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Hilaire - Letter from Battersea to Shaker Aamer, Guantanamo

Well Versed is edited by JODY PORTER

Letter from Battersea
to Shaker Aamer, Guantanamo

Hilaire

The park is much the same.
Spring arrives earlier each year.
First, snowdrops, in stealthy clumps,
nodding their hope to the sodden ground.
Crocuses, sudden cups of lilac,
saffron, ivory, trumping St. Valentine’s Day—
cruel anniversary of your rendition,
your unmet son’s birth.
And still a coming-up of daffodils;
blizzards of blossom on leafless trees;
catkins twisting towards detachment.
Birdsong and nesting exist in this place.
I press words into the page—
forget-me-nots sewn in your name.
Down the road,
they are laying the foundations
of the new American embassy.
Good neighbours,
we are preparing our welcome.
See our banners. Hear our chants.
Free Shaker Aamer.
Bring him home.

Hilaire is a Melbourne-born, London-based writer. Her poetry and stories have been published  in several anthologies and various magazines, including Brittle Star, Under the Radar and Smoke: A London Peculiar. This poem was first published in the Stare’s Nest.

Well Versed is edited by Jody Porter – wveditor@gmail.com
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