Showing posts with label Sophie Robinson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sophie Robinson. Show all posts

Thursday, December 20, 2018

Three poems by Sophie Robinson

Sophie Robinson


THREE POEms
BY SOPHIE ROBINSON

<3

jagged are names and not our creatures
– veronica forrest-thomson

 

i wish i had a better name to be called by like you might call a dog at a lake and she would surely turn
& i could eat your name for days: i would gladly bow my head o as the ploughman to the plough
& become the machine that made me that gave me my name my job (& what would i be called then)
for now i sit & wait in boots i made myself & laced in faith on better days than this with better names
& all & thinking on the names that trump other names & who wears them; how for example when you
search
for yourself you don’t always find what you’re looking for or say your name & feel like a stranger
at the bank with your wad of cash for rent or at the park you stop when called to find a pup called sophie
chasing down a human you don’t know. do you have a problem in your life? no.
buddha says: look on the internet & you will surely find one i mean a problem.
i had 107 problems & i named them all to keep them safe (each of them is called ‘<3’)
& then i kissed them on the back and sides, i brushed their hair & called them my baby diamonds.
buddha says: name your price. so i named my price sophie & she is high & heavy, she is surely gold, but
now
i want to call my price better i want to make my price a price a dog would pay. besides
you can call my price by any name and she will come just the same.
like dogs we neglect our work & lie on soft carpet and laugh and rofl about
to the tune of the internet & shed our love
all upon & around our bumbling manchild that we made & named.
you can say eat the cake & you can even eat it
but you can’t say anna mae & no you can’t turn her. how stupid & crazy to always have to say everything
so much, to have to tell people not to hit it up or be a fucking joker, to have to always be the one
to say no & then the long walk back to womanhood so obvious and boring to you
so you make up names & say you are anything
or write some awkward long-limbed poem just to remember that
you have a clit. if you turn the head of my dog she will surely come but
my cat does not come when i call he doesn’t come anywhere at all
but stays home all day shagging blankets or crying on the roof & waiting
for my face at the window. buddha says: do you get naked in the distant thunder. no sir.
i keep my clothes on so my pets will know me so my poems will know me.

  

 

fucking up on the rocks

 

ducking my head under each wave on fire
island i try to think of other times ive felt this done
w/life & survived
frank o’hara died here everybody knows
alcoholics die everywhere all the time everybody knows
he was purple wherever his skin showed
i never thought of myself as a useless drunk
i never felt
so unspecial through the white hospital gown
in the daytime it feels
like it would be easy to die
to dip my head under
just a second too long
but in the dark death is real
like an animal up close
he was a quarter larger than usual
on the edge of sleep you could fall
straight into & thru it                   & nobody wld know yr name there
naked in the atlantic at midnight cutting a path where the moon hits
the water i could swim a straight line out into forever & nobody
would stop me. would know my name. every few inches
there was some sewing composed
of dark blue thread   i want to shut my eyes        i want to shut a million things
strawberry moon     orange to silver                      my simple tits
bobbing on the water                some stitching was straight and three or four
inches long      others were longer and semicircular              urge to die breathing out & folding in
on itself until it feels like nothing   we get out     shiver lose the keys to the house
find them & laugh on the porch     the lids of both eyes were bluish black         jameson
drinking an inch of mezcal & me sucking on my seltzer like it’s a beer
alive         smiling      only half-quitting    only half-gone           a normal heart
flashing in & out on the shore it was hard to see his beautiful
blue eyes which receded a little into his head           the wifi is out
my 4g is fake           replacing each image in my recent life with a square and a ?
(i know rite)   he breathed with quick gasps. his whole body quivered.
i have taken a solemn vow to stop looking
at your face on the internet                 to stop imagining your unkind thoughts
of me my life as a little nobody
there was a tube in one of his nostrils down to his stomach
i go to sleep in a wood-panelled room the same length & width
as my bed     & count the waves as they break
over my head                    i sleep like im already dead
face to the wall
greedy for the nothing         won’t fall
in the crib he looked like a shaped wound
i wake up constipated
in the morning sun  drink coffee & smoke
on the beach feeling full of shit     & good to no-one
his leg bone was broken and splintered and pierced the skin
every rib was cracked.
a third of his liver was wiped out by the impact
i could make a home here prone forever
belly to the sand
let my messages go unread
let my phone battery run flat
let the sun burn my back
let all the ships fuck up on the rocks
indistinguishable      baby small      little pieces
floating         like the world floats    gay unbroken
bloated & golden
a monument to my favourite alcoholic
the greatest homosexual    who ever lived & died

 


sunshine belt machine

 

happy valentines i am not
at my jazziest     matching sweat
shirt    hair in a cheerful pony so dirty
it would stay up by itself                ‘i hope
you’re as good at sucking dick
as you are at being lonely’      unknown
quantity of poems inside me     unknown
quantity of living moments    moon’s outside
almost full     blood on my pillow
never these days
i take care of myself okay
like a baby something
like a mama something
& my eyes
dressed like candy
big as the moon
& it’s fine to be full
of pretty much anything
just for a while i love life i love being
alive one day after another
forever. what’s next.


Sophie Robinson

Sophie Robinson teaches Creative Writing at the University of East Anglia and is the author of and The Institute of Our Love in Disrepair. Recent work has appeared in n+1, the White ReviewPoetry Review, the Brooklyn Rail, Ploughshares and BOMB Magazine. Her third full collection, Rabbit, is published by Boiler House Press, 2018.

GRANTA


Monday, February 27, 2017

Two poems by Sophie Robinson

 

Sophie Robinson



TWO POEMS
by Sophie robinson

SWEET SWEET AGENCY

 

the candy here is hard & filled & there is nothing i love more

than to be treasured. if nobody’s watching i just do nothing: lie down

don’t hardly breathe, keep my face in careful stillness not to crease

its cute forgettability. the world is full of edible munchkins & it is my life’s work

to work out how to stay creamy on the inside, how not to sour myself

up with little nips of this or that or otherwise cut holes in myself thru which

to be seen. i must learn to love what i cannot know: the wide bleached anus

on a porn blog, the insane demands of toddlers, the desire for moderation or

slimness of affection, the reasons lovers leave, the trash my cat brings back,

the crack of footsteps in the woods at night, why the killer kills.

i learn it all the hard way but fwiw

i would never snap the rabbit’s neck again

i would rewind i would keep it every time

 

 

HONEY LAMB

 

don’t remember going downstairs saying sorry or

nevermind just the moment of waking not knowing

if it’s dusk or dawn sweating like a hothouse

flower red & wet & pulled up from under & gasping

steeped & steaming like a teabag & drunk on sleep

& beer & sadness blue & dewy as a hothouse

flower & the white white vodka crouching neat

as a bullet low inside me & burning light

like a living laser & i feed it – milk & bread

& honey & lamb – until i’m sticky as an ant

& shining like a hothouse flower thrumming

with the urgent clag of honey blood across

my chest in uneven lubbing – my vodka

heart trembles like a chihuahua & bruises

break across my skin all purple & yellow

as hothouse flowers & the white hot vodka stars

at dusk & dawn glitter inside me i am beautiful

as a hothouse flower when i turn myself on i light

up in twinkling points between the milky

bones of my ribs & pelvis & all the bulbs

i planted in my fat hot head burst into bright

flowers through my eyes & my teeth bleat

like a lamb & i spark myself up into

a column of coloured light & fire myself

off like a gun going downstairs

to say sorry, nevermind

 


ABOUT THE CONTRIBUTOR

 is the author of A (Les Figues, 2009) and THE INSTITUTE OF OUR LOVE IN DISREPAIR (Bad Press, 2012). She lives in Norwich, where she is a Lecturer in Poetry at the University of East Anglia.


FEBRUARY 2017






Tuesday, November 19, 2013

We too are drifting by Sophie Robinson

 



we too are drifting

by Sophie Robinson

Sophie Robinson / Nosotros también vamos a la deriva

 

our tenderness being muttered up by other

people I lie awake twisting & stripped

of physical dwelling; hips with the same

feeling finding myself mumbling ‘I’m sorry

we jerked’ & your mouth is a place to go

a place where the human need for (relative)

peaceful sanctuary can collect itself –

suck me –nuzzle me – foster me– we are

in our separate spaces mouths mouthing

along to the words of the film Patch Adams

& learning that returning to “home” as an

adult promotes restlessness; but let’s keep

kissing & dipping with friction against

the softness of ‘Hum Sweat Hum’, licking punk

I found myself dwelling in the conceptual

heart of nonsense breaking up, I have two

hands to cope with his death by values by

economix, we are locked in structure in

spite of our nylon surgings, them being

reduced to slits of marginal import &

we know better huh, & yes you the

eternal optimistic you turn to me & say

that it’s good to get perspective on a

perspective even when the sky’s so black

with clouds it looks like night (upon which

you would remark at least that we are less

visible under extreme conditions &

besides we have more fun after dark)


Thursday, November 14, 2013

Geometry No. 1 by Sophie Robinson

Geometry No. 1

by Sophie Robinson

 

Sophie Robinson / Geometría no. 1


The uprigth nature of a girl, belied by

formless whirrs, signs of visible lust like the

density of skies, & the disappearing hour;

I think of you urgent & weak walking beside

billboards, missing out, flaking off in the

silence between 2 traxx, no tender riot

in yr geekheart [spliced open & pulsating

in four different places whilst the summer

is blaring musty and lithe, awful shiny

skin & sick tune of birds germinating light

as a new kind of loudness] & the crude urban

cosmos misses you & is just passing the

time w/dirt & money & pouting in the

corner w/out your nocturno-suspicious lure.




Friday, November 1, 2013

Unspeakable by Sophie Robinson



unspeakable

by Sophie Robinson

Sophie Robinson / Indecible


Your name swallows my lips &

the backward downward rage of all

girls knocking through me, a risk of

speech a risk of love a risk of causing

a scene, zipper of my jeans against

yours & in your ear I hear the sea.

 

Your name reverses itself on my lips as

I swallow the anger like a little boy, a

battle of the body, a risk of method, the

receipt of love, the cold slither of a fence

against the zipper of my jeans & the

immediacy of your ear against my face.

 

Your name; the danger of inversion,

swallowing down everyone’s rage you

burn & shake beyond yourself you

are the danger of love & you press

your ear against the zipper of my

jeans & say ‘I can hear the sea’.

 

Your name & mine.

Swallow it down.

We invert girls we slither under

barriers we shock with proximity

we press our ears to the ground

in search of foreign pleasures.

 

Your name & mine, swallowed

downward in anger. The reversal

of the body, scars where the

danger of love obtained will show,

our fingers in our ears our

hands pressed against our eyes.