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Amelia Loulli

wave

4

autumn

2020

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the poet

Amelia Loulli is a poet living in Cumbria. A pamphlet of her poetry was published by Nine Arches Press in Primers Volume Four. Her work has twice been shortlisted for the Bridport Poetry Prize, and longlisted in 2020 for the Rebecca Swift Foundation's Women Poets' Prize. Amelia is an MA Writing Poetry student at Newcastle University, and was recently selected by New Writing North to deliver creative writing workshops to young writers as part of their Inkubator scheme. She's currently working on a pamphlet of new poems, as well as a verse novel.

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the poems

Teenage Mother

00:00 / 01:18

they talk to me,

the day you were born,

as though another me stepped out

and never returned, my very own

double image, retreating, and for years

I only know knees of the dirty kind,


hands which would struggle to pick up

a small stone, a halo fastened at the neck.

There is a world in which I never had you,

the handle to my parent’s bedroom door

was missing, leaving behind a small

square eye hole, just above bed height.

I carried love around with me like milk

in a shallow bowl, watching it lapping the sides,

each drop bleaching my skin, there were days I broke


our home with only a few words,

I am not your mother. Mother

has gotten itself stuck in my throat,

grown like a tumour or a foetus

but faster, from poppy seed to broad bean

until it’s swollen so hard I can’t


say anything more. In your bunk bed,

behind your back, I lie, holding on

to your plaited hair like a rope.

First Blood

00:00 / 01:11

The dolls are bleeding,

all of them leaking,

red and black

from their forever open mouths,

what can we fill them with?

I don’t like the way

they look at me

like they expect something more.

Since you’ve been gone,


they’ve started touching themselves,

running their plastic fingers

up their own shiny thighs.

I don’t know how to stop them,

so I wait for you to come home,

whilst they slide their tongues

around their lips and look

at each other, eyes growing big.

Last night I filled an egg cup


with baking soda and vinegar,

and tried to clean their faces,

you were still gone,

they wouldn’t let me near,

until I promised

to pour the vinegar away

and bleed with them, so I did,

legs touching, my bled fingerprints

forming like wax seals upon our skin.

Broken Waters

00:00 / 01:22

Most people drown

without making

a noise or splashing. See me


here Baby, watch

me lying

out plank, below the surface,


all that stillness, all that

peace, see

how long I can breathe


down here alone. You must

trust me,

I am your mother after all,


don’t think about the firefighter

who lies

to the woman on the phone inside


the burning building, says he’s on his

way up

to save her, then hands her brother


back the phone, tell her you

love her,

knowing all his tears


won’t be enough to quiet the

flames, I am

your mother after all, I am made


to do this. When the mother harp seal

leaves its cub,

nobody calls it a mistake,


I have been at this much longer than

twelve days –

just let me float here a while, Baby


you will still remember my face.

It will be

the same one you wear every time


life cuts in such a way – the serration

drags the exact

formation of ripples upon its shape.

Publishing credits

Teenage Mother / First Blood: Primers: Volume Four

  (Nine Arches Press)

Broken Waters: Oxford Brookes Poetry Centre Weekly Poem

  (July 25th 20219)

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