the girls (after rilke’s ‘the boy’) and Other Poems

    by Laura Theis

    the girls (after rilke’s ‘the boy’

    we are girls
    our wild mares do not rush like rain
    towards the endings of our lines

    squares don’t make way
    and no roads bend towards us at strange angles
    we are girls

    houses refuse to take the knee behind us
    the black solitude we race across is never
    cleared by screaming, glinting trumpets

    our unprotected golden heads may gleam uneasily
    but our torches do not flutter in the wind of our great hunt
    like undone braids

    we are girls
    all we wish for is to pass the night unscathed

    feral tale

    the most beautiful sight
    I have ever seen is
    the rage of one woman
    avalanching into
    the rage of ten
    thousand more

    I want to be saved by
    the fury of women
    I want to dangle my long woven hair
    from the towering rage of women
    I want the whole hog
    golden carriage and steed

    I want to wear my most elaborate
    dress to the dance
    with the bravery of women
    and when I lose any glass slippery
    part of myself I want to lose it
    to the sisterhood of women

    I want the whole world to
    watch as I marry
    the fury of women
    and when death do
    us part I want my bones
    to lie alongside the ferocious
    beauty of women

    unbroken ever after

    busy night

    tonight I shall place a moon
    in every little boy’s mind

    and let me not forget the knife
    because tonight I am going to have to carve

    a flower into every little boy’s mind
    so that the flower can drop

    a seed down every little boy’s mind
    and ripen into a fruit

    that makes whoever tastes it
    disappear

    and reappear on top
    of my heap of mysteries

    yes tonight I must do all I can to pull
    the riddle wool over every little boy’s eyes

    so that no matter against which of them
    I’ll one day try to break myself

    I will already have crafted
    a softer landing

    Laura Theias’ work appears in Poetry, Oxford Poetry, The Caterpillar, Magma, Rattle, Aesthetica, iamb, etc. Her Elgin-Award-nominated debut how to extricate yourself (2020), an Oxford Poetry Library Book-of-the- Month, won the Brian Dempsey Memorial Prize. A Spotter’s Guide To Invisible Things (2023) received the Live Canon Collection Prize and the Society of Authors’ Arthur-Welton-Award. Other accolades include the Alpine Fellowship Writing Prize, Poets & Players Prize, Oxford Brookes Poetry Prize, AM Heath Prize, and Mogford Prize. Her new collection Introduction to Cloud Care and her children’s debut Poems from a Witch’s Pocket are both forthcoming in 2025.

    Subscribe to our newsletter To Recieve Updates

      The Latest
      • What We Lose When We Love Unequally

        What We Lose When We Love Unequally - The Failing Math of Emotional Labour

      • The Matchbox by Usawa #10

        North-East Special by Matchbox x The Little Journal of North East India

      • rice fields after heartbreak

        Grief, memory, and loss rooted in ritual silence

      • The Woman I Aspire to Be

        The Woman I Aspire to Be: A Feminist Reflection on Age

      You May Also Like
      • The sensory politics of fictional violence By Diya Sengupta

        Growing up in small mining towns in India’s hinterlands has exposed me to all

      • An Approach to Adjourned Affections by Rebecca Vedavathy

        For Imroz Loosen the drawstrings of sorrow you clasp around that poem, my love

      • Two Poems By Meher Pestonji

        Meditations on the Sea The sea abandons shoals of shells broken and unbroken