Ken Evans’s poems appear in Poetry Scotland, Magma, Under the Radar, Envoi, 14, The High Window, and IS&T. He won the Leeds Peace Prize in 2019; the Kent & Sussex Poetry Competition (2018); and Battered Moons (2016). He has twice been longlisted in the National Poetry Competition (2015 and 2020). His second collection, To An Occupier Burning Holes, was launched by Salt in October.
The poems in To An Occupier Burning Holes observe and dissect the minutiae of ordinary relationships and happenings, ranging across daily life, as well as attempting to tackle a larger canvas, of contemporary climate collapse, plagues and war. There’s an interest in historical incident as a comparator, attempting to ‘fix’ and focus a current event or idea in a longer-range view and context.
At times, they play and twist form (there are sonnets, a ghazal, a villanelle) as well as try to update styles largely out of vogue – there’s an eclogue and invocation, for example.
The tone is restless - often dark, surreal, absurd, and sardonic, as well as playful, metaphoric and sometimes downright funny, tackling topics as diverse as lost hearing-aids, AI, funeral invoices, the life of fruit flies, migration, bins, love, family and travel.
To an Occupier Burning Holes
on a scrap of paper and throw it on their bonfire:
a ritual purge, our lives crumpled, shorn
in a black smoke of scribble.
dressed in plastic at the back of a wardrobe,
and am teased for it, so throw it to the fire
came down from patriachs, or else starchy
of course. Erasure of ties with the past, but not so
lack, what the regime will provide – revisions.
scarves up a sleeve, a white rabbit, in hiding. Some
Brown, Sasha Roberts, the hyphen, a knife cut through
as strong. Others hide it in their first: Bodhan becomes
side like a smile, with two fingers up, at lapel height.
Bacchanale
The invader sends wine to sweeten us,
our fighters in a street in green fatigues.
They wave and stagger till they fall over,
red wine pouring from their throats.
rounds, but they refuse, ‘No, this is on us,
drunk songs yell from booze-sodden beds.
fiery vodka, cognac, brandy, Jäger bombs.
children bewildering in the red spills.
crimson mask for a face, unrecognisable,
like big silver fish burst forth from nets.
in the venue. This is not permissable.
they chuck it everywhere, singed carpets,
of blown-out of entrances, too off-their-face
frantic, ‘Kristina, I have aspirin, I have water.’
Anaesthetising Flies in the Lab
Drosophila melanogaster, the fruit fly
can help these young babies with folded wings
like swaddling bands, settle to their exoskeletons,
and lull them toward the entrancement of sleep.
You have a god-like half-hour in the fly nursery
as they rest, for they rise quickly on feeling warm,
and like all newborns, wake hungry for nipagin-
ethanol solution and bio-agar, plus a little water.
Pull the front legs off as they sleep to see
how they preen. They are spotless, contrary
to expectation, and polish each body part
in order, the eyes, antennae, then head.
Front legs torn off, they adapt in forty-eight hours,
or eight years in human life and start to clean
with their middle legs. This learning, beyond all
my easy metaphor.
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