
A Cinquain for my dry cleaner
You wave
in the morning
removing the stubborn
aches in lost bones and the deep rum
punch stains.
© Carl Burkitt 2023
Weird
The bloke and his auntie are not eating
the gherkins next to their burgers and
I have never felt more lonely. Two mums
are discussing how their children have cried
every morning for two years going to nursery.
The owner of this eatery is brushing his teeth
behind the bar with his arm around his wife.
I can see two runners out the window
wearing denim shorts. Two blokes refused milk
and asked for five sugars in their tea.
The pair of gherkins are doing what they can
to convince me it wouldn’t be weird
if I just leant over and asked if I could eat them.
© Carl Burkitt 2023
Too cool for school
He’s doing some kind of maths work in the pub
wearing a black and yellow Spice Girls T-shirt
looking like the coolest guy in the world.
Maybe it’s the set square jawline,
the smile wider than an Excel spreadsheet,
or the way he just ran out the door
and down the road quicker than Mel C
to hand an old lady the woolly hat
she accidentally left on her booth chair
before leaving. When he returned
with the hat on his head declaring
it was not actually hers, I would have
kissed his calculator-hard pecs
if he’d asked me to.
© Carl Burkitt 2023
Flicking through the pages of a calendar
They call time a race.
Frank does what he can to dance,
charge through days like a great Dane.
Hours lean
in to watch my lad
say yes to a dare,
choose Velcro over a shoelace.
There is no time to clean
the path in front of him. I ran
slowly, pretending I was real,
looking for a time-bending clan.
© Carl Burkitt 2023
Controller
Gerald woke up in a computer game
and felt his lives increase. He started
living carelessly: eating turkey legs off the street
floor, crossing the road without looking left
and right, texting ex-girlfriends and boyfriends
pictures of his pixelated biceps. Gerald stopped
looking after himself. He wore the same clothes
every day and spent afternoons trying to jump over
things too tall for him to jump over. During his
down time Gerald thought about the person
playing him, the guy holding the controller
dictating his movements. He imagined him
having curly hair, a shrinking confidence.
Gerald started living even more carelessly
and held the hand of the controller.
© Carl Burkitt 2023
A Limerick for John standing at the bar with his six month old son
There once was a man with a strong head
Who laughed about shit nights in bed
His baby was teething
lied life was so easy
But his eyes left nothing unsaid
© Carl Burkitt 2023
A haiku for the six men in the pub
Twelve polished loafers
Half a dozen pints of ale
Zero how are yous
© Carl Burkitt 2023
Air. Blood.
Air cannot breathe between them,
the two-headed boy sharing shoulders.
The other kids at football club
respect space, spread out like new freckles
on hairless skin, but blood flows
between these two, sticks them together,
burns like jealousy or first love.
They will grow, call each other words
not yet invented, press each other’s buttons
with knowing bones. They will score
different goals, concede different goals.
Air will breathe between them.
Blood will continue to burn.
© Carl Burkitt 2023
Nod
My barber moves in precise silence.
When he’s in the weeds of my scalp
he does not care about my holiday
or what I am up to on the weekend.
He cannot see the weather through walls.
His scissors chat nervously.
The barber nods hello to every hair
and whispers goodbye.
© Carl Burkitt 2023