Two Poems By: Martha Sprackland | The Quietus

Two Poems By: Martha Sprackland

New poetry this week comes courtesy of the multiple-award-winning and enviably prolific Martha Sprackland

Martha Sprackland grew up on Merseyside and lived in Madrid before taking an MA at Lancaster University. Twice a Foyle Young Poet of the Year, her work has appeared here & there — Poetry Review, Magma, Iota, and the Salt Book of Younger Poets, amongst others — and she co-founded Cake magazine with Andrew McMillan. Martha is Assistant Poetry Editor at Faber & Faber.

Hiraeth

Dress in the loosening dark, the faint

beginnings of song chivvying you

from the heavy room, the hall

the there-now-that’s-done-it click

of the flat door and down the stairs.

Here’s the banister. Here is the outer door.

Stand here for just a second, no more,

and then post the keys back through

the letterbox, become that shifting

shape diminishing in the frosted glass,

down the empty frosted streets

and into town and without deviation,

get onto that train.

Lithograph (1955)

M. C. Escher

In the kitchen sink the gutted fish is open

to the moon. That murky asterism reflected

in the brushed steel? False. Those stars

are shattered scales; this eye

doppelganger of the deeper sky.

See this collection of postcards

from Rydal Water, North Narrameen,

the infinity pool at the Kandalama hotel,

the salt pans at Salar de Uyuni.

In the park, a puddle holding a network

of black trees induces vertigo,

the day bends like a tuning fork.

Mirrored sfumato in the window, the fish

begins to disappear. Can you, like this

disregarding mathematics, translate yourself

through solid glass into a silvery garden?

The sink is empty but for the thin line of blood

circling the drain. Left behind: these ersatz stars

coins of fish around the sink, around the mouth

as payment for the journey.

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