Friday, December 29, 2017

Cruelty



After rubbing his hands vigorously,
Paul presented his right to the teacher,
who smashed the bamboo down on it,
then hit his knuckles on the upswing.

Each slap was met with a yelp of pain;
six in quick succession, and more almost daily;
more with each new year;
with each new teacher.

Paul was from a poor family,
the least academic in the class,
he left school early; was sent away;
he ended his life when it was supposed to begin.

.

Tuesday, December 26, 2017

In This Mood

Sometimes,  perfect renderings of still life might signify a state of mind.


In this mood,

things become more defined, absolute, more themselves.
The silver sugar bowl is not just reflective,
but a collection of the objects around it.
The shadows between the soaking peas are as dark
and mysterious as those between trees in a forest;
scale is immaterial, the detail is precise.

Colours become experiences: I look into red,
as I’d search inside the flow a river; browns
take on the richness of mahogany,
a grain inside the colour, a dynamic.
I reach for the sugar and watch my hand, from mid-arm,
travelling over the table like a boat heading out to sea.

It seems that my eyes suck the energy that is in me;
build this crisp perception from my concrete,
leave me in darkness amongst the brilliance of things.

Thursday, December 21, 2017

Christmas Song

I wrote this as a song a number of years ago. I wanted to write another Fairytale of New York............okay, okay, no harm trying or wishing. I gave it to a singer who insisted that it was a poem; I still see it as a song (albeit with an alternative beat) waiting for a melody.      


              Christmas Song

I remember frosted trees,
sugary sunlight on rotted leaves,
winter hedges crisp and still,
high above a blackbird’s trill.

And you with ice blue eyes
and brilliant smile
singing Silent Night and all the while
wishing
that Christmas was gone.

I remember frosted trees,
collecting cones for festive wreaths,
carols wafted on the air,
we stopped awhile to wonder where.

And you with ice blue eyes
and brilliant smile
singing Silent Night and all the while
wishing
that Christmas was gone.

I remember frosted trees,
crunching across the frozen fields,
two plaited trails that we made,
promise of  the life we’d braid.

And you with ice blue eyes
and brilliant smile
singing Silent Night and all the while
wishing
that Christmas was gone.

I remember frosted trees,
a bracelet made with holly beads,
I placed it in your hand,
said it would be our wedding band.

And you with ice blue eyes
and brilliant smile
singing Silent Night and all the while
wishing
that Christmas was gone.

            I remember frosted trees,
            how they’ve haunted me all these years;
            oh to have been half so wise
           I would have seen through your disguise.
.           
           
And you with ice blue eyes
and brilliant smile
singing Silent Night and all the while
wishing
that Christmas was gone.

            

Saturday, December 16, 2017

Visit Issue 4 of ​AvantAppal(achia)

Visit http://www.avantappalachia.com/,  if only to read Gabriel Rosenstock's gorgeous submission. It's very fine; beautifully presented in Irish and English, it's  inspiring; the kind of poetry I'm always hoping to find. 

Tuesday, December 12, 2017

The Terrorist

I’m exploring a village in County Roscommon, a quaint little place
on the banks of the Shannon. I’m strolling around, trying to catch
the atmosphere like I’d try to catch a tan. It’s  Summer, there’s no traffic,  
a few boats on the river, some hall doors are open, the shops are quiet,
if a bee stirred that would be the height of it.

It doesn’t take long to get around the whole village.Countryside laps
to every backdoor, the church on its ground is silent  as a tombstone,
the Shannon drags itself painstakingly by, and the sun’s heat has settled itself down
among the clouds. In the fields the hay is saved, somewhere a cow is yawning;
and an old man drives past in a tractor, going three miles an hour.

I know this, because he is half way to the shop, when I decide to make a race of it.
There is quarter of a mile at most, straight road, and, walking, I’m already gaining
on him. He’s past half way, moving incredibly slowly. I’ve covered half the distance
 between us.  He’s three quarters way, I’m over half way.  I’m almost level, almost level
when I reach the shop.Later I discover, locals call him The Terrorist.

Armani stops at our house

The ethics around photography are more than a bit grainy. The professional photographer is one thing, often questionable, but at least, he/she would appear to have a reason to be there, but the amateur is a different ball-game.

This flashy customer caught my eye; privileged materially, and with very expensive camera, he gave himself license to pry.

Armani stops at our house

  
Ferrari
sunbathing on the verge,

Armani
surveyed from the wall.

Rolex
grinning up a cuff,

Nikon
stole granddad’s gappy smile.

Ray-bans
snapping the moment shut,

Gucci
stepped from the grass;

Pirelli 
spat dust into our gateway.

Thursday, December 7, 2017








gentle as rain,
as petals,
as snow,

you 
were,
always.






Monday, December 4, 2017

Failing Light



In the failing light of a November evening,
among the rotting leaves on a suburban path,
I remember you, digging the garden ridges, shaking out
the groundsel, tossing the stones under the hedge.

Great events in your kingdom were scurryings in the grass,
a thrush feeding on a worm, raindrops falling from the apple trees.
Far from inspectors and reports, you held sway over
the straightening of ridges, regiments of onions and lettuces.

With each passing year, you settle deeper into memory,
becoming ever more intangible, like these rotting leaves
that leave only their scent hanging in the dank November air;
after all this time, you have become more like a conversation 
                                                                                I never had.

Friday, December 1, 2017

The Wind Claps The Slates



The wind claps the slates;
all night they are hooves running berserk,
all night the wind is inciting them;
all night.

At twenty past two and twenty past three
and twenty past four I am looking at you;
how I would love to have hooves to come
crashing through your sleep, to burst into
your solitude.

And there I would, for better or worse,
demolish the muzzled years with as much
violence as reverberates beneath iron shoes,
as  causes such a frenzy in stone that slates
stampede.