Public Service Announcement without Violins
by Adele Evershed
CW: Contains sexually explicit language.
In our summer
we made love outside
like the great romantic poets
Byron or Keats—those wet-dreaming rebels
my back pressed against ancient bark
a rough reminder that outside marriage
this was once thought unholy
there was a scent of something feral in the bushes
or maybe that was just you—glowing with sweat and sap
we were always a whisper away from being discovered
and I imagined that was why
I never climaxed
(although you had no such trouble)
In my winter
I know I need creature comforts
to make me come—
a warm womb of a room
lit with the old romance of candles
maybe a deep throated singer promising
to fly me to the moon
the quickness of a tongue
and the slowness of fingers
laying me down stone by stone
like a place of worship
the deep slow build
of an ache as old as Eve
until out of that liminal space
a piercing so sweetly agonizing
I forget myself and call on God
(although I no longer believe)
And maybe that’s why
I’ve always trusted winter more
Adele Evershed is a Welsh writer who swapped the Valleys for the American East Coast. A Pushcart-nominated poet, her work has appeared in Poetry Wales, Comstock Review, Literary Mama, and Modern Haiku, amongst others. Her poetry includes the collection Turbulence in Small Spaces (Finishing Line Press) and a forthcoming collection, In the Belly of the Wail (Querencia Press). Her flash fiction includes the novellas-in-flash Wannabe and Schooled (Alien Buddha Press) and A History of Hand Thrown Walls (Unsolicited Press).
Find her on X @AdLibby1, Instagram @ad_libby, and BlueSky @adlibby.bsky.social.
