On the Death of a Queen

there is laughter like the ripples
when something dark breaks the water,
the laughter of children colliding
with the inert thigh of their mother
stood hollering,

there is the laughter of that discovery
of looking up at the mother's face softening
and learning fear is a thing
you grow into
not out of,

there is the laughter of wind filling a sail
and two lovers’ hands on the tiller,
peacocks pluming and the dogs’ mistress returning
to a forest of tails around the hearse,
there is

the laughter of doors opened slowly by lovers
with a bottle in one hand and a lie in the other,
then the dark laughter of the same door closing some hours later,
the laughter of disbelief and crumbs in the bed,
there is

the laughter of the town crier drunk in the night
swaying under a lit window
where
the pert whisper of a curtain being drawn
seems louder than the tolling bells.

This piece was featured in Volume 3, Issue 2. Click here to explore other pieces from this issue.

Justin Lowe

Justin Lowe was born in Sydney and spent his formative years on the Spanish island of Menorca with his artist mother and younger sister (his latest poetry collection San Luis is partly based on his experiences there). Known ostensibly as a poet, Justin has published widely both in Australia and overseas, and until last July he ran the international poetry blog Bluepepper. Justin has a collection of short stories in the offing. He has also had poems set to music by artists such as The Whitlams and The Impossibles. He currently lives in the Blue Mountains west of Sydney.

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