Owen Sheers
Owen Sheers
Owen Sheers
Owen Sheers
Owen Sheers
Owen Sheers
Owen Sheers
Owen Sheers
Owen Sheers
Owen Sheers
Owen Sheers
Owen Sheers
Owen Sheers
Owen Sheers
Owen Sheers
Owen Sheers
Owen Sheers
Owen Sheers
Owen Sheers
Owen Sheers
Owen Sheers
Owen Sheers
Owen Sheers
Owen Sheers
Owen Sheers
Owen Sheers
Owen Sheers
Owen Sheers
Owen Sheers
Owen Sheers
Owen Sheers
Owen Sheers
Owen Sheers
Owen Sheers
Owen Sheers
Owen Sheers
Owen Sheers
Owen Sheers
Owen Sheers
Owen Sheers
Owen Sheers
Owen Sheers
Skirrid Hill’ takes its origin from the Welsh, ‘Ysgirid Fawr’ which roughly translates as ‘shattered mountain’. ‘Skirrid’ can also mean ‘divorced or separated’ – the theme is the connotation of something broken down or split away — the natural deterioration and separation of people and things.
Th...
i.m. Jean Sheers
There were instruments, as there always are,
to measure, record and monitor,
windows into the soul's temperature.
But you were disconnected from these
and lay instead an ancient child
fragile on your side,
your breath working at the skin of your cheek
like a blustery wind at a blind.
There was only one measurement
I needed anyway, which you gave,
triggered by the connection of my kiss
against your paper temple
and registered in the flicker open of your eyes,
in their half-second of recorded understanding
before they disengaged and you slipped back
into the sleep of their slow-closing.
The Skirrid Hill collection was published in 2005. I don’t think it’s recorded when Sheers' grandmother, Jean, died.