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Ellen de Vries lives in Nottingham, in the UK, in a small flat above a fish restaurant. Originally from the Netherlands, she is in an MA program for creative writing. She has recently ventured onto the net and into performance poetry.
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THREE POEMS
It
even with yellow guinness bellies,
with sleep not coming easy
in the tangerine bedclothes,
even with eyes like unstoppable trains
mixed with yellow bellies,
hands
finger knots, junctions intederminable
ways to hold on in the night.
together
we count one sheep. Push him
somewhere into the middle of night
where we unfold our tongues.
Later I watch the words climbing into
the nape of your neck comfortably;
Together, still is
an awkward way of fitting two people
into one word, one bed until morning or past that
Cue the birds' singing.
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Marjory
As it was I didn't know auntie Marjory well
We only talked once or twice.
She strolled through Marakesh in a straw hat,
she been to Colombia and Russia and back
had the pipe tobacco
tasted the eggs of sturgeon.
Then someone told me how she'd once robbed banks;
As a result it was said that
in the night, she grew more and more petrified that they
Who?
They were coming to get her;
To take her to Vienna, with reference to the banks.
The grey woman clutched her blankets,
Stared bulb eyed at the door like they were coming.
But one night she seized up with fear completely,
she died.
I wouldn't have thought it.
Nobody would have thought it but she did.
It turns out she never left Bedfordshire;
Her bungalow, her garden, or the safety of the precinct.
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Holes
There are holes that expect things
a foot fits in a sock
an arm runs through a sleave
a head fits in a cap
and
There are holes that expect things
like graves
then
There are holes that do not expect
To be filled with persons
.
Ellen de Vries
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Sometimes a bit of ground is a hidden hole, waiting.
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