Tag: Formal Poems

  • Quatrina by Neil Fulwood

    A half halved. A quarter moon. The Sign of Four.
    Two slices across the pie chart. I’m sorry; let
    me start again. I’m talking about dividing or
    multiplying by four, the answer or image you get

    by quartering or quadrupling. Or what little you get
    from a quick trawl of the library shelves: The Four
    Feathers, Four Past Midnight, Four Quartets, and let
    us not forget Four Children and It. Why do five or

    seven get the better deal? Enid Blyton and the rich ore
    of children’s fiction, that’s why! If it’s not Five Get
    Kidnapped by Somali Pirates then it’s Seven for
    the Cup, Good Show, Hooray! Give me a break. Let

    me disentangle from their tea-time adventures, let
    the tomboy and the girly-girl get better acquainted, or
    the dog make a break for freedom, run wild, get
    its Jack London funk on. Let anarchy come to the fore

    and words give numbers what for. Yes! And let
    no quarter be asked or given. And let the reader forget.

    Neil Fulwood was born in 1972 and got involved with poetry at an impressionable age. His interests include visiting inns and taverns of architectural interest. Some people confuse this with pub-crawling.