Sasha Dugdale

I don’t quite say it anymore, now the kids

Are teens and there are sudden wars, threads

Of conversations that no longer want to pass

Through the needle’s eye of how we recast

Ourselves in new politics, new sadnesses, newspapers.

Irritability, like the substance left by vapours

That have long departed the alembic’s lung

And taste with a quetsch’s bitter tongue.

The hours and days mass themselves around

And harden like the filthy, frozen ground

On railway embankments on a mid-February day.

And that is in truth what I never quite say:

Those trashed slopes are home to the foxglove

An ancient restorer of the heart’s beat, my love.

Sasha Dugdale

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Pat Ingoldsby