Press. Excerpts from Seasons in the Sun. Winter’s Breath 3 Poems by Annest Gwilym

Days like this to be read as honey

For the child I never had
    I would give you: the honeydrip of low sun on the horizon; a cold that sugar-coats mountain tops, collides cells and atoms; all the tree-lined hours of your dreams; a moonsuck and sunstruck clock stuck at youth; four seasons in a day. In my witchery I would line up jars of bright starshine on your windowsill; conjure Caravaggio days, raining pomegranate seeds; trap it all in amber. And if you ever lived, you could live it too.
First published in the PK Project Quixotic Travellers, December 2018. Also published in Caught in the Net, November 2019. In the Immensity of Night
    Things with invisible hands unlatch the doors unseen Creep on silent feet around my floating bed Tap their long, strong nails on my wooden headboard Whisper poetry in my sleep which evaporates at dawn A crinkle of leaves gathers at the base of the bed While the sea laps at my front door lost and miles from home Baby crabs with tiny pincers knock, want to enter The herons are watching as gulls tear candy-floss clouds Outside is dangerous, static-filled inside is better I pull the duvet under my chin I think I’ll stay here
Winter’s Breath
    Winter’s breath is snow-dust prophecy, humus and moss-scented ache of leaf mould from autumn on the floor. Under the cold, clear fire of stars its wind corrugates the sea’s iron in the silent meadows of the night. Winter’s woods are antlered, dark, fox-sharp, full of long, wolfish shadows that follow you home. Its eye is pale, glaucous; air salted with frost, whose sharp proboscis probes every crack and crevice. Winter is a black and white country. The old know this: it strips flesh from trees, flowers, bones.


https://carreg-gwalch.cymru/seasons-in-the-sun-3008-p.asp

Annest Gwilym is the author of three books of poetry. Surfacing (2018) and What the Owl Taught Me (2020), were both published by Lapwing Publications. What the Owl Taught Me was Poetry Kit’s Book of the Month in June 2020 and one of North of Oxford’s summer reading recommendations in 2020. Annest has been widely published in literary journals and anthologies, both online and in print, and placed in several writing competitions, winning one. She was the editor of the webzine Nine Muses Poetry from 2018-2020. She was a nominee for Best of the Net 2021. Her third book of poetry – Seasons in the Sun – was published by Gwasg Carreg Gwalch in September 2023 and was Poetry Kit’s Book of the Month in November 2023 as well as being one of their Christmas reading recommendations. She has been nominated for the Wales Book of the Year Award 2024/Gwobr Llyfr y Flwyddyn 2024. Seasons in the Sun is available from Amazon and other places. It is also available from all bookshops in Wales.

Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Seagull. Poem by Annest Gwilym

 
Inspired by Wallace Stevens’ Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackbird
 
I
The world was born
From the point of light
In a seagull’s pale eye
 
II
Beneath the sign
DON’T FEED THE SEAGULLS
The seagulls feed themselves
 
III
In the sea’s deep crypt
Two oysters and a mussel
Dream of seagulls
 
IV
In the woods of confusion
The way out is marked
By a trail of seagull droppings
 
V
The sun plays Midas on the water
While two seagulls play Mars
Over a limp sandwich
 
VI
A flock of seagulls
And a raven
Is still a flock of seagulls
 
VII
In a castle’s cobbled forecourt
A seagull and a collared dove
Hold court
 
VIII
When skies are violent
A seagull’s muscular wings
Hold up moisture-rich clouds
 
IX
Killers from the egg
Each seagull knows
How to catch a pike
 
X
In a manor’s formal gardens
Where a marble fountain tinkles
A seagull’s cries are informal
 
XI
From a train’s rectangular window
Seagulls chase after a plough
Like a sudden snow blizzard
 
XII
One of Braque’s birds
Dreamt that in another life
He was a seagull
 
XIII
Alone on a beach, a child watches
As a dead seagull’s wing flaps
Quietly in the breeze
 
‘Killers from the egg’ is from Ted Hughes’s poem Pike
 
 

 
 
Author of two books of poetry: Surfacing (2018) and What the Owl Taught Me (2020), both published by Lapwing Poetry. Annest has been published in many literary journals, both online and in print, and in anthologies. She has been placed in several writing competitions, winning one. She lives on the coast of north west Wales with her rescue dog. Twitter: @AnnestGwilym
 
 
 
 
 
Robin Ouzman Hislop is Editor of Poetry Life and Times at Artvilla.com ; You may visit Aquillrelle.com/Author Robin Ouzman Hislop about author & https://poetrylifeandtimes.com See Robin performing his work Performance (University of Leeds)

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