I am a blade

    a frond of kelp drying out
    on a rockpool

    waiting for the next tide.

    And you, with your watering can,
    brave barnacles, uneven rocks.

    I bring ginnels of seasalt
    between bloated pockets.

    This is how I love you.

    I am slime and gratitude.

    This is how I am
    some of the time.

    Don’t turn away as the sea returns.

    I am of an undulated tangle
    in a forest of possibility.

     

    Our Natural Colour

     

    Dyed plums weep their original purple
    into the secret spaces, finite security
    is an avalanche-primed winter against the cold.

    When did passports become chimneys on fire
    sending their smoke signals sky high?

    This constellation is a bedside emergency,
    a salmonella evacuation of decency.
    Stars in the wrong alignment are sickness. 

    A starched wing creaks its way through the small hours—
    salmon bloody themselves trying to get home.

    This river in full spate is not the same river twice 
    but hold on to its ways of finding a tunnel
    through the gaps in the rockbed. 

    We have to make the best of it, the very best.

     

    Whilst Walt Pretends to be Naked, Emily Wears….

    after Walt Whitman and Emily Dickinson

     

    Sometimes you can hide in plain sight—
    refuse to go to church—to convert, refuse
    to conform to the current orthodoxies—
    maybe you don’t want to—wear a gender
    like it is a definition—not fit into a listable
    category. As he—like a politician, is being
    —one with the common man—like someone selling
    snake-oil. She is putting on innocence—or
    the mad woman in the attic—he claims
    kinship—with strangers—whilst he lays down
    his railroad tracks across stolen lands— 
    she is—giving—permission to a woman
    —she loves—to be—oneself
    whilst wearing innocence as a door.

     

    Masculinity

     

    The wetlands freckle with surface ice
    as I slough-off my disguise and sink below
    the water. I hope no one recognised
    how close I was to crying. The damp
    seeps back into my bones, the night
    awash with creatures who wake up
    when the sun goes down. I creak
    into the survival routines I’ve created
    to survive this place. Another human
    finds a sinkhole near to the edgelands
    and I inch a little closer. I listen
    for the music of other bodies settling
    into the water, try to decypher who is
    friend and foe. I will myself to belong.

     

    Poem in Which a Poet Considers Being Photographed

     

    She offers to take my photograph. I say that would be
    lovely but I don’t photograph well. She asks me to pick
    three qualities I would like to show in myself and
    some notes for style/atmosphere. I panic.

    I say that sounds great—let’s do it! Somewhere I’ve
    gone to hide. I am busy, genuinely busy so I put it
    off. I remember her kindness as I rush between 
    the deadlines filling my mind. Her suggestion niggles

    at the bottom of a gender pit dug long ago. The little girl who 
    always felt ugly is annoyed at having to share space again 
    with an adult self who is no better at dealing with this
    than she. I write a message saying I will talk to a friend

    who is good at these things. I tell them about the pit
    and the little girl. They say that maybe, then, I want 
    to be confident, child-like and beautiful. I do and I don’t. 
    That’s not what my poetry is like, is it? They agree. 

    The photographer hasn’t replied. This is not her task. 
    I decide to write a poem about it. That will surely 
    help. I wish I hadn’t given my ex their pro photography 
    books back. There would be a perfect example of me

    there, surely? An exploration of inner darkness and light by Sally Mann
    or photo-therapy with Jo Spence. Beyond Beauty like Irving Penn, 
    Faye Godwin’s stark landscapes or the domestic intimacy of Elliott Erwitt. 
    My ex, the photographer, never captured

    a photograph of me that I liked. That kind of thinking never helps. 
    I wish I were wiser and  could make myself vulnerable
    enough to be strong like the women I admire. I wish
    I were real like the women who have dug themselves out.

    I imagine the courage and kindness in all the women
    who make me laugh at how ridiculous all this is—
    image, objectification, vanity. I want to be beautiful, sadly,
    this is true. But not in a way that looks like I tried to be. 

    I consider cancelling the whole thing. Now I’m against
    the wall. I know there are hints already there but 
    fear wells up inside me: memories of my mother trying to make
    me smile or pose for sexy leg photo competitions for Page 3. 

    I wish I were reserved, cool, aloof and had style. Like someone else?
    Or that I really looked like people imagine I’d be when they read 
    my poems. I wish I were made of words. And I lived
    deep in a forest like a recluse and no one knew what

    I looked like. I wish I were a punk who didn’t give a fuck. 
    I think of myself back in Northern cities and how fragile
    I’ve become. I try to imagine the singer in my old band:
    how fearless and strong and urban. I think of my Nan

    beautiful in her old age because she was kind and it showed
    in every line of her face. I imagine this photographer trying
    to make sense of all this terror and confusion. I imagine her saying
    breathe—this is art, this is process: it’ll be fine

     

    How We Face The Gods of Misrule

     

    It is the nerve of us, the verve of us
    standing still, holding hands, keeping
    the line of us. The mother of us,
    loving of us, genderqueer and diverse of us.
    The black of us. The enough of all this—
    there are enough of us. The we-have-got-to-
    do-something-about-this us. The running
    out of time and patience of us. The
    reading signs, unpacking lies, following
    the science and listening to the others of us.
    The creative beating heart of us.
    The truth matters, caring matters, having-
    too-much-is-wrong—we-need-to-look-out-and-
    we-need-to-look-after each other of us.
    The re-defining what is a man, what is success of us.
    The woman-is-more-than-we-have-begun-
    to-dream-of-and we’re-not-going-back of us.
    The we-don’t-need-to-be-gendered-
    and-neutered of us. The appetite for change
    but not just for the sake of it us.
    Grief and hope and courage of us.
    The let’s put an end to their mischief
    for the sake of all of us.

    Hannah Linden is a working class, queer, neurodivergent poet based in Devon, UK where she lives in ramshackle social housing. She is published widely, won the Cafe Writers Poetry Competition in 2021, was Highly Commended in the Wales Poetry Award 2021, and is currently shortlisted for the Leeds Peace Poetry Prize 2024. Her debut pamphlet, The Beautiful Open Sky (V. Press), was shortlisted for the Saboteur Award for Best Poetry Pamphlet 2023. X: @hannah1n

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