ISSUE 12
YASMIN ROE – TWO POEMS
Pulse
Bones of your wrist.
Skin beneath my fingers.
Head on your chest.
Lie back,
Feel your blood ripple
Over and around me
Through my fingers
Skimming the tips of bones.
Heat
Passed to me.
Alive with the pulse of tomorrow
And the day after.
This morning I held cold hands.
Ice flesh;
A cut of arm;
A kilo of leg;
Tossed and turned over.
Life had trickled out hours before.
When we felt for that same beat
It was no more.
Though we tried we could not keep his pulse
From being released.
So I lie inside of you.
Nuzzled,
Into the smell of your pits,
The glaze of your face,
The sweat in the crevice of your back
And feel your pulse synchronise with mine
Knowing that tonight we will both be warm.
Breathe
Miles of it,
Piled high.
Colossal chaos colliding in my chest.
I like you,
I think,
In that small and meek way you grow to like something.
A song that repeats on you
Over and over.
Can’t get it out of your head.
Twitching from the corner of each mouth.
A longing for wake-up kisses;
Midnight talks in the black;
Carrying each other through rain.
Desire to be yours.
It’s a funny sort of madness.
Like a fever that beats
In shallow breaths.
To be comfortable;
To feel secure.
To breathe
To not think
And to breathe again.
Yasmin is from Hull and studies Learning Disability Nursing at the University of York.