And just like that
it was done.
The windows were shut,
the floor was cleaned,
the door was closed.
Move on,
they reckon.
© Carl Burkitt 2020
And just like that
it was done.
The windows were shut,
the floor was cleaned,
the door was closed.
Move on,
they reckon.
© Carl Burkitt 2020
There’s a little stack of unread books
sitting on a white, wooden unit in the living room.
They could be about absolutely anything.
Fire. Guns. The tale of a tree’s lifetime.
Wizards. Darts. Facts about jungles.
Perhaps there’s a young boy in one of them
desperate to learn how to ride a bike.
There’s probably death in one.
And fireworks. And chocolate.
Those untouched pages could be filled with worlds
made of first times and tumbling walls.
There could be terrified lions, broken watches,
roads leading to doors leading to rivers.
There’s definitely death in one.
There must be death in one.
I can feel it.
© Carl Burkitt 2020
Last Thursday you got kidnapped by wolves.
Friday evening wasn’t much better
as you slipped down the plughole.
I watched an avalanche crush you on Monday morning.
On Sunday afternoon a kite caught your sleeve
and took you to the other side of the world.
It was only 20 minutes ago
that your vital organs melted into slush
and your clothes were sandpaper
and your eyes were egg cups
and your teeth grew out of our elbows.
Do you remember when the loose nail
in our living room caught a flap of your heel skin
and unravelled you like a frayed jumper?
Every time I shut my eyes you are in hell.
© Carl Burkitt 2020
I like combing my beard and thinking about
what historic bearded men thought about
when combing theirs. I imagine Abraham Lincoln
pulling out in-growing hairs and pondering
tomorrow’s breakfast; Karl Marx wiping milk
off his moustache, struggling to remember if he
locked the front door; Charles Darwin playing with
his sideburns and wondering if a newborn baby
will remember accidentally being sworn at;
Leonardo de Vinci separating split ends and bringing
you back to life in the mirror; Sophocles fiddling
with his goatee trying to work out the difference
between a clementine and a tangerine.
© Carl Burkitt 2020
There’s a dead pigeon
on the path outside my front gate
and I’m desperate
to write something
to do it justice,
but I can’t.
All I can think about is you
on the side of the road
surrounded by feathers,
the world walking around your body
giving you a wide berth.
© Carl Burkitt 2020
From BBQ sauce
to treacle
to caramel
to mint sauce
to pesto
to piccalilli
to Colman’s
to Dijon
to scrambled egg.
Your bumhole
is the most confusing
Pokémon in the world.
© Carl Burkitt 2020
I watched a stranger walk in the rain
as if nothing was falling from the sky.
She bounced down the street,
her vest and short shorts drowning,
her flip-flops splish-sploshing,
her sun-cream dripping
down her red raw forearms.
Her smiling teeth were deckchairs
draped in grey cloud towels.
Perhaps it wasn’t raining,
perhaps the sun was finally melting.
Perhaps she was a ghost
given a short window to feel again.
© Carl Burkitt 2020
Today we picked up Thor’s hammer with our pinkies.
We swam in a volcano and emerged with Teflon skin.
We juggled a piranha, a chainsaw and an egg.
Today we killed all the birds with zero stones
and bought them all back to life.
We turned water into wine.
We turned whine into silence.
Today we blew up the sun.
We replaced our eyes with stars.
We tickled the tummy of a lion.
Today we took the devil out for dinner
and made him pay the bill.
Today we only just got started.
© Carl Burkitt 2020

Wore a vest.
Winked at a 16-inch free standing fan.
Had three showers.
Changed my boxer shorts four times.
Swore at a nail in a floorboard.
Stuck a finger up at the sky.
Stared at a set of lungs.
Looked for answers in the white dots
on a nose that hasn’t decided whose it is yet.
Imagined the smile your children would’ve had
and wondered if you ever saw a heatwave.
© Carl Burkitt 2020