Chuir Nuala N Gallachóir as na Doire Beaga an gaeilge ar an dán seo agus 's é mo thuairim go bhfuil sé i bhfad nios fearr sa gaeilge.Tá brón orm go bhfuil na fadai as lathair sa piosa seo.
GEANTRAI
TRATHNONA BEAG
Solas min nona
Ag cimilt an uisce;
Mise agus tusa
Ag imeacht thar bhraid
Faoi scathlan na gcrann
Ar phreamhaigh cois abhann,
Eala,
Go h-uaisneach
Ag cosaint a criche:
Eiti mall triallach na gcorrghlas
Ar leathadh na speir;
Noin bheag agus deire lae -
Cach anachta faoi choim na h-oiche.
Poetry by Irish poet Michael O'Dea. (poems © Michael O’Dea, Dedalus Press, Amastra-n-Galar, Lapwing Publications)
Monday, December 15, 2008
Tuesday, December 2, 2008
Sky, Bog, Mountain
I think Irish skies are stunning. The combination of bogland, mountain, lake and sky in our part of Donegal is frequently breathtaking. These were taken just north of Barnesmore Gap, Kay took the third near Lough Mourne.
Labels:
"Barnesmore Gap",
"Lough Mourne"
Let’s hope God’s not a hen.
Here are 2 scenes from Baraka. Made in 1992, directed by Ron Fricke, it traces a downward spiral from a spectacular planet set in a wondrous universe to man living in harmony with the planet to the current, appalling, (and escalating), abuse by man of everything around him.
If you haven’t seen it, you have missed a masterpiece. If you have, it’s probably time to be reminded again of the damage we’re doing.
Balinese Monkey Chant
Mass Production of Chickens
Can't wait for the future!
If you haven’t seen it, you have missed a masterpiece. If you have, it’s probably time to be reminded again of the damage we’re doing.
Balinese Monkey Chant
Mass Production of Chickens
Can't wait for the future!
Tuesday, November 18, 2008
My Poetry Choice for Christmas
Top of my wish-list this year is Filíocht Ghrá na Gaeilge/Love Poems in Irish edited by Ciaran Mac Murchaidh with artwork by Anna Nielsen and published by Cois Life in October 2008. It is an anthology of Irish love poems and songs (with English translations) spanning more than 1000 years. An Arts Programme interview with MacMurchaidh, aired on the 29th of October, can be downloaded from the RTE website.
Sunday, November 9, 2008
I Give You
I wrote "I Give You" a number of years ago.It is part a series of love poems I had plans to dramatize under the title "Under an Apple Blue Sky".
When things don't go for me at first they tend to get buried under subsequent initiatives. Later I find them and warm to the idea again. I have a number of long-time items sitting in the 'out tray' but this one does deserve a bit of consideration.
I Give You
This tree's dripping fruit
to place in your mouth
to ripen your tongue.
The water guttering down
these green leaves to be a trellis
of fingers about you.
This soft drizzle of sunlight
to fall gentle as the petals
of meadowsweet on your cheeks.
This bindweed and all tendrils
to hook and bind
our desires together.
When things don't go for me at first they tend to get buried under subsequent initiatives. Later I find them and warm to the idea again. I have a number of long-time items sitting in the 'out tray' but this one does deserve a bit of consideration.
I Give You
This tree's dripping fruit
to place in your mouth
to ripen your tongue.
The water guttering down
these green leaves to be a trellis
of fingers about you.
This soft drizzle of sunlight
to fall gentle as the petals
of meadowsweet on your cheeks.
This bindweed and all tendrils
to hook and bind
our desires together.
Sunday, November 2, 2008
Rathmines Writers Book Launch
The Rathmines Writers group celebrate the launching a new book in Rathmines Town Hall (Rathmines College)on 27th Nov approx 7.30pm.
Thursday, October 23, 2008
Sydney Bernard Smith

I was sorry to hear that Sydney Bernard Smith died a fortnight ago, he did me a great service.
He published some very early poems of mine in a broadsheet published in association with Sligo Arts Festival and later took some time to criticise my poetry. I think he was disappointed with what he saw.
We met up in the International Bar where he took a red biro to my efforts. By the time he finished there were red lines through most of it. Initially discouraging, (he said that my only saving grace was that I was so new to writing), it turned out to be the most valuable few hours tuition I ever got.
His criticisms were crisp, accurate and flawlessly observed; he left me with a clear understanding of the need to be concise and efficient, to avoid waffle and pointless adornment. He left me with an insight into the value of ruthless editing. He did this with authority but without superiority.
You can download 2 of his books from the Irish Literary Revival website http://www.irishliteraryrevival.com/
Tuesday, October 21, 2008
How We Fell
Glen Colquhoun’s most recent collection, How we fell: A Love Story (Steele Roberts, 2006),is the beautiful and evocative telling of how the relationship with his former wife was and went.
The poems go beyond what words can describe like garlic on the breath. Understanding might depend on recognizing the territory; it’s like feeling for solidity in cloud, but you will feel; and there is a universe to feel. Their relationship, as he describes it, was passionate and spiritual; consumate. The title is interesting: there’s clearly the fall, and there’s the fall in love; but the second (phrase) is unfinished.
Is it possible that after love has crashed through like a meteorite, we remain, carried forever (our atoms just) suspended in its brilliant tail.
Wonderful.
The poems go beyond what words can describe like garlic on the breath. Understanding might depend on recognizing the territory; it’s like feeling for solidity in cloud, but you will feel; and there is a universe to feel. Their relationship, as he describes it, was passionate and spiritual; consumate. The title is interesting: there’s clearly the fall, and there’s the fall in love; but the second (phrase) is unfinished.
Is it possible that after love has crashed through like a meteorite, we remain, carried forever (our atoms just) suspended in its brilliant tail.
Wonderful.
Sunday, October 19, 2008
Panda Sneeze
Not poetry in the usual sense but I got a great laugh when I was shown this today. So thanks to jimvwmoss for posting this on YouTube
Tuesday, October 14, 2008
Rain and Phone Scams
Today is WET. The world is full of running water and stiffling greyness; as Leo Sayer says it’s raining in my heart. It started with a nightmare last night. Sleeping past the alarm this morning. And now a cloud stuck over the city like an elastoplast. It reminded me of one of the first poems I had published, but without the slightly romantic note:
Damp and Drizzle.
Damp wet, wet, wet.
Grim drizzle
Leaning against the wall
All day.
If I could hum the mood
In your ear
You'd know what I mean;
You'd remember.
The mood may be connected to my annoyance yesterday at discovering I been done out of maybe €4 a week (or more) for over a year. Having registered for a quiz last year I kept receiving questions by text on my mobile. I never replied to them, but still was charged €2 for receiving each of them.
No doubt I missed some very fine print at the outset and I wasn’t keeping an eye on my costs, but surely this type of scam, though legal, is obviously an unfair lure to take your money. Is it not time the legal loop-holes that allow these sort of practices were closed.
Damp and Drizzle.
Damp wet, wet, wet.
Grim drizzle
Leaning against the wall
All day.
If I could hum the mood
In your ear
You'd know what I mean;
You'd remember.
The mood may be connected to my annoyance yesterday at discovering I been done out of maybe €4 a week (or more) for over a year. Having registered for a quiz last year I kept receiving questions by text on my mobile. I never replied to them, but still was charged €2 for receiving each of them.
No doubt I missed some very fine print at the outset and I wasn’t keeping an eye on my costs, but surely this type of scam, though legal, is obviously an unfair lure to take your money. Is it not time the legal loop-holes that allow these sort of practices were closed.
Labels:
"mobile phone scam",
"text scam"
Monday, October 6, 2008
Favourite Poems and Poets Online
What a wonderful thing the internet is. My favourite poem is Fern Hill; I search and find
Thanks to CSteierNKU for posting this on YouTube.
Among my favourite Irish poems are Patrick Kavanagh’s; hear his voice at Poetry Archive: http://www.poetryarchive.org/poetryarchive/singlePoet.do?poetId=7871
And find a generous selection of his works at poemhunter.com: http://www.poemhunter.com/patrick-kavanagh
And Walt Whitman’s voice, ( believed to be), at The Walt Whitman Archive:
http://www.whitmanarchive.org/multimedia/index.html
I love the upbeat mood and rhythm in Whitman’s ‘songs’ and other poetry; it would be difficult to avoid being infected with the celebration that starts with ( shout it if you can)
I CELEBRATE myself, and sing myself,
And what I assume you shall assume,
For every atom belonging to me as good belongs to you.
I loafe and invite my soul,
I lean and loafe at my ease observing a spear of summer grass.
My tongue, every atom of my blood, form'd from this soil, this air,
Born here of parents born here from parents the same, and their
parents the same,
I, now thirty-seven years old in perfect health begin,
Hoping to cease not till death.
Thanks to CSteierNKU for posting this on YouTube.
Among my favourite Irish poems are Patrick Kavanagh’s; hear his voice at Poetry Archive: http://www.poetryarchive.org/poetryarchive/singlePoet.do?poetId=7871
And find a generous selection of his works at poemhunter.com: http://www.poemhunter.com/patrick-kavanagh
And Walt Whitman’s voice, ( believed to be), at The Walt Whitman Archive:
http://www.whitmanarchive.org/multimedia/index.html
I love the upbeat mood and rhythm in Whitman’s ‘songs’ and other poetry; it would be difficult to avoid being infected with the celebration that starts with ( shout it if you can)
I CELEBRATE myself, and sing myself,
And what I assume you shall assume,
For every atom belonging to me as good belongs to you.
I loafe and invite my soul,
I lean and loafe at my ease observing a spear of summer grass.
My tongue, every atom of my blood, form'd from this soil, this air,
Born here of parents born here from parents the same, and their
parents the same,
I, now thirty-seven years old in perfect health begin,
Hoping to cease not till death.
Monday, September 29, 2008
Lucky Thirteen

One of the best pieces of news for Irish poetry this year is the return of Force 10; Issue 13 is out now.
In the past I always enjoyed its mix of the written and the visual, local and national, its non-pretentiousness and liveliness, its generous size (the new issue has 160 pages).
So thanks to those that have made it possible and good luck to Dermot Healy and all involved, I hope the force remains with us for a long time.
Monday, September 22, 2008
All -Ireland Poetry Day
How do I know I need to mix more? When just about every poet I’ve ever heard of has a gig but myself.
And that’s close enough the case on the Poetry Ireland supported all-Ireland poetry day on Oct 2nd. They are supporting a reading in every county in Ireland. It’s very impressive. A huge number of poets are involved and that’s great to see.
I especially like the poetry of John F Deane (reading in Dublin), Ger Reidy (Mayo), Gabriel Rosenstock (Roscommon), but there are numerous poets worth hearing all around the country and looking at the list I see that I am out of touch with some of the newcomers to the scene. Co Donegal is hosting an Oíche fhílíochta as is Leabharlann na Ceathrún Ruaidh, agus beidh fílí Chiarraí ag léamh san Daingean. The big Galway event includes mayors of city and county reading personal favourites and a particularly strong musical component with Judith Mock and John Feeley performing.
All in all it’s a tremendous effort. Lets hope the events are well advertised and the suppport they deserve arrives.
And that’s close enough the case on the Poetry Ireland supported all-Ireland poetry day on Oct 2nd. They are supporting a reading in every county in Ireland. It’s very impressive. A huge number of poets are involved and that’s great to see.
I especially like the poetry of John F Deane (reading in Dublin), Ger Reidy (Mayo), Gabriel Rosenstock (Roscommon), but there are numerous poets worth hearing all around the country and looking at the list I see that I am out of touch with some of the newcomers to the scene. Co Donegal is hosting an Oíche fhílíochta as is Leabharlann na Ceathrún Ruaidh, agus beidh fílí Chiarraí ag léamh san Daingean. The big Galway event includes mayors of city and county reading personal favourites and a particularly strong musical component with Judith Mock and John Feeley performing.
All in all it’s a tremendous effort. Lets hope the events are well advertised and the suppport they deserve arrives.
Tuesday, September 16, 2008
Needing Something Different
I look along my poetry collection needing something I can’t quite define in the same way one sometimes has a desire for a taste: something different, something exotic; a drink? And then I find “The Stinking Rose”, a beautiful, exotic and highly original collection of poems by multi-award winning poet Sujata Bhatt. It was published in 1995, (can it be that long ago?), and is one of six collections published so far by Carcanet.
Now it’s on its way to my bedside table and will take up residence there for about three months. Here, for an example of that difference, are the opening few lines from the title poem:
The Stinking Rose
Everything I want to say is
in that name
for these cloves of garlic-they shine
like pearls still warm from a woman’s neck.
My fingernail nudges and nicks
the smell open, a round smell
that spirals up. Are you hungry?
Now it’s on its way to my bedside table and will take up residence there for about three months. Here, for an example of that difference, are the opening few lines from the title poem:
The Stinking Rose
Everything I want to say is
in that name
for these cloves of garlic-they shine
like pearls still warm from a woman’s neck.
My fingernail nudges and nicks
the smell open, a round smell
that spirals up. Are you hungry?
Labels:
"Sujata Bhatt",
“The Stinking Rose”
Friday, September 5, 2008
Love
Recently I’ve been thinking of the love poems I won’t be writing. But I do find my ‘would be’ words in the writings of others. When it comes to love, it’s hard to beat Kahlil Gibran.
“Ever has it been that love knows not its own depth until the hour of separation”
“If you love somebody, let them go, for if they return, they were always yours. And if they don't, they never were”
“Love and doubt have never been on speaking terms”
“And think not you can guide the course of love. For love, if it finds you worthy, shall guide your course.”
On the other hand there’s the love guru, Woody Allen, who came up with this,
“I was nauseous and tingly all over. I was either in love or I had smallpox”
For poignancy: “I miss you a little, I guess you could say, a little too much, a little to often, and a little more each day.”
I don’t know who said that, but I know.
“Ever has it been that love knows not its own depth until the hour of separation”
“If you love somebody, let them go, for if they return, they were always yours. And if they don't, they never were”
“Love and doubt have never been on speaking terms”
“And think not you can guide the course of love. For love, if it finds you worthy, shall guide your course.”
On the other hand there’s the love guru, Woody Allen, who came up with this,
“I was nauseous and tingly all over. I was either in love or I had smallpox”
For poignancy: “I miss you a little, I guess you could say, a little too much, a little to often, and a little more each day.”
I don’t know who said that, but I know.
Labels:
"Kahlil Gibran",
"Woody Allen"
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)