I’d like to submit a poem on behalf of my daughter, Isabella McCullough.Isabella is 12 yrs old and enjoys walking in the rain – (this poem came back on a soggy piece of paper as she’d written it as she walked, stopping here and there to write a further line) – and curling up with her dog to read by the fire!
A Rainy Walk
A grey stream runs along the side of the road Trees not far away are misty The puddles are the same red brown as the path Delicate drips on leaves It sounds like the rain is crunching my hood The grass is bent under the wind and rain Puddles bubble as a foot lands inside Mud coloured marsh reeds leaning Water in a small river rippling The sky is a dripping blanket Pond weed cakes the black river water Swifts being blown by the wind Wild flowers dotted like gems The wind makes flowers and bushes sway and dance The rain comes in pinpricks hurled by the wind.
Isabella McCullough, aged 12
Did you enjoy this poem? Why not visit Maggie’s website at: Maggie’s Centre Nottingham to find out more about their exceptional work and/or make a donation. Do you have a poem you would like to submit to Voices? Feel free to do so by email at: voicespoetry@outlook.com or via the ‘Contact’ page on this site.
Many thanks to Penny Evans of Buxton, Derbyshire for her topical and inspiring poem. We are sure everyone will be able to relate to Penny’s message. A keen poet, Penny has been crafting verse for many years now and has been published in a variety of formats. Penny is also a trained singer, having performed professionally in the past. She often appears at charity events where she kindly shares her talents. We really appreciate Penny’s decision to share ‘The World of the Net’.
THE WORLD OF THE NET
by Penny Evans
Once on a time in the World of the Net
Places were formed where certain folk met
Respectable banter
Where minds merged with minds
Close Encounters of the Intelligent Kind!
–
No one was more important than the other
Everyone was treated like a sister or brother
‘Celebrity’ status and ‘fan’ did not matter
This refuge was a place of safety and chatter
–
For a few years at least
Till reality replaced
This very intimate ‘human’ space
Jealousy then reared its ugly head
What had been full of laughter
Was now pronounced dead!
–
Cyberspace fantasies came with a cost
People drifted away
And friendships were lost
Words can be so powerful
Manipulative as well
Not so very hard to fall under their spell
–
Time passed
Then big business took over the land
Only power and greed made this universe expand
A network was formed leaving small rooms forlorn
And sadly the World of the Net was reborn!
–
The writing on the Wall was deciphered all wrong
When Myspace, then Facebook and Twitter came along
Then social media ran over roughshod
Acting like some kind of over-crazed God!
–
Every flesh and blood human had freedom to speak
The World was their oyster
Which made some people weak
Allowing their innermost demons to rise
Words became weapons
Truth became lies
–
Security and Privacy seemed to be no more
Since all had the power to open that door!
Insecurities and egos now emerged as one
And the World of the Net
Became a time ticking bomb!
–
Obsessions ran riot
Innocents got hurt
Which made some of us realise
We should be more alert!
–
We must share social media to spread joy and peace
Calm down the fears and let love be released!
To always keep honesty and truth up your sleeve Otherwise…
What the Hell is left to believe?
Penny Evans, Buxton, Derbyshire
Did you enjoy this poem? Why not visit Maggie’s website at: Maggie’s Centre Nottingham to find out more about their exceptional work and/or make a donation. Do you have a poem you would like to submit to Voices? Feel free to do so by email at: voicespoetry@outlook.com or via the ‘Contact’ page on this site.
I’d like to enter a poem for the Voices competition. My name is Robert Smith and I’m deeply inspired by nature and romantic poetry. I’m currently a neuroscience student and I’m particularly interested in how the wiring and biology of our brains can convert so beautifully, if sometimes inadvertently, into verse.
Pannus
And so my soul sat
Beneath the branches
Of some old oak tree.
–
Crisp, erratic beats broke
Softly
Above me,
As black and gold light fell
Like an unbounded aerial locomotive
Across the wood that stood
In front of me
Turbulent and free.
–
I quite contented to
Spend the life there,
Near narrow brooks
By occluded orchards.
–
There was song to the wind
And sight to the sunset.
All whilst my company cackled
From height and sward.
–
Yet with darkness came distension.
The stars cast a shadow
Over my heart
That could not pass as do the shadows
Of the light.
–
My heart, my soul could be as one
If only thought could fly and wind could speak
So that my heart would move its shadow
With the changing of the air.
And then I might sit happily,
Beneath this olden oak
For evermore.
–
Yet like a stream my heart did flow
In relentless fashion.
Far away from here,
To prison.
For a man does know
That his strength has purpose.
A purpose that cannot be excised
Or sculpted, or moved.
A purpose that holds
All fate together.
A purpose beyond one’s own soul,
Beyond desire
Beyond life itself.
To fight, to serve
To endure.
Robert Smith
Did you enjoy this poem? Why not visit Maggie’s website at: Maggie’s Centre Nottingham to find out more about their exceptional work and/or make a donation. Do you have a poem you would like to submit to Voices? Feel free to do so by email at: voicespoetry@outlook.com or via the ‘Contact’ page on this site.
My name is Leanna Wood, Iv’e just turned 18 and am currently studying for my A levels at a local sixth form. I enjoy writing poetry and short stories in my spare time, but have only recently thought about entering writing competitions. I love writing poems which have an emotive effect on the reader, as I am fascinated by how words can have such an influence on people’s emotions and imaginations.
Marked Manipulated Memory
I
wonder if you will ever understand
How
your manipulation managed to fly
Like
the way you swung your hand
Yet
blind and deaf to my cry.
Maybe
it was me. Me who conceptualized – that you did no wrong
But
wait – your prescribed discredit and damage to I
Confirming
the neglect to the hidden song
All
of you, it, life- all a lie
The
ache and agony and anguish, still you somehow shaped it as not wrong
Oblivious
to the smothering red
The
warnings were not yet enough
Until
the final chapter of guilt read
“Even
those who realise it is abuse
MAY
soon be freed- but still bruised…”
Leanna Wood
Did you enjoy this poem? Why not visit Maggie’s website at: Maggie’s Centre Nottingham to find out more about their exceptional work and/or make a donation. Do you have a poem you would like to submit to Voices? Feel free to do so by email at: voicespoetry@outlook.com or via the ‘Contact’ page on this site.
I live from day to day, too often they are the same
I am 47 years old and currently work as a taxi driver. My youngest child has recently left home to go to university so I have time to spare and have decided to act upon my love for books and try my hand at writing. Two weeks ago I started a part time college course on literature and I love it so far
All men are created equal
Yes I am homeless
I have no shelter from the wind or the robber or the judging eyes
I live from day to day, too often they are the same
I worry, I wander, I shiver, I sit
Some people give me nervous smiles, loose change
Some even ask my name
Their lives are ordinary, as mine was
Before it went to shit.
–
Stop a minute! You with the judging eyes and leather briefcase and authentic tan
Do you really think you are a better man
Than me? There but for the grace of whatever, wherever,
Could it all fall flat? Like it did to me
Stop a minute! Look! Are we so unalike?
I too am a man, and a good man at that!
Donna Godsman
Did you enjoy this poem? Why not visit Maggie’s website at: Maggie’s Centre Nottingham to find out more about their exceptional work and/or make a donation. Do you have a poem you would like to submit to Voices? Feel free to do so by email at: voicespoetry@outlook.com or via the ‘Contact’ page on this site.
I’m Maximus Kromholc, 19 years of age and currently studying film at Queen Mary University of London, I am however originally from Bedford. I wrote poetry as often as I can and me and my co-workers have even set up a poetry group chat where each week someone sends in a theme and we have to respond within the week with our poem. I read as often as possible with my favourite writer being Haruki Murakami and my favourite poet being Walt Whitman. I tend to write poetry about the modern world for the most part, enjoying fleshing out the complexities and surrealism that is imbedded into our current world. The following poem is inspired by a dream and follows a narrator that has found a deep love and obsession with a girl through social media. It is an evocation of a modern love poem and how we perceive modern romance in the age of the internet. It also explores the current distortion found within the youth of today between lust and love especially as influencers and such become integral parts of society but also with an undertone of overt and demanding masculinity. This poem tackles these themes as well as many others. Thank you for taking your time to read it and I hope you enjoy.
Computer Love.
Self inflicting pain,
With access to you,
The unobtainable.
Only in in anonymity,
With impure posted pictures,
Can i ever see that incomparable beauty.
Yet still the desire,
Incessant as true love
Fuels the loneliness forever.
–
You look so heavenly,
With selfies immaculate,
Teasing,
Touching,
Torturing,
My innermost lust.
Though in person, you I’ve never seen,
Just as real to me as a dream,
I already love you too much.
–
Beauty never comes so true,
Lips parted inviting,
Fringe cut cutely,
Black blonde hair intwined,
body carved of an angel,
Deepest hazel eyes,
Looking straight into my soul,
bringing anguish to my heart,
and tears to my eyes.
All for a chance with you,
Just a couple moments bliss,
I would do most anything.
–
You’re as strange as i too,
This I can tell,
You play the saxophone,
So wonderfully so,
I could swear it’s charlie parker.
Yet this fact I can only guess,
As you seem to bless
All else with your magic touch.
With the pop culture you post,
I see your tastes align with mine,
To an eerily perfect degree.
–
One of these days I shall meet you,
I shall touch you,
I shall hold your sweet hand.
Free from ambigious lust
And free from everlasting wanting,
With unattainable delights,
Jealousy constantly abound,
At the thought of any other,
Anyone it may be,
gazing upon my fantasy in the flesh,
That can hold you tight,
That can look into your sweet eyes,
That can admire your perfect nude body,
If only for the night,
or any eternal second at all.
I know this could never be me,
And that thought destroys me more each day.
By Maximus Kromholc.
Did you enjoy this poem? Why not visit Maggie’s website at: Maggie’s Centre Nottingham to find out more about their exceptional work and/or make a donation. Do you have a poem you would like to submit to Voices? Feel free to do so by email at: voicespoetry@outlook.com or via the ‘Contact’ page on this site.
Amy B. Moreno currently lives in Edinburgh with her young family. An experienced translator and interpreter, she’s now trying her hand at writing her own words rather than someone else’s. She enjoys wild swimming, and cosying up with a good book (preferably in that order).
Writing on the Edge of the Kitchen Table Amy B. Moreno
Someone once told me that mothers Of young children (the Keepers of Others), Write on the edges of kitchen tables And kept occupied, but otherwise able I push an empty-tanked car to the next frontier. During this period of enjambment in my career I mill out daily product reviews, Shuffling priorities for minimal revenue, Rejected notes from the country of motherhood, Migrated do-to lists with chastened ‘shoulds’. And a laptop moored in play-dough and crumbs, Or tapping out plot memos with bedtime thumbs, Guilty translations and proof reading, At the margins of “Mummy, play more” pleading, On receipts; a balanced assonance scribble, Blotted by demanding baby dribble, On the borders of highchairs and nappy changes, ‘Peace and quiet’ workplace strangers, No room of my own with territorial workmates, Sharing my bed, annexing my headspace, I can make room on the desk still covered in laundry, Finding space in my mind; a more challenging quandary.
Amy B. Moreno
Did you enjoy this poem? Why not visit Maggie’s website at: Maggie’s Centre Nottingham to find out more about their exceptional work and/or make a donation. Do you have a poem you would like to submit to Voices? Feel free to do so by email at: voicespoetry@outlook.com or via the ‘Contact’ page on this site.
Ian has had poems published in magazines – ‘The Dawntreader’, ‘Sarasvati’, ‘Poetry Space’. A gardener, living in Cumbria, now semi-retired he has of late, at last, found time to write more poetry and is keen and excited to contribute to this purposeful Voices project.
Unguided
Another bout of soft September showers merge under a cloud-roof smudge, sky and earth seamed together at the (only) near horizon, I can’t see any further.
The summer annealed fells now concealed beyond these sheep-stripped fields, the splashing stream and the yellowing leaves of mist-dripping ash trees.
I am waiting with the damp-feathered birds (the moulting old, the young) through autumn days when the intrepid go unguided, and the courageous stay.
Today, more than ever, I’m unsure if I am to stay again or am I yet to prepare to leave, when will I know more of what life still requires of me? I can’t see any further.
Ian Huckson
Did you enjoy this poem? Why not visit Maggie’s website at: Maggie’s Centre Nottingham to find out more about their exceptional work and/or make a donation. Do you have a poem you would like to submit to Voices? Feel free to do so by email at: voicespoetry@outlook.com or via the ‘Contact’ page on this site.
My name is Sasha, I’m a 25 y/o Copywriter living in London. By day I work in Advertising by night (and usually lunchtimes too) I find myself lamenting through poetry. It keeps me sane. It keeps me happy.
Yesterday’s Donuts.
So far south
it feels like the end of the world,
discarded ideals and beer-battered aspirations
litter the shore line.
Yesterday’s donuts sunbathe with
tomorrow’s comedown – still warm and wet from penetration
and washed away with Glen’s
–
so far east
the sun barely reaches.
A town filled with aged people
haunted by ever-present problems
that linger at every shop door.
You shall not pass
without the guilt of privilege
weighing – gently ebbing
–
so far detached,
this isn’t home anymore.
Not even the ghost of puberty past
or rosy mist of reminiscence
can fool me now
–
-but I’m tethered anyway,
–
to a town where yesterday’s newspaper
gets printed with regret
and fingered with greasy intent –
where the self-perpetuating cycle starts at 15
with a broken condom
on a dusty sofa
at a shit party
with your brother’s friend Dean –
a town where empty souls roam the streets
at the ripe age of 23.
–
They’re starved of purpose –
and dehydrated by the sea
Sasha Newbury
Did you enjoy this poem? Why not visit Maggie’s website at: Maggie’s Centre Nottingham to find out more about their exceptional work and/or make a donation. Do you have a poem you would like to submit to Voices? Feel free to do so by email at: voicespoetry@outlook.com or via the ‘Contact’ page on this site.
I make friends with the dolphins and the leggy octopus
Salty Tea
I am a monster,
I have eyes but I don’t see what you see,
I see things from beneath the sea,
Drowning bodies and shipwrecked tea.
–
I live my life,
Jumping from crate to crate,
But as the waves push back I’m merely jumping in the same space.
–
With nobody around me,
I’m the only one of my race.
–
I make friends with the dolphins and the leggy octopus.
But I couldn’t swim nor hide as well as they could.
–
I have two arms and two legs,
With some sort of a body and face.
When I look down at the water,
All I see is a trace.
–
So empty,
So plain,
The artist gave up again.
I don’t even know my real name.
–
You see I’m lonely out at sea,
but at least I have my saltwater tea.
By Jessica Levett
Age: 18
Did you enjoy this poem? Why not visit Maggie’s website at: Maggie’s Centre Nottingham to find out more about their exceptional work and/or make a donation. Do you have a poem you would like to submit to Voices? Feel free to do so by email at: voicespoetry@outlook.com or via the ‘Contact’ page on this site.