Thursday, 11 June 2026

Carmella de Keyser, "Chasms"



Carmella de Keyser is a prize-winning British poet, known for explorations of identity, and the liminal spaces of human experience. Her writing spans both adult and children’s poetry. Founder of Harlow’s first Poetry Society Stanza, judge for the Harlow Poetry Open, she is committed to the democratisation of poetry and is an active figure in the grassroots UK poetry scene. De Keyser has five books published or forthcoming, from Hedgehog Press, Alien Buddha Press, Parlyaree Press and the Seventh Quarry Press. Her accolades include winning first prize for the Hedgehog Poetry Press Pamphlet competitions of 2024 and 2025 and achieving over 100 of her poems published in contemporary journals such as The Madrid Review, Hooghly Review, Dream Catcher: International Arts Journal and Dust Poetry Magazine amongst others. She has had her writing selected for podcasts and radio shows including for the BBC and has had the honour of having her poetry widely anthologised including by the major publishing house Macmillan. Her website is here



About Chasms, by Carmella de Keyser
Chasms is a reflective journey into intersections, an exploration of identities, trauma, conflict, justice and recalled memories of visiting the Balkans juxtaposed with London life in the 90’s. The word chasm originates from the Greek word "khasma" meaning yawning hollow or gulf. It can also be a profound divide, rift or impassable rupture in the earth between peoples, feelings or ideas. The poems within Chasms consider dissonance and identity across different settings, borders, edges, and of projective identifications of self and the other, yet they also invite in space for bridges to be built across these gulfs via joy, integration and reconciliation.


From Chasms

Reflections

Baba's face resembles railroad tracks that disappear into each other. 
Like an Escher woodcut. 
I can look at it for hours …
She has been perma-sketched by early dawns in the Balkan sun. 
Grooming her garden,
Twisting cucumbers away from their tender climbing. 
When she smiles, three more lines crack open - from each of the sides of her cinnamon eyes. 
As her lips downturn again, the motifs across her face are filled with wholesome flesh, plumped up by "baklava," "tulumba" and "revani." 
She has toiled for her whole life and her skin is all stories. 

My reflection has no novellas,
Or folk tales, 
Or kneeling in the early womb of the teeming soil, 
It’s paler than hers, has lived in colder climates, 
My cheeks are smooth, mirthless urbanised tombs,
Yet for a moment -
Drawn in, by her flare, and her gaze,
Her face warms mine.

No More Anniversaries

A pile for "her" and a pile for "him,"
Twenty years and it’s come to this.
The mahogany music stand – "his."
The mini pyramid ornaments – "hers."
The toaster – "his."
The porcelain chopsticks – "not sure."
Plates from his intrusive mother – "Who cares?!"
The origami child coiled in the corner – "theirs."
Some things can never be unshared.

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