Showing posts with label Irish poet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Irish poet. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 12, 2025

Am I the stairs or climbing it?

              


Having moved through the years like clouds;

reached a crescendo, passed through it,

and still travelling to an ending.

Upward or downward?

It seems like the perspective of height;

the weighing up of the steps that have brought me here,

each built one atop the other,

but sometimes contrary like Escher’s stairs,

labyrinthine, incomprehensible like a mind;

maybe I am.





        

Monday, January 6, 2025

All is still

 


All is still.

I have stopped to listen,

but there is only myself.


If you shout,

wherever it is you are,

I will hear you


because here, 

I am all;

I am the full of here.


If you shout,

your voice

will flood my ears;


if not your voice, you, 

you yourself

will fill me.













  

Sunday, August 16, 2020

The Exultation of Larks



And what a stream is to the sound of water,
are larks to the air.
Their effervescence all around
as though life just discovered;
the intricacy of their trills,
far beyond the capabilities of any pianist’s fingers,
is exhilaration.

In the light and colour of a summer’s day like this,
far from vainglorious cities,
their song reaches deep into the soul,
finds the excitement that is our birthright,
draws it, shining, upward into our day:
life rediscovered
amid the exultation of larks.

Tuesday, October 9, 2018

New Poem




I have set myself up to write a poem
and am sitting set before the screen
and

Monday, July 16, 2018

Visiting the Corsetmaker


 It was ireland in the sixties. Corset conversation veered very close to immodesty. Michael O'Hehir was the voice of Sunday afternoons in Summer, and a spin in the car seemed like a good idea, but children get bored quickly.

 VISITING THE CORSETMAKER


Miss Gately, you know, the corsetmaker; her cottage 
thatched and whitewashed beneath sycamores ragged with 
crows and their bickering. A Sunday afternoon, my mother 
walking to the red door and it opened and closed and 
nothing else stirring for ages but ourselves in the back of the 
white consul with the red roof at the end of the avenue, just 
outside the gate; stone walls and lichen patches wallpapering 
our afternoon. Father dropping off in the driver’s seat 
while Micheal O'Hehir commentated on matches, one after 
another, without ever taking a breath in all that pipe smoke; matches collecting in the ash-tray all burnt to tiny black bird 
bones and the condensation all used up with words and 
faces dribbling pathetically into shapeless bad temper. Over 
and over: will she ever come out, can’t we go now, why do 
we always have to come, move your legs; till eventually she 
would reappear, a slap in the doorway, motor jauntily, 
red-headed, back to the car like it’s been five minutes or 
something, and Dad’s awake, reversing from the gate, back 
into the remains of a Sunday afternoon.

And I never knew what went on in there; never saw who 
opened the door, never saw a package, never heard anything 
about it. My father didn’t know either. I remember she 
took my sister with her when my sister was in secondary 
school. I wouldn’t have wanted to join them anyway, it was obviously a woman’s house.

Thursday, June 28, 2018

Beaten by life


I had a friend who was beaten by life.  A keen poet once, by no means a great poet, but most extraordinarly honest and brave; think of a gay man publishing poetry that expressed his sexuality without inhbition in the Ireland of fifty years ago.
My poem refers to this man disapointed and despondent in his later years; fight and spirit gone, he was good company, but  kept all that he had been locked tight deep inside himself.




The Poems Are Past.


The poems are past;
goodnight, au revoir.

And life, handed over like a cheque;
good luck, all the best.

Still: an adjective for a man ?
Still ?

Think of rain, bucketing down,
sunshine caught in its strings;

that's how I think of you:
a rainstorm in June; gentle subversive .

Tuesday, June 12, 2018

I Love You



The purple heads of the chives standing on their bottle-green stalks
were June’s bright soldiers above the dun-coloured sandstone;
beyond them, the soft pile forestry of the opposite  hillside
was a kind of wealth to us, especially in the rich glow of evening sun.

I moved closer to you; held out my hand to find yours already there,
to be links in a chain with this beauty; and then I said, ‘I love you.’
It was not just the moment; it was the magnificence of the view below us;
I needed something that grand to put the words into.

Saturday, September 19, 2015

Depression. One Fruit


I must have written this on a quiet night. Occasionally I get depressed. Then the forward flow  of life is arrested and a disappointment settles over all. It might be triggered by something in particular, but the soft grey that settles has no particular focus. It locks out light and leaves you sitting energy-less and incapable of rising to the words of love that the sufferers around you deserve for their forbearance.
Fortunately, it's not a very regular visitor in my case, and after a day or few days, I'm back, slightly dented maybe and sometimes with a poem that has come from my deepest self. 
 
No Title
 
This evening I will leave my mask and crutch,
go to the well, immerse myself
till there is no chill;
till water, moss, sky and I are all one marble.
 

So when you find me, my love, this  smile,
my limbs and fingers will be milk-white;
rosaries will be hanging; petitions,
stuffed between my jaws, fluttering in the wind.
 

And the reason will hang: a faint quivering
of atoms in the air around you,
an SOS in a register just beyond audibility;
and the mask’s smile: a mouth full of soil.

Thursday, September 3, 2015

The Clouds have overrun the sky

 
 
The whole countryside’s a fluster:
meadows quivering, a tree is screaming,
the boulders have clapped hands over their ears.
 
The word is that the stars have been burgled,
a stream’s stolen the silver,
and a cave, (whisper it), has swallowed the moon.

Monday, March 17, 2014

Looking at You


 
How her face changes when she is sleeping. I have not seen that face before, where is she?
Where do the zillions go in the sleeping hours?
And when she comes back, her mask reset; will this face be taut beneath,  waiting for the next night's darkness?
 
Looking At You.  
 

Now asleep:
Are you young again?  

When your body loosens out
And your eyes needn't see me
And your face unravels from its cares;  

Is it me you'll want to escape from?  

To run back, hurdling over the years,
To seek out your first lover, and to nestle
In that small space of time before doubts began.
 
 

Friday, September 7, 2012

Explaining Our Madness

A friend, contemplating the various madnesses of humanity during the week, mentioned the irony of governments paying people to save lives and kill simultaneously; only doctors save lives one by one, soldiers kill in thousands.

There is a short period in childhood when these ironies are questioned, I think this is the only time in which we can save our children from what we've perpetuated. From Sunfire...

 
   Growing Up           

Shortly you will trace lines,
leave,
join the herds,
leave a trail among the trails
meandering over the hills. 

We are part of some eccentric’s
geometry;
I wish I could tell you more,
my little love.

Thursday, August 2, 2012

There Are Stars All Around



I am sitting on a park bench
 with a pool of sunlight almost on my lap;
 a cosmos of flies,
galaxies in Brownian motion,
 fills it.

I am looking into a park
after midnight;
 moths flitting beneath an unseen lamp
 are sparks streaking
from invisibility to invisibility.

I am lazing by a stream;
 the sun,
reflected in
innumerable scintillations,
 has ordered the universe
 to pulse beside my sleeve.

Saturday, April 28, 2012

New Poem-Nature is Music

Following on from the last post,  this is one of the new poems.I'm using it as an introduction to the piper's music, the music of nature.


Music is a stream

whose fingers, knuckling over boulders,

send droplets trickling into crevices, tinkling;

gurgles bass notes in hollows beneath the rocks,

spills soprano trills

that burst into the white noise of spray.



Music is the wind

that whistles high notes in the leaves

low in a bowl of mountain-side;

that whistles sad through a stone wall;

laughs in a stand of nettles.



Music is all that stirs on the earth;

the blackbird standing on the morning

trout etching circles at noon

raucous crows bickering with evening

a fox tearing a hole in the night-time.