Athena
I
split my father coming out,
my
mother already
swallowed
up. I pushed
through
the labyrinth of childhood, grey
years
of dressing up in armour,
my
toys capable of murder.
As
I grew, everybody knew
me,
the woman warrior who wore the head
of
a gorgon across her breasts.
They
talked about the wisdom of my actions–
forcing
one brother to fight for justice and
stopping
another being revenged on his wife.
When
my heart emerged with the owls
I
made it curl up like the spine of a cat,
wondering
as I walked in the city that bore
my
name, under the lecherous gaze
of
the sun, if anyone would see I
wasn’t
made of clay.
Merope
You were a star, everyone said,
apart from my sisters, because you were mortal.
Maybe it was true.
You mesmerised me –
becoming the king of the city you founded,
reuniting a family despite a god’s anger.
Between us, it wasn’t always stellar,
like when you raped and tried to impregnate
your brother’s daughter, and when you made me
swear to throw your dead body into the public square
so when you washed-up naked at the shore
of the Styx, Hades wouldn’t let you in.
You’d couldn’t be without me, you announced.
Maybe it was true.
You mesmerised them
and hung solid-gold love around my neck.
Even being sentenced to roll a boulder up
a hill for ever couldn’t dim your light
as they bayed for your release
I slipped into the sky,
hiding my face from my shimmering sisters
who couldn’t forgive,
paler every day
but far away
from your gaslighting.
A star nobody saw.
The
Coat Stand Grows Old
In
summer, an abundance
of
silks and cottons were gentled
on
her. In winter, she was adorned
with
fur and suede, velvet and tweed, wool and fleece.
In
the spring and autumn, she received leather and denim.
Umbrellas,
hats and scarves were carefully bestowed.
She
held everything, never buckling or tipping,
drawing
in scents and sensing stories.
On
the best days a possession was left
and
she could keep it for its owner.
Every
touch transported her.
Now
she is naked in a corner
grumpily
moved to make room
for
whiteboards, flip charts, etcetera
as
coats hang from chair backs, hats sulk in bags
and
umbrellas lurk under tables.
Occasionally
someone trips over or walks into her
and
she is sworn at and kicked.
Soon, she knows, they’ll retire her to a skip.
Sam
Szanto lives in Durham, UK. Her collaborative poetry pamphlet, ‘Splashing Pink’
was published by Hedgehog Press and is a Poetry Book Society Winter 2023
Choice. Her pamphlet 'This Was Your Mother' was one of the winners of the 2023
Dreich Slims Contest and will be published this year. She won the 2020 Charroux
Poetry Prize and the First Writer International Poetry Prize, and her poetry
has been placed in many international journals including 'The North', ‘Northern
Gravy’ and 'The Storms'. She was awarded an MA with distinction from the Poetry
School / Newcastle University in 2023. Her short story collection was published
by Alien Buddha Press. She is an editor at ‘The Afterpast Review’. Find her on Twitter/X at sam_szanto, on Instagram at
samszantowriter and on her website at samszanto.com
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