ISBN: 978-1-906700-54-6
Her first full collection Wherever We Live Now was published in 2011 by Red Squirrel Press.
Wherever We Live Now includes poems about archaeology, about the creation of a sense of belonging and of national identity, and about how the way we see and relate to the natural world shapes how we see and feel about ourselves and the communities we live in.
The People on the Streets
For Women in Black Scotland
There are people on the streets collecting
and shopping and on their way to work.
There are people bringing music and colour
and languages from everywhere, and suitcases,
and cameras stealing the architecture.
There are people on the streets, selling
or performing – silver and leather, and statues
suspended improbably, and opportunities
to take a selfie with a storm trooper,
follow a ghost, spit on a stone heart.
There are people on the streets, kneeling
on their muddy duvets, holding up cards
that claim they don’t take drugs. They have dogs
and tattoos, and nowhere to go, since hostels
have doubled their prices, and it is cold.
There are women on the streets in black.
They don’t sell anything. They are there
because of people who aren’t on the streets,
the bombed or disappeared. They will be there
in mourning until there is an end to war.
![]() | Elizabeth RimmerElizabeth Rimmer was born and educated in Liverpool and moved to Scotland in 1977, where she lives beside the river Forth. Poet, gardener, river-watcher, and grandmother, her roots are Catholic, radical, feminist and green. She is inspired by weather, landscape and tradition, and writes about language, legends and our relationships with the environment. |