in the very west
there is something about
how high tide brought full circle and a stray
egret went and claimed he was afraid
right short they are on rock pools
even
intertidally because those trees before were hardly
sea palms whether kelp is fun to say as nap
so I have been told to go down weary in the kelp or suggest
or something if togetherness and tenderness
more than tethered-ness matter in
elevations as tight as the wave it is braced
toward then that is as well as I can put things when
home is provided for home is still an island far from
inhabitants like seals and starfish for I reckon
narwhals are as close to permissibly equine as
green rocks and a white belly might be in other words
a refusal to say wave stallion or the rest
because armour twice upon each
organism has withstood or grey together
underwent very harsh tides quite
tired of pressure loss of water loss
barnacles though steel themselves better than
anemones for if barnacles if ever
rarely fight then they cannot
not nearly
advise on issues such as
colony water coverage or territory for if
long-time wed to good rock or good seal
each barnacle contentedly is
subjected to necrosis of alone a final sort
Andrew Wells is the founding editor of HVTN and on the editorial team at The Interpreter’s House. He is based jointly between Norwich (studying on the English Literature and Creative Writing BA at the University of East Anglia), and London. He has reviewed for Glasgow Review of Books and his essay ‘Waiting for Goals’ is forthcoming with Fanzine. His poetry has appeared in 3:AM Magazine, Lighthouse, Bare Fiction, and Sharkpack 2014-2017, among others. His first pamphlet was J/W/U (PYRAMID Editions, 2016). He has read for the Enemies Project, as part of the ‘North by North West Poetry Tour’, and Drawing Breath.