Skip to content
Menu
home
issues
about
submissions
search
home
issues

issue one

issue two

issue three

issue four

about
submissions
search
Menu
home
issues
about
submissions
search
home
issues

issue one

issue two

issue three

issue four

about
submissions
search
Geraldine Clarkson

Colour Me

I plucked colour off a bush, broke it in my lap, and it bled a little blue then turned its coarse puce cheeks northward to puff out mini-clouds of milky yellow filched from primrose, scarcely there. A handful of heart in its eyes, home in its leaf-sprung boots. I watched it close to see if it blenched at new night sweeping in early. There was a white tube ogling from its chest, breaking through skin. I read it as despair-proud-silent-not-aloud. I brushed it with my palm, quick-feather strokes, and it jumped a little in response, flushed purple. I reached for its chin and gripped it carelessly to face the sun, a laughing orange ball rolling in cherried cream all along our garden’s horizon. Mother, I called in through the back door, propped open to let in draughts of prickly evening, I shall be in shortly! We’ll have a nightcap. And I turned to colour melting in my lap and holding me with its curious pourquoise gaze. 

author bio
issue two

Posts navigation

previous
next
[email protected]
Twitter Instagram
Generic selectors
Exact matches only
Search in title
Search in content
Post Type Selectors