Sunday, 13 October 2024 10:56

A Hagworm's Nest, Walmsgate, 1897

Written by
in Poetry
118
A Hagworm's Nest, Walmsgate, 1897

Hagworm’s Nest, Walmsgate, 1897

by Barbara Barnes

The sky is made when walls run out of bricks.
The sky is boiled wool. It’s an upturned bucket,
we are its dregs emptied onto the courtyard cobbles.

Who knew a baby could be made from a skimp of gin,
a skirt lifted in Mad Alice Lane, that a child could be housed
in a cupboard like new bread. Our mother feeds us scraps

bought with a stranger’s touch, our father steals her leftovers.
We mistrust a heaped plate, keep our desires lean–
hunger measured against the length of a workhouse sleeve.

By day we are the mission ladies’ dearly beleaguered,
by night we rove in packs, taunting the officer’s stick.
Our shadows flit across a sunken moon.

Read 118 times Last modified on Tuesday, 15 October 2024 08:31
Barbara Barnes

Barbara Barnes' poems have been widely published and her debut collection, Hound Mouth was published to huge acclaim by Live Canon. She has had a wide-ranging career as an actress and voiceover artist in Canada, the US and the UK.