Poetry by Irish poet Michael O'Dea. (poems © Michael O’Dea, Dedalus Press, Amastra-n-Galar, Lapwing Publications)
Wednesday, June 15, 2016
Walking along the Grand Canal outside Dublin
Beyond The Twelfth Lock.
All the world was in a pool by the canal;
all the Autumn,
all the Summer turned peacock
gazing at itself
quietly, still, face to the water.
Where I had seen the swans
flaming in Spring,
today I came on Summer,
gold and beautiful,
about to die.
Saturday, June 11, 2016
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.
Tuesday, June 7, 2016
Representative of the Common Man?
I was listening, recently, to an interview in which an Irish
businessman was outlining the necessity of capitalism. It was a familiar
story: those who create wealth for all must have the reward of affluence to
motivate their efforts. That wealth is then divvied up among all; he would
acknowledge that there were basic entitlements at the lower end e.g. education,
a home etc. His philosophy acknowledges that greed is a driver for humankind, and inequality is an inescapable aspect of it all. So be it.
Part of the reward for wealth, though, is the belonging to a
class that can ‘afford’ privilege; privilege that permeates all facets of life,
that is passed onto succeeding generations, deserving or not. Within a skip and
a hop from that philosophy then, we have the divided society in which many are set for cannon fodder
(or one of its peacetime guises) and others to be part of the elite who can enjoy uninterrupted
comfort through the privations of others.
This, then, leads me to wonder how anyone can imagine that
someone like Donald Trump can possibly be a suitable representative for the
American in the street.
Margaret. (d.
1961)
Child that played and skipped
and ran,
climbed among the trees
when the adult was as far away
as death itself;
woman in a countryside
of old men and their wives
turning spidery;
rain and years
between herself and old age;
London: Irish skivvy,
that rolling unrolling knot
of mop, bucket and woman
paid with poverty for accepting
oblivion.
Spitalfields and squalor;
a dark coat, bark-rough face
beaten to a glower;
culprit and victim,
drink took them both.
Wednesday, June 1, 2016
When yellow was the perfect colour
Yellow has that unfortunate connotation in battle. But yellow is a warm light. And blazing gorse is the fullest vent of Summer's exuberance. A yellow rose on the verge of full bloom is the promise of just that.
The Yellow Rose.
for
Alan Biddle (1952-1994).
When his eyes had shut for good
and his face was just a face
and conversation had slowed
to the ebb and flow of memories
speaking among themselves,
a small gesture recast the day.
She placed a yellow rose on his chest
over the picture of the Sacred Heart.
The gentleness of that moment;
the single rose: how well chosen;
how well she chose it.
His face changed, full of ease
as through all his illness,
but death had sculpted warmth away.
His eyes shut against us,
fingers tangled up in rosary beads;
I'll remember him alive
or remember the rose when he was dead.
Sunday, May 29, 2016
Rain and Imagination
The day darkens. Charcoal clouds
hustle the blue across the sky, corral it into a far corner of the universe.
The first drops fall, heavy as berries. In minutes the world is a blur. The
sharp edges of landscape now diffuse; what was clear is now obscure. Imagination is released.
![]() |
| Monet. Cliffs of Pourville, Rain |
And then there is the rain in which thoughts come clear and
perfectly defined. Each having its own
orbit; delicacy its beauty, still sharp as a bullet hole.
![]() |
| Gustave Caillebotte. The Yerres, Effect of Rain |
Labels:
Caillebotte,
Monet,
rain and imagination
Tuesday, May 24, 2016
Seeing
Inside yourself. In the space of yourself. Watching your feelings flying, litter in a gale, down the main strip. Seeing it all with that 'accident moment' acuity. A curious distance between you and your emotions, as close to being two as is possible.
Seeing
discarded matches
on the pub floor,
reflections in
gutters,
cobwebs in the
corners of ceilings,
petals shed and
shriveling,
railings’ wrought
iron curlicues,
broken windows,
tattered curtains,
carrier bags snagged
on branches,
the moon running
along beside me,
heron one-legged by
the pond,
a glove on the
footpath;
each fleck, speck,
flaw in your argument;
every minute
branded, second burned
as thoroughly as a
pipe smoker’s match.
Thursday, May 19, 2016
Transatlantic Trade Investment Partnership
Democracy seems to have little currency now beyond being a pretext to wage war. This agreement smacks of much that I hoped the EU wouldn't become. There's a lot online regarding TTIP; this is a good place to start.
This was posted by 38 Degrees; worth visiting at https://home.38degrees.org.uk/
Monday, May 16, 2016
A Bottle of Whiskey
Whiskey is my best colour.
The bright eye in the glass
sucks on grief;
still Manhattan lights
ring the bay below.
Stomach the needle.
The yellow meter falls;
conversation curves with the bottle
and I fly, birdless wing.
At half past three
the genie is corpsed on the table.
Thursday, May 12, 2016
A Nightmare
As a child I had the nightmare of being lost in a forest, wandering blindly among alien-looking plant-life and slithering skulking animals. That universe is huge, and cluttered with unthinkable possibilities, almost none of them pleasant.
Where Are You.
Where are you.
Where are you child.
Among the spring green leaves
Naked as a lizard;
I hear your airy lilt,
Why are you humming.
From what remote well
Do these grotesque sounds come;
Dispatched, bleak cirrus
In the high skies of a child's voice,
Freezing all the forest
Into fairy-tale stillness.
Where are you,
Where are you child.
In what empty paradise;
Where's the tower that emits your
eccentric song;
Against the frozen wings of which
birds of paradise
Do you rub.
Saturday, May 7, 2016
Carpet from her eye
There was a carpet from her eye,
I was fool to walk;
peacock not in the ha'penny
place with me.
She of the gold tabernacle;
I, the greedy eye,
passing shadows up the upward tail,
knowing, all the time, the blade in
my wake.
Monday, May 2, 2016
For Ecstasy
He smashed his head
on a mountain-side;
fell pentagoning down;
earth exploding blossom-like
toward him.
They found his body,
knew that he had jumped,
but couldn’t find his head.
I tell you now,
his head is falling still.
Wednesday, April 27, 2016
Measure A Life Span
How many times did you dip a spoon into sugar, drink a cup of tea, eat a slice of bread, dip a spoon, drink a cup, eat bread, dip a spoon, drink a cup, eat bread, dip a spoon, drink a cup, eat bread, dip a spoon, drink a cup, eat bread, dip a spoon, drink a cup, eat bread, dip a spoon, drink a cup, eat bread, dip a spoon, drink a cup, eat bread, dip a spoon, drink a cup, eat bread, dip a spoon, drink a cup, eat bread, dip a spoon, drink a cup, eat bread, dip a spoon, drink a cup, eat bread, dip a spoon, drink a cup, eat bread, dip a spoon, drink a cup, eat bread, dip a spoon, drink a cup, eat bread, dip a spoon, drink a cup, eat bread, dip a spoon, drink a cup, eat bread, dip a spoon, drink a cup, eat bread, dip a spoon, drink a cup, eat bread, dip a spoon, drink a cup, eat bread, dip a spoon, drink a cup, eat bread, dip a spoon, drink a cup, eat bread, dip a spoon, drink a cup, eat bread, dip a spoon, drink a cup, eat bread, dip a spoon, drink a cup, eat bread, dip a spoon, drink a cup, eat bread, dip a spoon, drink a cup, eat bread, dip a spoon, drink a cup, eat bread, dip a spoon, drink a cup, eat bread, dip a spoon, drink a cup, eat bread, dip a spoon, drink a cup, eat bread.................................
The Fall
When apples fall
like pocket watches
among the trees
and leaves
like closing old hands,
the fog is rising,
old souls
over the green.
There is a quietness
like padded feet
or, quietest of all,
the droplets
playing in the hedge;
and the grumpy whimper
of hedgehogs
scuttling for their sleep.
Most of all I notice
the thud of Winters
changing children into men.
Labels:
living and dying,
time and passing
Sunday, April 24, 2016
Moon poem
Desire brushing my face
like some woman’s hair.
Trapped in a drizzle of muscles,
beneath a moon
filling the world with longing
and hopeless space.
Boyle Arts Festival Poetry Competition
Boyle Arts Festival Poetry Competition
2016 has announced arrangements for the 2016 poetry competition. Prizes are
€250 first prize, 2 prizes of €50 for highly commended. This year’s judge is Ross Donlon (http://www.rossdonlon.com/index.html
) and the closing date is June 30th. Part of the Boyle Arts Festival, the Awards Ceremony takes place in the splendid King House on July 30th.
Tel 00 353 (0) 7196 63085 info@boylearts.com
www.boylearts.com
Labels:
Boyle Arts Festival,
Poetry Competition,
Ross Donlon
Thursday, April 21, 2016
You Take the Sea; I'll Take the Land
You Take the Sea; I’ll Take the Land.
Then, growing cautious of air currents,
my ears will extend to points,
nose become a snout, eyes flinty.
I will grow a coat of hair to thwart the wind,
jointed limbs that angle to take a fall.
Your sides will be sleek to cut the water,
your face an arrow, even eye-lids planed to nothing.
Your skin will have the dapples of flowing liquid,
drop-shaped scales. By then, of course,
we will not know each other at all.
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