When we tolerate lies from those who lead, don't we cede
all rights to principled government, not just for now, but for the foreseeable future. Encourage future contenders for leadership to be, not just lax in their
accountability to their people, but to be downright fraudulent in their
practices; whatever is self-serving. Our tenuous regard for the truth, so often highlighted in our treatment
of whistle-blowers, will leave us open to forms of leadership normally
associated with dictatorship.
Poetry by Irish poet Michael O'Dea. (poems © Michael O’Dea, Dedalus Press, Amastra-n-Galar, Lapwing Publications)
Monday, April 10, 2017
Sure Sight
I see
pearl-like
dawn
in
your face
a desolate
blue
yonder
in
your irises
the wash
of slivered
moonlight
in
your smile
I know of
nowhere
less trodden
more
perfect
I contract
to be
forever
an explorer
in that universe.
Saturday, April 8, 2017
Rivers run
Eternity
Rivers run
over the land:
slivered
sky and light,
spindly
bodies flowing,
fish and
ripples one,
alive.
Clamouring
in the high places,
lisping in
the low;
spry in
youth,
sedate
in old age;
always journeying
to their end
to run
again.
Monday, April 3, 2017
Looking at the detail
One of my favourite works of art, Mantegna’s extraordinary ‘Lamentation Over The Dead Christ’, is nearly too familiar. It would be easy to pan across the image and
see much less than is there. Break it down to its detail and its brilliance is seen
afresh.
It brings to mind the words of doubting Thomas “Unless I see
the nail marks in his hands and put my finger where the nails were, and put my
hand into his side, I will not believe.”
Look at the torn flesh in the feet, the open gashes in the
back of the hands; you could put your finger into them.
And when the resurrected Jesus appears to the apostles and
says to Thomas, “Put your finger here; see my hands. Reach out your hand and
put it into my side. Stop doubting and believe”, he readily replies “My Lord
and my God!”
This painting carries, magnificently, that strength to convince.
Labels:
Lamentation over the dead Christ,
Mantegna
Thursday, March 30, 2017
The Salmon in the Spring, the Hazel and the Hermit
The prompt word for this poem was 'source'. Mythology is full of sources, and mythology comes with a plethora of suggestions, all endlessly malleable. It provides a platform for creativity but with roots that give the work weight and resonance. The poem is a bit of a departure for me; feel free to comment.
The Salmon in the Spring, the Hazel and the
Hermit
Into an open gob the hazelnuts fell,
so over the years the salmon grew
into a colossus.
A day came when one nut dropped, plumb-line,
to be devoured complete with husk
at the very moment of its agitation.
And in that very instant, the salmon spewed
from its intestines
its knowledge of a thousand years;
that cascaded downhill
over the shilling bright stones,
through the ignorant meadows to the lake,
where they became part of an ever-shifting
circuit of water, weed, spume and silt.
A hermit, who lived by the lake,
doused his face, and drinking some of this
potion
was instantly replete.
A hazel took root in his belly and he convulsed,
so that the stones unearthed by his flailing
feet
filled the lake
and sent its waters flooding out,
onto to the plain where the people lived;
and they, too, in their turn, drank .
Monday, March 27, 2017
The Silver River
Jacket, shirt and
shoes;
his socks and
trousers
neat on the bank;
a small crowd
watching from the bridge.
silver river running
He was coming from a card game, late;
the winnings in his
pocket.
There had been a
woman,
they had visited the
priest.
silver river running
But that’s long ago
now;
he worked the farm;
a good worker, his
neighbours said,
always busy with the
tractor.
silver river running
He lived with his
mother,
who cooked his meals
and managed the money;
now, she was a great
farming woman,
everyone agreed.
silver river running
I have a photograph of him holding a child,
he didn’t look comfortable;
he sat for a while in the garden
but didn’t stay long.
silver river running
Wednesday, March 22, 2017
Ominous
There is a blue box on the hall table.
A cube, transparent plastic, maybe three inches
high.
It capsules twilight,
and there are objects drowned in it.
Sitting there,
it’s like something is going to happen.
Thursday, March 16, 2017
Scarecrows.
We are two scarecrows: rags
and string;
what the rain softens the
wind picks clean.
We are two scarecrows:
sticks and straw;
crows fly out from
underneath our jackets.
We are two scarecrows: nails
and wire;
each day drowning as the
corn grows higher.
We are two scarecrows: sacks
and hay;
nodding toward eternity, we
tip toward clay.
Saturday, March 11, 2017
Your Crying
Your crying:
The silver streams
Of your eyes,
The radiant red cheeks,
The choking on words,
The gullish.
Somehow
I think of a voice
Curling up
From inside a hollow oak.
Sunday, March 5, 2017
Bones
(in response to this week's awful discovery in Tuam)
Bones in
the soil,
broken bones.
Bones that
sheltered a mind,
and a heart.
That had a
name,
that rested
on a pillow,
that might
have run a race,
maybe won if
they were fast-
moving
bones.
That might
have grown
to adulthood,
crooked
around a lover’s neck
and been
happy then.
Might have aged to venerability,
or been
fond old bones
carrying
liver spots,
showering gappy
smiles
on grandchildren.
Bones,
those bones
in the soil.
Thursday, March 2, 2017
In The Park
I met an old man
with seawater eyes
sweeping together
the leaves of his life.
Into a sack they went,
each golden one.
Sunday, February 26, 2017
Child
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.
Labels:
1997,
Dedalus Press,
from Sunfire
Sunday, February 19, 2017
The way of the world
I came across a written piece in which it said that you can be very friendly with a person. The friendliness grows towards a sexual relationship. A time comes when that relationship might be consumated, but if the moment passes, the relationship unravels, even appears somewhat sordid to the other person.
It always surprises me when I see the closest relationships break up, only to descend into a version of open warfare.
You see it, often in families: is it because there's a sense of betrayal? Closeness turns to outright hostility.
The Way of It
I can't fit you into my scheme of
things
nor you me,
now that we've finally become ourselves.
I turn on you sharper than a scalpel,
spit words chiselled to wound.
Out from beneath the quilt of affection,
our naked selves so vicious,
we bruise each other with the same fervour
that once marked our love.
Labels:
breakdown of relationship,
end of love
Wednesday, February 15, 2017
She Swept into the Sky
That day Maggie Allen,
propped up in her bed,
was staring at the bedspread.
Snow, melting in her eyes,
fell, tiny bells,
into the valley far below.
Suddenly, arms spread wide,
a blizzard of hair,
she swept outward
off her ledge,
into the sky
across the room.
We stared at her
nonplussed face,
the four pillows tucked behind her.
Friday, February 10, 2017
Reflection
The sunlight on the back of your neck,
ear-lobes, hair.
A page-reflected glow onto your chin,
dimming upward towards your eyes,
and all else darkness around you.
If I’d never seen that you are beautiful;
that day, as the light chose to steal up behind you,
to settle on you so
gently, but dazzlingly;
that light would have been light enough
to reflect forever in my mind.
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