A group of students from the Higher National Diploma in Media (Journalism)in Rathmines College are working on a new website to bring together all things Rathmines: businesses, services, clubs, societies, history, events, you name it...........
The website should be up and running by March, but in the meantime they have put in place a facebook page, http://www.facebook.com/InRathmines, a twitter site, https://twitter.com/InRathmines, and a blog, http://inrathmines.blogspot.ie/, which are already very active.
If you have an interest in bringing people into Rathmines for business, leisure or otherwise, you would do well to support these sites.
On a parallel track, Rathmines Community Clubs n Soc's Day, 2013 will take place on 27th April; if you are interested, you know where I am.
Poetry by Irish poet Michael O'Dea. (poems © Michael O’Dea, Dedalus Press, Amastra-n-Galar, Lapwing Publications)
Thursday, December 13, 2012
Paradise Lost in Trinity College Dublin
Reminding you of Paradise Lost read-a-thon, Friday 14th December 2012, starting at 10 a.m. in the GMB, Trinity College and re-locating to College Chapel from 2 p.m.
Among the readers are Seamus Heaney (at 10am), Eilean Ní Chuilleanáin, Joseph Woods, Gerard Smyth, Macdara Woods, Leeanne Quinn, Peter Denman, David Norris, Iggy McGovern, Terence Brown, and many others. It will continue through the day till approx. 8.30pm. My halfpence-worth comes somewhere around 5.30pm.
It’s all in a good cause, raising funds for the National Council for the Blind. So for a bit of devilment, why not call into Trinity on Friday.
Saturday, December 8, 2012
Mashed Up Yeats
I have no doubt that Yeats was the greatest poet writing in
the twentieth century. He had the complete poet’s palette. I thought it might
be interesting to mash up his lines and see what emerged. So with only his own lines recombined, a few changes to punctuation and the position of line endings, this is what I got, (apologies to the purists):
from the mouths of old men:
I heard the old, old men say,
when you are old and grey
the world is full of magic things:
embroidered cloths
enwrought with golden and silver light,
silver apples of the moon,golden apples of the sun,
faery vats,
full of berries
and of reddest stolen cherries.
All that's beautiful drifts away
like the waters,
like the waters,
for everything that's lovely is
but a brief, dreamy, kind delight.
On the stuff of dreams:
When sleepers wake and yet still dream,
Imagining in excited reverieThat the future years had come.
All hatred driven hence,
The young in one another’s arms, birds in the trees—Those dying generations— at their song.
The fury and the mire of human veins.
If there’s no hatred in a mind,
Assault and battery of the windCan never tear the linnet from the leaf.
On love:
I whispered, 'I am too young,'
And then, 'I am old enough';Wherefore I threw a penny
To find out if I might love.
Love fled
And paced upon the mountains overhead And hid his face amid a crowd of stars
Till the stars had run away.
We taste and feel and see the truth:
A pity beyond all telling is hid in the heart of love:Beauty passes like a dream,
All true love most die.
Labels:
Mixed up Yeats,
Yeats Re-jigged
Thursday, December 6, 2012
The Start of It
This is the start of it:
the clay palm hitting the face,
bags packed, colours away;
all my flares quenching into the distance.
It begins: the spectrum loses a stripe,
the red berries fall,
light leaves;
morning’s a corpse.
This is the way of it:
table set and unset, crossed knives and forks:
insignia of the tamed and helpless;
rain dribbling, failed flames.
This powder insistence:
stampede of padded hooves,
retreat to reverse;
the days worn thin with walking back and forthSunday, December 2, 2012
Digging Potatoes
This first year, the potato plants in the water-logged soil
beneath the mountains made a bedraggled- looking crop. They went in late, so we
dug them in late October.
As we uncovered them, I kept thinking how they would have
looked to famine-time diggers. Bright nuggets, valuable as gold; each a
life-saving package of food. Each clod of earth yielding, or not, its
life-saving load. Each decent-sized potato bringing a rush of relief, each
marble a disaster.
How carefully they must have dug with their children’s lives
at stake; potatoes rolling away with the loosened soil, disappearing into the
ground, fingers scrambling after them. How it must have bound families together
in their struggle to survive; how strong must their kinship with the soil have
been.
A different life now: my kitchen stocked with oranges from
Spain, olive oil from Italy, wine from France; leisure filling the space that
was filled with struggle and fertile soil disappearing under concrete.
Wednesday, November 28, 2012
You Chose This
No one lives with the moon,
no one could;
the moon is beautiful, too
beautiful;
a sentence to loneliness.
Night after night, catching
glimpses of lovers
through half-pulled
curtains, it loiters,
bleaches their bodies with
arctic disdain;
solitude freezes the heart.
Saturday, November 24, 2012
Corporal Punishment
Mise Raifteirí an file,
Lán dúchais is grádh,
Le súile gan solas,
Le ciúnas gan crá.
The opening quatrain to the famous gaelic poem fairly rolls
off the tongue; it is perhaps the easiest few lines to memorise I’ve ever come
across. However I had major problems memorising it owing to the terror of been beaten yet again by a teacher I encountered during my schooldays in Roscommon. Over the course of a
year, I was slapped numerous times across the face each time I had this
teacher. Well learned verses flowed out of my head like sand.
In my schooldays, primary and secondary, I and most others in
my class groups were struck, (usually on the palms, one teacher liked to catch
the back of the fingers on the upswing), with a snooker cue, bamboo, an
assortment of kitchen-chair legs, leathers. Imagine: even then, (60’s, 70’s), there
was an industry making leather straps with hand-grips for beating pupils.
That culture was accepted to the point that there was no
point telling your parents; children were wrong.
On one occasion, in preparation for catholic Confirmation,
the class group was being examined on its knowledge of Christian Doctrine. The
questioner went around each student in turn asking catechism questions. When a
boy failed a question he got four slaps with the leg of a chair. On and on it
went till there were just 2 boys standing. One of these failed somewhere in the
twenties and got four slaps. The brightest boy in the class went on past the
fiftieth question; when he eventually failed he was hit harder than the rest of
us. Our guess was that this teacher revelled in his only opportunity ever to
hurt this boy.
It was a time of institutionalised cruelty and total disrespect for humans under a particular age. The two examples above show how two people I would credit as basically decent were corrupted by their habitual use of corporal punishment.
Monday, November 19, 2012
Movies, Dreams and Gorgeous Faces
Movies, Dreams and Gorgeous Faces
Ok, it's your movie house;
you got the doors shut tight;
out here’s ice.
Pacin’ up and down,
collar a chimney;
my cigarette smoke - tension.
Lookin’ at you:
we used t’share the
picture house;
you’re gorgeous.
Twelve thirty, not a flicker;
I turn away, take the
second left;
I'm in my bedroom.
Neon flashing red in my face -
she loves me, loves me
not, loves me.....,
I keep repeating it;
the stammer occupies me.
.
Wednesday, November 14, 2012
To the Professors at Trinity
This poem was written a number of years ago in response to a sculpture of a grouping of professors/teachers by Simon O'Donnell. Tongue in cheek, the poem pokes fun at the traditional rituals of universities and "old boy" schools and colleges; it could as easily be directed at the wigged personages officiating in our courts.
The Circle.
Now dried tobacco leaves,
these professors,
whose intellectual travails
have scoured them skinny,
are engaged in the Spring
ritual on the back lawn at Trinity.
Stripped naked, buttocks
slung low over the crew-cut grass,
hands beating mortar
boards; they sway on their haunches,
loosening the centuries'
compaction of soil grains.
Some say they are whipping
up the aurae of their forebears,
others that they are resonating
with the pain of earthworms
as they shift, right to
left, on the balls of their feet.
At the center, standing on
a box, a physics-doctor
with plumb-line hanging
from between forefinger and thumb
is demonstrating down.
I have watched them for an
age, seen their growth rings
appearing like
water-marks, the knowledge in their face-pouches
guarded like genitalia in
a bag.
Saturday, November 10, 2012
Christine Takes To The Air.
Slipped
on ice;
prim,
haughty
Christine
takes
to the air.
Wow,
what a moment;
Christine,
the
unabridged version,
totally
graceless.
Never
on speaking terms;
from
now on
I'm
gonna greet her,
"
hi yer"
Monday, November 5, 2012
trees keening
Another beautiful painting by Elaine Leigh.The trees invested with human features, and life in the their wind-blown hair mirroring the neolitic artwork beneath the earth.
Trees keening winter nights away;
(Image by and poem from a collaboration entitled "Above Ground Below Ground")
Trees keening winter nights away;
their wails woven into the wind.
Heads of hair like seaweed from the strand,
knots tailing limply towards the sea.
Underground, roots twisted toward some source,
shaped by memory.
Trees like abandoned lovers,
scratching down the marble of night-time.
(Image by and poem from a collaboration entitled "Above Ground Below Ground")
Wednesday, October 31, 2012
The baby in the tree
The
baby in the tree
is
screaming.
High
above the pathway
near
the black tips
of
the sycamore branches
he
is gaping,
white
membraned luminous.
How
did he get there?
He
blew there in the wind;
it
took him
like
a flag from his cot
till
he was stretched
across
the boughs
like
the wings of a bat.
And
who sees him?
I
do;
all
his hopeless writhing,
too
high for the passerby.
And
his screams:
too
high,
too
high for the passerby.
Wednesday, October 24, 2012
Resistance
Two poems from “Turn
Your Head”. They refer to individuals’ defiance in the face of torture and
death. The looks on two faces among the photographs from Khmer Rouge’s death
camp Tuol Sleng inspired the following two poems.
(I doubt this sort of bravery is on my own list of attributes.)
I will not look up.
I will not allow them look
me in the eye.
The light that shines there
I control;
I will not comply.
Though freedom be reduced
to the thimble-full,
I will have it when I die.
454.
Let them flash my hatred,
let it pierce them;
if they dislike it, they can kill me;
they will anyway.
Be sure lens, don’t miss my steady eye
and fixed mouth;
know that every muscle in my body
is a clenched fist.
Friday, October 19, 2012
A Treasure Hunt in Madrid
If I had my choice of buildings to walk into tomorrow
morning; I might just choose the Museo del Prado in Madrid.
I would walk with purpose through the main entrance of the
Villanueva Building, head straight then take a left, the Raphael collection
would be before me but I’d be turning right, pass through the Durer Room with
reservations but carry on, enter two rooms with Flemish paintings then take a
left, and I would be there: Room 56A. Have a look, here is the url:
Rotate the view 180 to see the work on the end wall behind the cam; it is
perhaps the artwork I most wish to see anywhere on the planet.
If you agree with me, and have an hour to spare you will certainly
enjoy this BBC programme:
Labels:
art,
Favourite artwork,
Museo del Prado
Monday, October 15, 2012
Flaking
What Happened ?
I can’t remember.
no one thing, no bust up.
All the time talking
about our love,
we were crumbling,
flaking,
till one day
the emptiness was complete
as our love had been.
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)



