Read Penning Perfumes Volume 2 Page 3
Oxford
21 February 2013, the Albion Beatnik Bookshop.
Eloise Stonborough, Lucy Ayrton, and Dan Holloway share their poems inspired by Grossmith’s Hasu no Hana.
All Things Nice
If only a body could taste its own sweetness,
then it could cease hunting for another skin
to gild with its hunger. I have wrapped myself
in unfamiliar arms, as if they could mark the bounds
of my flesh. I have hoarded bruises to remember
the weight of touching. What a peculiar breed of haunting:
to know your limbs only by what they press against;
to know yourself invisible beneath your clothes.
On the allotments, two sticks and a rotting bowler hat
is enough to keep the circling gulls from roosting.
A ragged proximate of man, a corpse bulked out by air;
and yet he seems more human in his vagueness
than I ever have. I was born illegible: a child
with pond scum in her hair and dirty nails,
dragging her dolls up as soldiers. Inside my cheeks,
I am still as pink as the girl my mother mourns.
—Eloise Stonborough
Untitled
I never really got the hang of that thing
girls do in paperbacks.
That thing where you all get ready together
and you giggle.
But I loved those times you let me watch you
pat on powder, slick lipstick,
it never seemed fake,
like other mums,
not warpaint.
Watercolours.
Those nights would always mean
a disregarded bedtime
and half an inch of wine
you knew I was pretending to like.
You always said I was very grown up.
People stop saying that, don't they?
People stop saying
"Look how big you are!"
It means something different.
And now I'm an adult
I'm not very grown up.
I can't walk in heels,
I'm not really sure how to put on foundation.
But a few times a year,
When I'm home,
our home,
and I'm going out,
I try.
I take your makeup bag,
which still feels so naughty,
and I pat powder, and slick lipstick,
and I brush my hair.
Properly.
Because you're right.
I never think you're wrong, you know.
Even when I don't agree.
—Lucy Ayrton
Amber
On Ulica Mariacka
In love’s October
Heartbeats stopped in amber clocks
Point fingers through
fog, taunting
Memories of the forgotten
Of the forgotten
Of the forgotten
For their youth.
Afterglows of touches
Cooled by rain
Cooled by rain
Cooled by rain
Cooled by the wingbeats of angels
Dissolving from collective consciousnesses
Spiral from the street’s glass belly
Prodding strangers,
Tracing secrets on skin
With lips burnt dry
By the remembrance of their birth,
Burying mockeries of flesh
Beneath regret.
—Dan Holloway
Oxford Haiku
The Oxford haiku were inspired by Cacharel’s LouLou.
Bubbles sheen and glow
Anna laughing enamel
head under water
—Sarah
Linen sheets: dry, crisp
Perfumed with possibility
Of what might happen.
Student in Paris
My run down sad apartment
Tealight, oil, drifting
—Paul Fitchett
give me scented words
warm, sophisticated, close;
primitive of brain.
—Judi Sutherland
The air is full of
other things: dreams, ghost; and words
that can never speak.
—Ted Beausire
Worlds apart always
But always my love you’ll be
Words will not stop us
—Maryam Goheeri