going on a journey and still beating

Thank you Jessie-Mae Buers for her fantastic entry. Jessie-Mae has been ‘inspired by the work of Wendy Cope and Sylvia Plath, as well as work from the Romantic era of poetry.’ She feels that poetry is a ‘coping mechanism when facing troubles that you feel are out of your control.’ We are very appreciative that Jessie-Mae decided to support the project and share ‘where the water falls’ with us.
where the water falls
you can’t bury a heart in thick earth,
expecting a new one to grow
from the ground, like a willow tree
or something that has the power
that holds the same strength
as the running waters. sooner
a branch breaks, goes off-stream; yonder
towards the oesophagus of the sea
where the organ
deflates, drowns and becomes purple,
swollen, limp, but
charitable
going on a journey and still beating —
and I swear,
it goes for a walk, must’ve
summit of choice, the mouth of the roots.
by demand, it can’t go far,
as it reaches
like a biblical story
postures like a crane,
billed with tissue and
reaches.
Jessie-Mae Buers, Bristol
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