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Alix Willard

Alix Willard is an English with Creative Writing graduate and teacher of GCSE and ‘A’ Level English. She is studying Creative and Life Writing at postgraduate level at Goldsmiths College, and is an emerging poet whose work has been commended for the Ambit Annual Competition 2021 and appears in issue 97 of The Rialto magazine.  

Email: Alix_Willard97@outlook.com

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Solstice

 

We make it through this herby darkness on horses

made of water, not glass, though we stay dry

and do not breathe any of the dirt that can change

the strength we use to hold a flower.

 

We tense our thighs against the flanks, knowing

we could relax our bodies, we who keep our nails

short enough to make a fist, fit our fingers around paper

cups to see yellow flowers branching to full height.

 

We are the ones who say nothing without purpose

and mostly everything in vain. We play with language

like children, small hands poking the glass of a bus

to prove how well they belong in the set world,

 

how often they can make themselves laugh.

We don’t need to remember our other lives but,

now we have remembered, the horses have left

and there are only the backs of wooden chairs for us

 

to straddle and contend with the length of our arms,

our need to be musical and indulgent against the weight

on our chests. We make a poker with our tongues,

though the scentless air of our carrying left already

 

a long while ago, and you recline until your back lands

on the firm softness of white sheets, poise yourself

to teach me I should sit at the back of an aeroplane,

where I won’t see the wings in moments of turbulence.

 

Now I see you better, and I seat myself next to you.

I want to tell your unsmiling face I understand, and I do.

I understand. It is painful to remember our wings,

preened and responsive, are not really ours,

 

are really part of a remorseless body that will expel us

so we are no longer riders on horses made of water,

so we are chargeless like a poet’s final words, like love

with its coffered ceiling for your breaths,

 

suddenly shallow and stunted, to settle

before we can stay a little longer to play with voice

so we may find the right pitch with which to live,

then die.

 

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Download a PDF of Solstice by Alix Willard