Poetry by Irish poet Michael O'Dea. (poems © Michael O’Dea, Dedalus Press, Amastra-n-Galar, Lapwing Publications)
Wednesday, May 28, 2014
from Painting Women
Sunday, May 25, 2014
All Dublin in your armchair
If ever you plan to go to Dublin, I suggest you make a virtual tour first, and you'll no finer way to wander through the city than by Storymap. Meet the story-tellers, poets and writers: Laurence Foster, Dermot Healy, Noel O'Grady, Paula Meehan and a host of others. Dubliners and non-Dubliners, hear their voices and their stories; arrive in Dublin with your yap in place.
So, I give you a gateway to Dublin; step through, and enjoy. http://storymap.ie/
So, I give you a gateway to Dublin; step through, and enjoy. http://storymap.ie/
Sunday, May 18, 2014
Irish trad but as you know it
Like the cover design, Ensemble Ériu's music is Irish but not typical; the inclusion of some unorthodox instruments gives it a very fresh sound. It's brilliant. Visit here http://ensembleeriu.com/
Ensemble Ériu are
Jack Talty:
concertina, electronics
Neil O’
Loghlen: double bass, flute & whistle
Matthew Berrill:
Clarinet
Matthew
Jacobson: Marimba, Drums
Jeremy
Spencer: Fiddle
Úna
McGinty: Fiddle, Viola
Paddy
Groenland: Guitar
Sam Perkin:
Keyboards
Colm O’
Hara: Trombone
Saileog Ní
Cheannabháin: Voice
Monday, May 12, 2014
Saturday, May 3, 2014
Stone: Christian and Pre-christian
Whether it be the ruined castles or celtic crosses, megalithic dolmens or round towers, Ireland's greatest treasures are made of stone. To my mind, they are at their most beautiful when you come upon them expectedly: unsign-posted, undeveloped. And yet we need them as part of our tourism. It's an old bone of contention now, but I would go for heritage centres away from these sites. I'd go for centres in local towns that highlight what's in the district, supply maps, information, lore.
If there must be development at the site, I'd go for small; not overwhelming. Carrowmore neolithic cemetery ( 6000 to 3000 BC) in Sligo is a case of the latter; the centre is modest, allowing the megalithic remains their space on the landscape.
St Patrick's Well at Oran, Co Roscommon would be passed in the blink of an eye as one drives around a bend on a road. The remains of the nearby round tower is the only evidence of its ancient importance. The unexpected discovery of the round tower added hugely to the pleasure of seeing the well.
St Patrick's Well at Oran, Co. Roscommon
Megalithic Tomb inside Cairn at Carrowmore, Sligo
Labels:
Carrowmore,
Co Roscommon,
Holy well,
Neolithic Cemetery,
Oran,
Sligo
Wednesday, April 30, 2014
Mick O'Dea, the artist
Mick O'Dea is perhaps best known for his portraits; his 2010 portrait of Brian Friel being a beautiful example of what he does so wonderfully.
But as the YouTube video above shows, he is far more than a portraitist. This will be borne out by a visit to his website, which I strongly recommend.
http://mickodea.carbonmade.com/
Tuesday, April 22, 2014
City Lives
City Lives.
They shout into space,
answer each other like
whales
across great haunted
distances;
they never meet,
only sound waves ever
meet.
Alone in their canyons,
hives,
shoals
they roar.
Rooms upon rooms
upon houses upon houses
upon streets upon streets:
roars spilling out,
spilling over,
spilling down.
A million sound waves,
a million discordancies
tumbling, surging,
pouring out
onto the streets,
into the traffic,
wheels, cogs, pistons:
that cannibal jazz
of cities.
Thursday, April 17, 2014
A poem about something I can hardly explain
This poem is about something I can hardly explain,
our twenty-third year in this house,
the laburnum, again, filling our bedroom
window
with its solar brilliance.
We met Graham outside, on the street.
He said “didn’t you hear about Evelyn, (his
wife),
we buried her last Saturday.
I looked at your house, you were away.”
I am in bed. My wife,
her arm casually across me, is sleeping.
I am looking at the laburnum;
I look at it like this every year.
Saturday, April 12, 2014
New or Old Religion
Old religion it may be, but worship of the goddess of the earth ensured that earth was not defiled. Ecology for pre-science days; the planet would be in a be in a far healthier state if those beliefs still prevailed.
Clay in her mouth,
clothed in darkness, caged in stone.
She speaks in
the crumbling of mountains,
creeping of oceans across continents.
When she pauses,
earthworms devour boulders.
Wednesday, April 9, 2014
All the beautiful days
"All the beautiful days,
all the beautiful days...."
And he died
with all the beautiful days
like a wishbone in his throat.
Two passers-by stopped and looked:
How did his eyes become like that?
They became bleached blue with liquor
madness.
How did his face get so torn up?
He often fell but was not dead.
And old, why is he so old?
Because he fought with every single day,
and each day's victory was notched into
his face.
from Sunfire (Dedalus Press, 97)
Sunday, April 6, 2014
Painting Skin
Watching artist, Mick O’Dea, building up the layers of
colour that are in skin was a revelation to me.
Her skin is clear and white (as I see it);
he picks out the heat and cold
that is in her flesh.
So her belly is blue and green,
colours I have seen
where rubbish stirs in low tide.
She is a frame for the hanging
of a thousand colours.
They are inside each other,
wash in and out of each other;
overlapping, under-lapping.
They graze on each other,
slap, fall, meld, hide,
shimmer, swelter, drown;
no rules until completion.
The brush, searching for challenges,
rushes about the page putting out fires,
anxious for a thousand perfections.
Wednesday, April 2, 2014
Tonight I Nearly Died
Tonight I Nearly Died.
Tonight I nearly died
in the Sunday chain
returning to Dublin.
A scythe
arched onto the road.
As I rushed
I nearly overtook life.
What did I learn?
My eyes are good
dilated in horror.
from Sunfire (Dedalus Press, 1997)
Monday, March 31, 2014
Face
A face in a
window
told me all
I needed to know
about age.
The
colourlessness, darkness,
confinement.
A face that
stared through me,
that saw or
not,
cared not ─
blank as its
countenance ─
for all that
moved.
A face
on a
north-facing window-sill,
turned
outward
for that day
toward the
sun on the other side.
Friday, March 28, 2014
A Moment Certified By Lovers
A Moment Certified By
Lovers.
It's a certifiable moment
a punch-drunk second
a pulse's high tide.
A dog eats grass
a water drop shivers
a barrel fills to its brim
an apple falls
a body drifts
a body drifts
a face buckles
a lover screams.
At the tip of an orgasm
passion powders;
the creek turns to dust.
from Sunfire, (Dedalus Press, 1997)
Monday, March 24, 2014
Three Scenes from a Midland Town
Three Scenes from a
Midland Town
1.
Marty Regan’s shiny coffins are loitering
along the out-house wall.
Lukie Dyer, waiting outside Anderson’s pub,
fag burnt close to the knuckles,
is doubled over in a fit of coughing.
2.
Toothless,
Pete Boland’s grin
floods his face.
His eyes are
salmon leaping.
3.
After mass
the pints
on Murphy’s counter
are a meeting of stout clerics.
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