Writing and is a secondary school teacher of English and Creative Writing. Liam is currently writing his first, professional collection of poetry entitled Borders that explores poetry from all around the world. Liam also Co-Hosts a movie discussion podcast entitled: The Pick and Mix Podcast. Liam writes under the pseudonym ‘Michael The Poet’ 

Links: WordPress: https://michael-the-poet.com/

Twitter: stainsby_liam

Instagram: Michael The Poet

-Sarah Reeson

is 54, married and a mother of two, who has been writing and telling stories since childhood. Over the last decade she has utilised writing not just as entertainment, but as a means to improve personal communication skills. That process unexpectedly uncovered increasingly difficult and unpleasant feelings, many forgotten for decades. Diagnosed as a historic trauma survivor in May 2019, Mental health issues had previously hindered the entirety of her adult life: the shift into writing as expression and part of a larger journey into self-awareness began to slowly unwind for her from the past, providing inspiration and focus for a late career change as a multidisciplined artist.

Website: http://internetofwords.com

-Gaynor Kane

is a Northern Irish poet from Belfast. She has two poetry pamphlets, and a full collection, from Hedgehog Poetry Press, they are Circling the Sun, Memory Forest and Venus in pink marble (2018, 2019 and Summer 2020 respectively). She is co-author, along with Karen Mooney, of Penned In a poetry pamphlet written in response to the pandemic and due for release 30th November 2020.  Follow her on Twitter @gaynorkane or read more at www.gaynorkane.com.

A Light in the Dark

wendycatpratt's avatarWendy Pratt

Photo by SplitShire on Pexels.com

I’m just back from an evening dog walk. I say evening, in fact it was afternoon, but the nights draw in so early now and it is currently so misty that it might as well be evening. The air was thick with water, heavy with the scent of woodsmoke and bonfires. There was no one about and no breeze lifted the branches or rattled the crisped autumn laves against each other. Th lane was wet, the fallen leaves beginning to stew together to become mulch. The dog and I got lost in the moment, as one does when one is walking and thinking and listening to the damp drip of water running down trees and riddling through the verge to the stream. The lights at the railway crossing were bright and warm and seemed so solitary in the dusk.

This is my favourite time of…

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In Tribute To The Sad Passing of G. Jamie Dedes here is a link to her generous acceptance and publication of my work online as part of the Wednesday Writing Prompt

https://thewombwellrainbow.com/?s=%22The+Poet+By+Day%22

Very sad to hear of that G. Jamie Dedes died on 6th November. For years I enjoyed contributing to her The Poet By Day writing prompt and contributing to The Bezine. She was an inspiration and indomitable spirit who will be much missed. Here is a selection of her poetry.

Jamie Dedes RIP

Eat the Storms – The Podcast – Episode 10 — Eat The Storms

Podcast available on Spotify, Google Podcasts, Apple Podcasts, Anchor, Breaker and many more platforms This episode aired on 07th November 2020 and I was joined by poets Eileen Carney Hulme, Karen Mooney, David L O’Nan and Liam Porter. The links to their websites, blogs or Twitter pages are all listed below… Eileen Carney Hulme is […]

Eat the Storms – The Podcast – Episode 10 — Eat The Storms

November Ekphrastic Challenge: Day 8

Jane Dougherty's avatarJane Dougherty Writes

This is my contribution to Paul Brookes’ November challenge. The painting I chose is another Marcel Herms Charon. I forgot to send it in yesterday so it might not be up yet. Please read the other contributions though, they are always inspired.

MH8 Charon, mixed media on paper, 22,4 x 30,6 cm, 2020

Charon

There is no getting away from it,
the end, no escape;
the dark river beckons that leads to a darker sea.
There is no escape when the time comes,
but does the order have to be so cold?

They accepted, antique minds formed in the military mould,
minds that understood only obedience
and the swift implacable justice of the stars.
But we, I?

Who is this messenger who will not even show his face,
whose the silent barque that slips through oiled waters
with only one destination, no sight-seeing along the way?

I will not pay to have the journey made easy.
I will not take the…

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Day Eight: Welcome to a special ekphrastic challenge for November. Artworks from Terry Chipp, Marcel Herms, MJ Saucer, P A Morbid, the inspiration for writers, Gaynor Kane, Peach Delphine, Sally O’Dowd, sonja benskin mesher, Anindita Sengupta, Liam Michael Stainsby, Helen Allison, Sarah Connor, Sarah Reeson, Holly York, Jane Dougherty, Gayle J Greenlea, Susan Darlington, Lydia Wist, Dai Fry, and myself. November 8th.

Day Eight

i speak, but You do not listen P A Morbid
i speak, but You do not listen by p a morbid
MH8 Charon, mixed media on paper, 22,4 x 30,6 cm, 2020
Charon by Marcel Herms
TC8

Willing Subjects

Frugally foraged plants
In situ – pricey house?
Indoors blends with outdoors
Outdoors an extension
Of the living quarters
Indoors an extension
Of the natural world
From my vantage point in
The best armchair there is
The best details are drawn

A Willing Subject”

Kind genuine eyes
Mirrors these values
And there’s no choice
The artist must capture
This purest form of beauty
If they a willing subject want to be

-Lydia Wist

For All I Know of Fear.

Forever in the moments
when the anger presses near –
disguised from head to toe
in the dirge and in the gear
and I have known of men in Sodom
and I have watched them disappear.
If you could bring me kindness –
then I would bring you fear.

I taught well enough on poetry
wrote the hate-lines and the jeers
in the dive bar and the trap house
with the broken, formless queers
and I want each man to know of,
you, fair mutineer
who sang the blues in Summer
when I sang on in fear.

I could play the blessed music
on our nights out on the pier
swim the waters of your tongue
from the darkened to the clear
while the spirit from your reefer
crawled my neck into my ear –
that was the night you saw me clearly
while I watched on in fear.

To the West Village in Autumn
watch the ghosts of Summer cheer
over whiskey by the boathouse
over dreamers flooding near
while a song you don’t remember
dwelled within your silent tear.
I would hear the words you whispered
and think nevermore on fear.

But there is a line outside the church-yard
and there is a ringing in my ear
there’s a hate that’s taken over
and it’s asked us what we hear
it’s a playground in the shadows
of a bitter, pointless spear
it’s a city built on nightmares
it’s a lifetime lost to fear.

-Liam Stainsby

Mogul Meets Charon

The dead do not always leave willingly
They dig in their heels, summon lawyers,

thumb their noses at the Ferryman
It was predictable you would violate

tradition, incite sedition, refuse your final
ride. You swore an oath by the Potomac

and broke it the same day. What is a river
to a god, but something to vanquish

between tee times? A baptism to bestow
super powers? Even Achilles found

he was not invincible. Nighthawk will
come for you at the appointed time

The psychopomp of your choice will ferry
you to Hades, a silver dollar on your lips

The American people have spoken
Celtic is in the House

It is what it is

– Gayle J. Greenlea

Dark River

River’s teeth salivating,
waiting bowed, primed
for mastication.
Time has named me
my psychopomp.
Charon’s boat awaits.

Now in journey’s time.
wood sits hollow a
bouncing on water’s skin.
A coin to the rower,
bent arms racked. To
take me speedy and dry
through deep gates.

Leaning back over
the stern
Stretching my arm
far over life’s stream,
I let my ray-bans slip
into the dark river.

-© Dai Fry 7th November 202

Offerings

We opened the patio doors and windows,
curtains wafted like veils. She was laid out
in the corner in a pink floral dress,
like a bouquet in a wicker basket
floating on a white cloud.
When the mirrors were covered
and mass was said>br>
we slotted a coin under her tongue;
paying for her passage –
covering all bases.

-Gaynor Kane

THE OFFERING

If the moss peeled itself off the stone wall –
hundreds of eyelets unhooking from the surface –
it would fall into a velvet evening dress
that would swish past the beds of fern
and the ivy cross-stitching twigs to birch trees.

It would glide over the mud that runs smooth
at the edge of the falls and pause to listen
to the wind as it conducts the rustle of leaves
and the brook’s crystal-cut spray; to watch
butterflies dance over blankets of wild garlic.

It’s to the wearer of this dress
that you offer a tarnished two-pence piece.
Push it into a dry pocket in the wall
until your index finger can go no further
and promise that one day you’ll return.

-Susan Darlington

Charon

There is no getting away from it,
the end, no escape;
the dark river beckons that leads to a darker sea.
There is no escape when the time comes,
but does the order have to be so cold?

They accepted, antique minds formed in the military mould,
minds that understood only obedience
and the swift implacable justice of the stars.
But we, I?

Who is this messenger who will not even show his face,
whose the silent barque that slips through oiled waters
with only one destination, no sight-seeing along the way?

I will not pay to have the journey made easy.
I will not take the hand that pulls free souls from life
to cross the water.
I will not go silent slick as oil into the shadows
where no bird sings, no joy in green things shooting
breaks the chill and profound silence.

If there is to be no more light,
I can at least refuse the nothing of oblivion,
and embrace the vast unsleeping comfort of the night.

-Jane Dougherty

Hockey Styx

I hate wearing the mask
but they say it protects
me and others from
the deadly teeth-bearing fungus,
a hoax for sure. Whether
I’m offsides or icing,
frozen crystals fly
from my skates as they slice
grooves into the silvery
surface. An assist!
A goal! All I need
is your blood for my Gordie Howe hat trick.
Come skate with me across the river.

-Holly York

:: do not wish ::

day 8.
or any day. do not wish to hide
do not wish to run

to take the boat and steer
to take the hiatus i fear

it crossed so many times
each time delivering
some time sinking

while we are shouting that
we do not wish to die
my son

***

wrote of it before
the last crossing

having paid the price we hope to be delivered
knowing that in depth we drown

***

the island blessed
sandy tracks to wander
in memory
like birds we flew

now it comes commercial
no crossing

-..sbm..

I speak but you do not listen

Flame balances upon wick
nourished by candle, the wax
of each day pools at our feet,
we speak of greens, chartreuse,
collards, the gelatin of leaves,
citrus once flowered within us
each breath an exhalation of spice.

Words we carve from shell fragments
sea polished , you could assemble
into a conch of hearing,
or fill glass jars for another day,
oystercatchers dig me out of wet sand,
black skimmers thread the needle
stitching each wave, tumbled smoothness
another black bird comes for me
feathered with night
emptier than moon,
my words remain for you
scattered, shards of tongue.

TC8(1)

You say silence is the bolster
these dreams rest against,
eyes and lips are the easiest
memory, hands already out of focus.

The voice swims around in my head
sometimes surfacing, an exhalation,
then the deep breath, somewhere
once we held delight in our hands
briefly, how easily the sea
fills my mouth with bouyancy
how slowly your image
fades with memory.

MJS8(1)

Tree of breath, rooted in sternum
spine of green, flowing limbs,
we establish thicket in the understory
of utterance, oak and palm
sweetbay and cypress,
flesh you cultivate, tassled
heavy with milk we scrape from the corn
for gritted bread,
we consume so much verdure
grinding the bones
of this land for a last supper
before the reckoning.

Charon

River was not meant for passage
outflow and drainage of a basin
unremarked by travelers, seeking
the headwaters only to circle back
to the ford, a steep bank
rickety quay.

“The bed is both river and ferryboat”
he would say, standing over me
one hand of tide on my thigh
“We can haggle over the price,
but you’ll pay”
loose change on the sole,
floorboards have defined my life,
river curving as spine, boat
gently rocking, steadily making way,
fragrance of a dark shore
filling all my senses.

-Peach Delphine

 

1. PA Morbid

The silent moon
They stitched up her mouth
to silence her, reached for her eyes
to stop her tears –
mercury falling on the rooftop –
stars streaming from the sky –
but she slipped from the grasp
of their red hands.
Crescent she cuts like a blade,
full she floats high,
secrets building inside –
a mountain of words,
fear, anger –
she vomits them into
her mouth,
swallows them again,
afraid of choking.

2. TC12

Conversation with Sigmund
So Herr Doktor
what do you see?
Peering through the mist
into my broken dreams,
my ugly fantasies,
my thoughts unspoken.
Your bright eye
inspects my faults,
my empty breasts,
my cold hands,
the lies I whisper
and the truths I swallow,
like ice-cubes,
freezing as they burn.

3. MJS8

Live with the generosity of trees
she told me, hands open
to give. A bird might fly from them.
She gave like a rose bush gives
scent and colour, gave freely,
abundantly – her eyes
were apples, and her lips were apples,
her hands open like flowers,
she gave with gratitude.

4. MH8
Charon

if you ride with me
I’ll teach you to forget –
first your reading glasses,
and the names of friends,
of children – they will fade,
almost unnoticed. Your wife
will disappear into the smoke,
your childhood will just slip away,
then words will go, un-needed,
and unheeded, until
you’re blank, white clean,
nuzzling for the nipple,
wailing in the night.

5. TC8

Winter nights
A face emerges,
blossoming like a bruise spreads –
maybe moonlight
casts a sort of spell,
a grey veil. Maybe
it’s just shadows,
smoke hanging too heavy
in the winter air.
My breath forms clouds
in front of me,
my own breath
deludes me.

-Sarah Connor

8. Charron, Untitled

teeth bearing fungus
smiles, beguiling
legend’s river
never crying:
styx, held in darkness
self, awareness

-Sarah Reeson

Bios and Links

-Terry Chipp

grew up in Thurnscoe and ia now living in Doncaster via Wath Grammar school, Doncaster Art College, Bede College in Durham and 30 years teaching.

He sold his first painting at the Goldthorpe Welfare Hall annual exhibition at the age of 17 and he haven’t stopped painting since.

He escaped the classroom 20 years ago to devote more time to his artwork.  Since then he has set up his own studio in Doncaster, exhibited across the north of England as a member of the Leeds Fine Artists group and had his painting demonstrations featured on the SAA’s Painting and drawing TV channel.  Further afield he has accepted invitations to work with international artists’ groups in Spain, Macedonia, Montenegro and USA where his paintings are held in public and private collections. In 2018 he had a solo exhibition in Warsaw, Poland and a joint exhibition in Germany.

His pictures cover a wide range of styles and subjects from abstract to photo-realism though he frequently returns to his main loves of landscape and people.

Visitors are welcome at his studio in the old Art College on Church View, Doncaster.

e-mail:  terry@terrychipp.co.uk

Facebook:  Terry Chipp Fine Art Painting

Instagram: @chippko.art

-Marcel Herms

is a Dutch visual artist. He is also one of the two men behind the publishing house Petrichor. Freedom is very important in the visual work of Marcel Herms. In his paintings he can express who he really is in complete freedom. Without the social barriers of everyday life.
There is a strong relationship with music. Like music, Herms’ art is about autonomy, freedom, passion, color and rhythm. You can hear the rhythm of the colors, the rhythm of the brushstrokes, the raging cry of the pencil, the subtle melody of a collage. The figures in his paintings rotate around you in shock, they are heavily abstracted, making it unclear what they are doing. Sometimes they look like people, monsters, children or animals, or something in between. Sometimes they disappear to be replaced immediately or to take on a different guise. The paintings invite the viewer to join this journey. Free-spirited.

He collaborates with many different authors, poets, visual artists and audio artists from around the world and his work is published by many different publishers.

www.marcelherms.nl

www.uitgeverijpetrichor.nl

-Jane Dougherty

writes novels, short stories and lots of poems. Among her publications is her first chapbook of poetry, thicker than water. She is also a regular contributor to Visual Verse and the Ekphrastic Review. You can find her on twitter @MJDougherty33 and on her blog https://janedougherty.wordpress.com/

-Peach Delphine

is a queer poet from Tampa, Florida. Infatuated with what remains of the undeveloped Gulf coast. Former cook. Has had poems in Cypress Press, Feral Poetry, IceFloe Press, Petrichor. Can be found on Twitter@Peach Delphine

-Dai Fry

is a poet living on the south coast of England. Originally from Swansea. Wales was and still is a huge influence on everything. My pen is my brush. Twitter:  

@thnargg

Web: http://seekingthedarklight.co.uk

-Susan Darlington

Susan Darlington’s poetry regularly explores the female experience through nature-based symbolism and stories of transformation. It has been published in Fragmented Voices, Algebra Of Owls, Dreams Walking, and Anti-Heroin Chic among others. Her debut collection, ‘Under The Devil’s Moon’, was published by Penniless Press Publications (2015). Follow her @S_sanDarlington    

-Holly York

lives in Atlanta, Georgia with her two large, frightening lapdogs. A PhD in French language and literature, she has retired from teaching French to university students, as well as from fierce competition in martial arts and distance running. She has produced the chapbooks Backwards Through the Rekroy Wen, Scapes, and Postcard Poetry 2020. When she isn’t hard at work writing poems in English, she might be found reading them in French to her long-suffering grandchildren, who don’t yet speak French.

-Gayle J. Greenlea

is an award-winning poet and counselor for survivors of sexual and gender-related violence. Her poem, “Wonderland”, received the Australian Poetry Prod Award in 2011. She shortlisted and longlisted for the Fish Poetry Prize in 2013, and debuted her first novel Zero Gravity at the KGB Literary Bar in Manhattan in 2016. Her work has been published in St. Julian Press, Rebelle Society, A Time to Speak, Astronomy Magazine, Headline Poetry and Press and The Australian Health Review.

-Helen Allison

lives in the North East of Scotland. Her first poetry collection ‘ Tree standing small’ was published in 2018 with Clochoderick Press. Her work has appeared in journals and magazines in print and online and she is working towards a second collection.

-Lydia Wist

Like someone who tries out hats or other samples before making a final decision, experimenting with different ideas and techniques is how Lydia spends some of her time. This allows for other portions of time to speak through the lens of fiction, creative nonfiction and art. You can find her work at Cargo Collective , Lydia Wist Creative and on Twitter @Lydiawist.

Website links:

https://cargocollective.com/lydiawist

https://www.facebook.com/lydiawistcreative/

-Sarah Connor

lives in the wild, wet, south-west of England, surrounded by mud and apple trees. She writes poems to make sense of the world, and would rather weed than wash up.

-sonja benskin mesher

-Liam Stainsby

holds a bachelor in English Literature and Creative Writing and is a secondary school teacher of English and Creative Writing. Liam is currently writing his first, professional collection of poetry entitled Borders that explores poetry from all around the world. Liam also Co-Hosts a movie discussion podcast entitled: The Pick and Mix Podcast. Liam writes under the pseudonym ‘Michael The Poet’ 

Links: WordPress: https://michael-the-poet.com/

Twitter: stainsby_liam

Instagram: Michael The Poet

-Sarah Reeson

is 54, married and a mother of two, who has been writing and telling stories since childhood. Over the last decade she has utilised writing not just as entertainment, but as a means to improve personal communication skills. That process unexpectedly uncovered increasingly difficult and unpleasant feelings, many forgotten for decades. Diagnosed as a historic trauma survivor in May 2019, Mental health issues had previously hindered the entirety of her adult life: the shift into writing as expression and part of a larger journey into self-awareness began to slowly unwind for her from the past, providing inspiration and focus for a late career change as a multidisciplined artist.

Website: http://internetofwords.com

Wombwell Rainbow Interviews: Trish Bennett

I am honoured and privileged that the following writers local, national and international have agreed to be interviewed by me. I gave the writers three options: an emailed list of questions or a more fluid interview via messenger, or an interview about their latest book, or a combination of these.

The usual ground is covered about motivation, daily routines and work ethic, but some surprises too. Some of these poets you may know, others may be new to you. I hope you enjoy the experience as much as I do.

Trish Bennett

Trish Bennett

is an Irish writer who grew up on the Leitrim/Fermanagh border.  She spent her youth changing jobs, careers, and cities, not realising that she was building up a lifetime of shenanigans to tap into later on, when she gave in to the urge to write.

She has settled in County Fermanagh in Northern Ireland, along with her husband, daughter, parrot, dog, two cats, and three hives of honey bees.

Bennett writes poetry, memoir, and short stories.  The main themes in her work are the landscape of her people, the natural world, and the antics of her family, and other creatures.

She’s widely published in print and online, and has read her work on BBC Radio Ulster.  Bennett’s won The Leitrim Guardian Literary Award for poetry, twice, and has been a finalist in over a dozen poetry competitions in the past few years, including The Allingham, North West Words, The Percy French, Head Stuff, Bailieborough, The Bangor Literary Journal, and Hedgehog Poetry Press.

Bennett performs regularly at events and festivals because she loves to connect with people through her words.

Twitter: @baabennett   Facebook: TrishBennettWriter.

The Interview

 

1. What inspired you to write poetry?

A lot of my poems start out as memoir or fiction. When I look at the draft that I’ve written, I decide whether it works better as a poem. My work these past few years has more power when expressed in the concise language of poetry.

2. Who introduced you to poetry?

I was introduced to poetry by my two primary school teachers, Mrs. White, and Miss Gallagher. As a child, I loved rhyme in poems. When I got older, my Dad influenced my love of Yeats as he was a big fan of his poetry. I lived in Sligo and visited many of the places mentioned in Yeats’s poetry.

The first time I realised how entertaining performance poetry could be was when I was having a drink in our local pub almost twenty years ago. Seamus O’Rourke, a fellow Leitrimite, performed his piece about plastic-bags. His wit and skill blew me away and I remember thinking, I wish I could do that, yet I was horrified at the thoughts of trying.

I worked as an Engineer of one sort or another for most of my working life, and it wasn’t until my late thirties that I gave in to the call to write. Ruth Carr ran a brilliant Creative Writing class at the Crescent Arts in Belfast. She’s to blame for introducing me to contemporary poetry and encouraging my writing.

3. How aware were you of the dominating presence of older poets?

I was turned off poetry in Secondary School by having to study poems written a century or two before, by middle-class Englishmen. As a teenage girl living in rural Ireland in the 1980s, I couldn’t connect with any of them. I don’t recall there being any modern poetry or Irish female poets on our English curriculum in Ireland at that time. Thankfully, things have changed for the better since.

4. What is your daily writing routine?

I was born in Winter and have a love of the dark days. I write, edit, or read poetry most days once the wind and rain sets in at the fall of the year. When Spring and Summer kick-off, the days are bright and busy, and I find it harder to write. I’m also a beekeeper which means I spend my free-time in Summer preoccupied with the shenanigans of my bees.

5. What motivates you to write?

Deadlines are a great motivator! If there’s no deadline, I write when something gets to me, like an image, or a phase someone says that sticks in my head and won’t leave until I write about it. I suppose you could say, I write to exorcise demons.

I wrote diaries as a child and teenager, stopping when my antics became too incriminating in my twenties. While going through old stuff during the first lockdown, I found a poetic rant about the state of Ireland that I’d written when I was 18. It seems I’ve always written something when I was annoyed enough.

6. What is your work ethic?

When it comes to writing, as with everything in my life, I go by the old cliche, Feel the fear and do it anyway. Those who know me know how terrified I am before a performance. Despite the sickening stage fright, I still go on, because I’ve learned that the fear keeps me focused on stage, and if I trust the muse, everything will be fine.

When it comes to writing, I keep at the bloody thing until it clicks together when I read it. I can’t explain what clicking together means as this is different for every writer. I keep editing, often as many as 25-30 revisions (especially for the longer memoir poems). I often work on twenty poems at any one time. Some poems, I leave for ages until I figure out the ending. I send them out into the world when I’m satisfied they’re as good as I can make them, and there’s a place where they might fit. Then I suffer imposter syndrome, kicking myself for thinking that the poem was good, and for even thinking that I can write. I’m high as a kite for at least five minutes when somebody publishes it.

7. How do the writers you read when you were young influence you today?

I’m not sure. I was a big reader in my youth, read everything and anything, except horror and poetry. I should’ve taken that as a sign…

8. Who of today’s writers do you admire the most and why?

I can’t answer this because there are far too many! It’d fill the page, and besides, I’d be afraid I might give them swelled heads. Can’t have writers getting confidence in themselves. It’s just not done.

9. Why do you write, as opposed to doing anything else?

I’ve a full life outside of writing. It’s being busy doing the other stuff that feeds my writing. When there’s no other choice and the demons are too great, I write.

10. What would you say to someone who asked you “How do you become a writer?”

I’d quote Hemingway,

There is nothing to writing. All you do is sit down at a typewriter, and bleed.

I’d also advise them not to become a writer. There are far less torturous jobs out there, normal jobs that will pay handsomely for a quarter of the work that you put into writing. I know, because I’ve worked in those cushy jobs.

11. Tell me about the writing projects you have on at the moment.

I’m meant to be working on one anthology of poetry, but the damned thing has morphed itself into two. Both need a lot of work as I keep adding new poems. I don’t want to say much more about them as I don’t like to talk about my work until it’s ready for review. I’m afraid I’ll jinx it.