Ophelia

Illustrated by Ella Clayton.
Illustrated by Ella Clayton.

Oh Hamlet, my lord,

a pleasure it is to

drown thee.

I mourned for thy

madness – no more.

My father pierced,

myself scorned,

a daughter’s grief is

worth threescore of

thy spendthrift mutterings.

Not to be… n-n-not to be’,

O! Take brook down thy

stammering gullet.


Too much of water hast thou,

so I shall spare my tears.

Rosemary and pansies,

fennel, columbines, and rue:

all are too fresh for thee.

Perhaps they shall

paint you one day,

floating and bloated,

choking on black bile

and vomited words.

I shall watch the painter

frame thy watery grave,

and laugh.

Ryan O'Shea

Ryan is a MA student in English Literary Studies at Castle. He used the last of his brain cells to write this poem, so hopefully he'll grow a few more soon. He is also one of the Fiction editors and tweets via @RyanOShea42.

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Those that bite beneath a mask of beauty

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Purgatorio, Stockton House, 2008