The man in Sainsbury’s bought fourteen 1kg bags of carrots

and the tiles around the checkout
were an Olympic swimming pool of hummus.
Tucked behind the frozen aisle
cried a thousand sniffless snow people,
while 60 hungry horses stacked themselves
on top of each other in a single bay
at the back of the indoor car park.
Outside, the day became night
and the man could see perfectly,
in the distance, a gathering of customers
high-fiving over the trimmings
of a Sunday roast together.

© Carl Burkitt 2021

Baggage

I often think
about the person who voiced
the Sainsbury’s self-service checkout
leaving a house party.
I hear all the guests
drunkenly shouting
Thank you, goodbye!
as she shuts the door, her eyes
unexpectedly stuffed with tears.

© Carl Burkitt 2021

What else

I’ve been around
a lot of death lately
and today I found myself
with a 6 month old baby
sitting under a war memorial.
It thanked the people of Wimbledon
who gave their life in World War II
and I readjusted
the bunny shaped woollen hat
on my son’s head
and let the cold breeze
take us on.

© Carl Burkitt 2021