Friday, 29 May 2026

Two Poems & Three Haubun Poems by Carmella de Keyser

 






DREAMMAKER

 

In him, we sanguinely invest,

Our hopes, our untreated vulnerabilities,

He carries so much, for all of us-

A glistening ballad of lilac wine,

He is robed in gold, winged and entombed, by our dreams,

That we have guilelessly bestowed on him,

Without uncertainties, or second thoughts.

He could do with us whatever he wants, or wills, on a whim, with our trust-

He has all the harnessing power,

He can replicate us into profusion, or make us disappear into Tahitian pearl fragments,

Into dust.

Despite him holding all the keys, the shamrock, the shackles, we still look up to him!

Searching…

For a place to leave our benign dreams,

And he rises, supernal, incorporeal and shining,

Luminescent,

Effervescent,

Ethereal!

He grows, prospers, blooms and mushrooms-

Holding boundless space for us all.

Yet we none of us are equipped or able to concede to ourselves,

That he, our dreammaker, is a total fraud ...

 

(An ekphrastic poem after ‘The Star Maker’, a 1995 film, directed by Giuseppe Tornatore)


 

DISUNION

 

in the city, there are multiple ways to connect and find presence

blunt force

a brisk morning walk facing the lemon sun,

trauma

an oat matcha latte with a friend

fawn

listening to the trill of a blue tit clinging to a filigree tree at the park 

hyperarousal

reading in the tunnels of the train

disengagement

family brunches, shashuka, mimosa, a cinnamon bun,

intergenerational shame

Visiting the national portrait gallery

identity confusion

Going home to a loved one

disunion

 

 

HOMESICK

 

While visiting nana as a child, I used to watch her fleshy, jellied arms, toiling and drumming splittercore beats into pastry, in the midday heat. Her home was open sands, candid waters, outstretched hands, pretty shadows, the earth’s crust, and love worn faces tanning on the porch. Each summer living colour would outshine my monochrome. Hushed and quiet, we would crowd atop each other like ice cream spoons. Hot breath on our necks, words in soft whispers, our tummies bubbled and burned.

A pinch of sea salt,

Red peppers grill on flames.

A wish to return.


 

OUT OF SYNC

 

Aromatic mangoes, and a golden fistful of pulpy heliophiles, enjoy the tempestuous popsicle squeeze of the swell. Their ripples of laughter fill the esplanade, as high helium in birthday balloons. Secrets and seaweed are brought as gifts to the shoreline, while my head is syncopated jazz, and his bony hands atonal driftwood.

 

Broken glass, low tide,

Sand-soaked palms, hold small seashells,

Sudden loneliness… 


 

POSTBOX

 

Living scarlet colour contains a spiderweb of graphology. A kaleidoscope of situations, people purgatories and thoughts. Secrets, bills, lies, birthday cards. Visa applications, love letters, late letters and divorce papers. Sealed, stamped, pressed, concealed in brown or fresh cream envelopes.

The postman comes twice,

His arms are long and wiry,

He holds all the words. 


 



Carmella de Keyser is a prize-winning British poet, known for explorations of identity, and the liminal spaces of human experience. Founder of the Harlow Circle of Poetry Stanza, judge for the Harlow Poetry Open, she has two published chapbooks, and three books are forthcoming, from Hedgehog Press, Alien Buddha Press, Parlyaree Press and the Seventh Quarry Press.

 

 

 

 


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