Home Planet News

a journal of literature & art

The Literary Review

Issue 10         Page 77

Approximations

Man am I, a woman,

both fellow and mate,

relative desister

from Truth.

Apes, aren’t we? on the shore,

twenty digits and

one poor collective word

for sand.

Wrapped up in a wristwatch

against exagger-

ated eternity –

“My time,”

I simplify. Dust all

becomes, atomised;

ground stuffs that will re-as-

semble

truth plural. Did I say

dead? I father lies

in my womanly way

and live.

Night Autobahn

Sleek on a diet of looming shadows,

the dark memories of daytime panoramas,

the nightway trawls

entrailing the land

in lengths of shrieking two-way peristalsis

red

by side

with onrushing eyes white

I sit, hurtling

intestined in a slipstream

screenscape

Succulent human

I am

Indigestible

© Jadina Lilien: Counting The Stars

Snail

A common or garden, ground coloured snail made its home on my gleaming white bathroom tiles. It parked in the neighbourhood of the shower head, three rows down from the window ledge, leaving a purposeful but jagged trail down the patterned pane which showed up in the steam from my bath. That tile was the snail’s destination. With forefinger and thumb I took hold of the snail’s shell and cast it, treading on air, out of the window. Later, when I left the house and passed the bathroom on the outside, I saw the snail with its shell like a ship in sail on the dirt sea, heading for that tile again.

Junction

The moons rise green

and spanning this late night

What follows is tidal: rev and flow,

journey, shift and errand

towards many small shores.

The settings of our ruling planets predict red.

Invisible will pulls apart the traffic

for the passing of the free

mastering the wheel

and steered by the changing light.

Our father is an engineer.

The middens

Here they will have sat and opened

the fruit of the sea – fruit being a land word,

sweet and salt – the middens

growing about them, their young

and the young of their young, shells

once manufactured in the hearts

of molluscs, chucked.

So many places they’ve made unloved

but with a beauty to the power of usefulness,

making now their own shells – shell

being a word with both pearls and emptiness –

with machines they’ve made in the minds of

other machines that somewhere

are programmed by hand.

They outstrip in hunger the rest of earth,

that jealous top soil teeming with rivals

covering concrete in the night,

lifting tarmac on the shoulders of saplings.

Their roundabouts spin riders

encased in vehicles off on all routes

but where we come from.

Little sycamores

Little sycamores break free:

They have choppered down the wind without order

to set root in the soils of this terrace, in all innocence,

and populate my unshifting patio plates. 

Let them know that I decide in this garden.

I pluck a forest out of the beds with one fist.

The steps from the house take me up and down

a history of the seas cemented.

Now I sit down on a step to rest

my feet on the crazy paving, my back

against the wooden window, and catch

my fingers’ work under the rule of crumble:

paint, posts, and flagstones shifting.

While an old sycamore pod 

cracks open a fresh green eye,

right beside my foot, and winks at me

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