Jean Sprackland

Jean Sprackland’s Sleeping Keys was published in 2013.

Three Poems

Jean Sprackland, 6 February 2003

No Man’s Land: I

Every day I walk this tightrope of tarmac, blown toppling in the wake of juggernauts. I walk it to learn the line of the road, to keep my place on it. When I was a lad my dad took me to a strange part of town, left me to find the five miles home – a stiff task that taught me to trust my feet. In a car, it’s all distortion, one landmark smudging the next:...

Poem: ‘Tilt’

Jean Sprackland, 24 May 2007

I

When the wind collapses at last the sand glitters with oil like the fine mist of blood a dying man would breathe onto his friend’s face and shirt.

It’s this freak weather. For five days and five nights the storm hacked the steel legs, mauled the derricks. The pipes flailed and shuddered. Nothing the men could do but play blackjack and drink the rig dry.

He has his friend by the...

Poem: ‘Three Lakes’

Jean Sprackland, 2 August 2007

I

The lake had been drained that night and filled with sky instead.

We stood on the jetty as if on a summit, looking down on a fathomless depth of cloud.

Sky overhead, sky at our feet

like deep past and deep future

and we stood halfway between.

It was one ten in the morning. I can’t remember who stood there with me.

II

Its green complacency makes him cruel. He tramps the shoreline,...

Poem: ‘The Source’

Jean Sprackland, 19 June 2008

Want to learn the source, the cool under the surface fire? Watch the heron:

he snatches the silver voice from the throat of the river and swallows it live.

How quick the water heals and speaks again, how many darting notes among the reeds.

Follow with your rod and line, tear a wound and drag out an echo.

Take home your hoard of silver. Run a blade along the seam of the belly,

spill the...

Diary: In the Mud

Jean Sprackland, 6 October 2011

Nine o’clock on a winter morning. I crunched my way through sand-dunes hardened and sheened with frost, then slithered over a sheet of ice. Under the ice, pale bubbles swelled and skittered away from my tread. The tideline was a sparkling white ribbon of frozen froth, curling away into the distance. I stopped to watch oystercatchers pecking at a frozen pool. I visited a shipwreck, its...

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