Published in Overland Issue 235 Winter 2019 · Uncategorized Sapphic legacy Siobhan Hodge Marble braced – you are fed on the offerings loved by women. Tender sheets, beloved breast and curving hip. Aphrodite’s call was yours to issue. You are softness, pleasure and the push. You take all that we still give. Dark eye and proud brow. Took the name and made it foreign, home and whole. To make love as the women from Lesbia used to mean a very different thing. You took that too and made crushed violets of sweet longing. I can only roll apples for a glance – we were made for each other – time apart. Maybe you would have cursed my eyes, damned my step and broken my every tooth in your open, pulping mouth as you did those girls before. Image: Thomas Kelley on Unsplash Read the rest of Overland 235 If you enjoyed this poem, buy the issue Or subscribe and receive four brilliant issues for a year Siobhan Hodge Siobhan Hodge has a PhD in English. She won the 2017 Kalang Eco-Poetry Award and 2015 Patricia Hackett Award. Her poetry and critical work has been published and translated widely. Her new chapbook, Justice for Romeo, is available through Cordite Books. More by Siobhan Hodge › Overland is a not-for-profit magazine with a proud history of supporting writers, and publishing ideas and voices often excluded from other places. If you like this piece, or support Overland’s work in general, please subscribe or donate. Related articles & Essays 29 April 202629 April 2026 · literary culture “You are here”: a conversation about poetry and politics with Jeanine Leane Lyndall Thomas Jeanine won the 2025 Victorian Premier’s Literary Award for her collection of poetry, gawimarra gathering. My conversation with her was recorded on Bunurong Country and in Naarm, in the east Kulin nations. 28 April 202628 April 2026 · History Red Hunter: inspiration from history for an eco-socialist movement Tim Briedis There is an incredible history of worker radicalism in the Hunter Valley region. Workers and communists took on governments, police, banks and bosses, unionised whole industries from scratch, and formed militant Labour Defence Armies of hundreds. While these are not specifically environmentalist actions, there is much to take inspiration from in this history of defiance and rebellion. It is a story of class struggle, collective action and combativeness.