Tuesday, November 30, 2021

Leaves in Sunlight

 

Leaves: music

and colour;


in sunlight

they are.


On a warm

afternoon


icicles of air

play them;


turn white

those green flashes;


so eyes hear

the world.

Thursday, November 25, 2021

Squalls

 

I keep myself up to date,

not with what you do

but how you are;

I read the squalls

coming in over the ocean.


Like newspaper print,

they drizzle upward,

and, truth to tell, they hanker

after tragedy;

I find them totally compelling.


So, yes, down to the last comma

(they don’t do stops)

and I know that you know this,

I know how it is with you;

no tragedies, but squalls: how apt, yes.

Wednesday, November 24, 2021

Autumn Aria

 

The tree,

aria

on a pedestal,

coloratura.


Autumn

performance;

the wind carries

fire.

Thursday, November 18, 2021

Wonders

 

The wind in the wires

is making choirs

of conversations

that would have passed

unheard.

The child standing

on the tarred road hums

what the wind strums

and beats a stick

on the ground.

The sound he hears

is the music of the spheres

from somewhere above

but a rustling in the hedge

turns his head

and there’s a mystery

in the darkness of leaves.

Sunday, November 14, 2021

To The Slaughter House

 This is a re-edited version of a poem I posted some time back. When asked why I wrote/posted this poem, I was a bit stumped. I am not a vegetarian. I used to see this years ago in my childhood; it was ugly, but we took it as normal life. It's not a scene many are likely to see now. So the answer: I think it tugs at a deeply buried conviction that animals have greater awareness and understanding than we have ever given them credit for; and the only logical upshot to that is that our brutal treatment of them needs to end.

To The Slaughter House



White-filled socket, eye twisted; its contorted,

steaming body straining away from that room.

At the end of a rope taut to the straightness of cane,

haunches working, legs thrashing, sliding in shit;

and men flat out, dragging, pushing the heifer

towards the slaughter-house doorway.


Roaring, terrified as humans are; that same recognition,

same fight, same blood gut muscle response, same horror;

and men, angular to their brutal task: dragging, pushing, hauling.

At the end of the rope, its head straining upward; the tongue,

extended from its mouth, tasting the stench of death,

and the horror of its flagging resistance.




Friday, November 12, 2021

Scale

 

It is mid-afternoon in Dublin;

two boys are hammering the shit out of each other;

no one else is around; they don’t know just yet,

but this is the end of their friendship.


Pull out.


At a city crossroads a motorbike slows;

five shots ring out, two pedestrians collapse,

one is dead, one will be maimed;

the motorbike is now two streets away.


Pull out.


All is suddenly people running

through the streets escaping chaos;

most don’t know what happened;

outside a bookshop bodies scattered like litter.


Pull out.


Two nations are flexing toward war;

there’s ongoing military build-up along the border,

incendiary rhetoric,

and fear is churning the insides of both sets of citizens.


Pull Out.


Europe, all of it, in one eyeful;

the sharp curve of the globe;

blue iris earth;

earth a drop of water; beautiful.


Pull out.


‘There may be intelligent life out there,’

one creature said to another,

looking beyond the moons of its planet;

‘but I doubt it.’


Monday, November 8, 2021

Small Wonders

 


Photograph by Paul Caponigro


What skies beneath our feet,

what immensities we trample;

how much gentler our step would be

if we saw the minute wonders of the world.




Friday, November 5, 2021

Water

 

Far down, a glimmer of light;


down inside the earth, a wonder


to our young eyes.



We lowered the bucket


through the ferns and darkness


to collect magic,



and drew it up,


heavy with water


and mystery.



Pristine; icy; we drank


beautiful water,


and believed it to be purity.

Monday, November 1, 2021

Western Landscape

 

The clouds are on the fields;

limestone walls their arms,

and thorns glistening black;

white berries of rain are

dropping from haws; haws

like rubies on slender fingers.


Limestone-locked, sodden

fields in thrall to water:

caged cress-green reveries;

long memories and dumb

to speak, as the sea might,

of sorrows buried in their depths.