June Poetry Compilation

The Sunstroke Monthly Poetry Compilation is a collection of poetry submitted by Sunstroke readers and staff members. Take a seat, light a candle, grab a cup of tea, and dive into the intricate words of our community.


Artwork by Casey Beifuss

Back in my day…

By Imogen Beaumont

Sure. 

Back in your day, when you wipe
the zealous crumbs from your eager lips,
you spare gratitude and leave your mother
quaintly bound by her pale apron, fingers glued
to the kitchen sink. You don’t prise her off,
but you savour the sweet taste of her labour.

Back in your day,
Though you wrestle, kick and run
with the lads in your estate, thousands lay beaten
for their skin alone. As they cry for help,
you run along, fleeing into the freedom of your day,
only recalling those prolonged hours in the sun.

Back in your day,
while you get off with the girl-next-door,
two boys die for a single kiss,
final gasps breaking in each other’s embrace.
But you remember her breath against yours:
the liberating ardour of your adolescence…

***

To the Aging House on Valley Drive

By Caterina DeSantis

Tripping over stone paths
To a vacant backyard
They are
Inside on the couch
Mouths open mesmerized
by flashing images and sounds
The smell of baked lasagna from the oven
Told me to set the table for dinner
Where we would wait forever
For grandma to chew her food
Here I realized
Time was not forever
Here I hit the piano keys when they lit up
red
solo cup she bathed my hair with while she called me
princess
shape of the chalky gummies I snuck out of the closet, they were
pastel
plastic tea set I drank from as they rested their eyes,
heavy
brothers’ backs hitting the floor as they wrestled
where no kids were allowed,
the living room
lined with artifacts from travels around the world
In glass cases as if to say this piece of us cannot deteriorate

The ability to move a priceless gift
Put on the market like the house on Valley Drive
Kept together by aging bones
And oh how they ache
Full of memories and weight

***

A Post-Apocalyptic Diary

By Willow Kang Liew Bei

i. The First Month

Fires, cataclysmic raiders brought on by the shelling
have grounded this terra into draconic bone
not even the primordial oak trees survive,
remnants of their bark scattered around what
were once parks. The red spider lilies lay ashen
in graves charred with similarly ambitious cherubims
& the skeletons of the artists still clutch rifles
which we pry from them in death
will the emptiness relieve them or
had the weight been a passing mourner
So, like the rightful monarchs before us, those
pickaxe-wielding kings & queens in woven hats
we mine, for stardust from the powdered ruins
of this cursed city
then with tender breaths, sweep the dust into animal biscuits
wait for life to scuttle again

ii. The Second Month

We freed the bunnies today
from that unknowable tabula rasa of the cargo bay.
Outside was a more unforgiving prairie
where imperial carpets are red, dyed with blood
rubies cruelly pillaged from stardust
& as the bunnies journey they will find
other smoldering lives, but in this country
a civilization of creatures in eternal naivete
stampeding bunnies will finally overrun the killing fields

iii. The Third Month

After we delivered the corpses home,
saw to the spirit’s ascension on haloed aviaries
let us hop up onto the roof and watch
with bated breath the shimmering cast of candles
dance through the black grime of this oil-coated earth
let us feel, together, living flesh undulating again,
that melts the unyielding isolation
of this city built from past desolations, past mistakes

iv. The Fourth Month

Two lovers waltz in the kitchen,
swirls of chocolate following their footsteps
twisting and turning like a spasming clock
& Upon them I pray
for the door gods' blessings
to keep away the snow-coated coyotes,
those imps of the Moon's mischief

v. The Fifth Month

I can make a promise to you,
about the wastelands: soon we can build
our cabins there, trees too
imperial ones, cedars & jacarandas &
everything else the garden gnomes
would call for, teapots & pools
Are you still worrying about the grazing creatures
with their serrated mouths?
But who wouldn't want the Easter bunnies back
You forget, how they huddled in their flocks
when the planets came crashing down on us
their cries, a siren that cut through
our jaggy slumbers, woke us up to the inferno
so let them in too & maybe we can learn
together, to be two ludic mountain shepherds 

vi. The Sixth Month

We bade farewell to the crumbling grounds, instead
step, jump lighter than the bumbling missiles did,
into the radiance of the clouds,
still balmy from leftover solar flares & there
we will create a new sanctuary for trustful bunnies
beneath us, hellhounds roam but here
in this genesis, why not try
to understand first, how gentle giants become
after all, we, as morsels of stardust
were not born bellicose

vii. The Seventh Month

For the terrapin is an overeating nebulae
teeth like celestial cutters
It would love the starfish, the glitter
spilled on the floorboards by the sun
a toddler, hands flailing like the clock
does when it looks down to see itself straddling
this colorful winded horse called life 

viii. The Eighth Month

The children hold their picnics &
high teas on the lawn, flying kites
without worrying about airplane crashes
By dusky hues we sit on swings
do nothing at all, except feel for the
cautious hops of bunnies on the spring soil,
the yoga sequences of the clouds
it is only at night that the terrors manifest
& this second can be as long
as we want it to be, like how the children
never fear at all, for sundown & going home

ix. The Ninth Month

The universe spins on the axes of
a single stalk of wildflower
we spend mornings in the national parks,
laughing like the shrill wind
without rations & cabins
mouths earthen, drooling dew

x. The Tenth Month

The acid rains have come and gone
now it is us, huddled by the fire
singing songs of our ancestors
with silver tongues
there is a future to worry about
but let us breathe more
of this terra's perfumed air,
with its floating nectar & now, dew rains
because our silver tongues too can weave
into the tapestry of our muddled fates
something coherent, a worldly raison d'etre

Find out how to submit to future Poetry Compilations here.