A poem by Imogen Forster
Damascus, August 2013 The dead lie in neat rows, each wrapped in a shroud bunched above the head, tied with a thick cord, their faces exposed like old John Donne’s in the engraving made for his monument. It’s easy to slide away from the cold fact, mind-wandering in sudden recognition, seeing them as those dusty figures we passed in some cool cathedral. But … Continue reading A poem by Imogen Forster