Leaving the climatic effects of global warming to one side, the geopolitical ramifications are truly scary. Take a short while to listen to Professor Jennifer Leaning in this BBC podcast, Climate Change and Me: https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b0b3fkps
Poetry by Irish poet Michael O'Dea. (poems © Michael O’Dea, Dedalus Press, Amastra-n-Galar, Lapwing Publications)
Thursday, May 24, 2018
The Havoc of Climate Change Already Here
Leaving the climatic effects of global warming to one side, the geopolitical ramifications are truly scary. Take a short while to listen to Professor Jennifer Leaning in this BBC podcast, Climate Change and Me: https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b0b3fkps
Saturday, May 19, 2018
A life alone
No one lives with the moon,
no one could;
the moon is beautiful, too
beautiful;
a sentence to loneliness.
Night after night, wandering, catching
glimpses
of lovers through half-pulled
curtains, it loiters
to glare on their passions with
arctic disdain.
Then scurries onward through the
forests of the sky,
to recover its empty heaven,
the solitude that freezes its heart.
Monday, May 14, 2018
A View Upward
Two swallows, pencil points on the ends of mathematical
compasses,
wheeling in a smoky blue sky, took me with them; a sort of freedom.
Lying, watching the sky think, composed of nothing but separating atoms,
I, you might say, was reassembled in the magnificence of that one moment.
Exhilaration, a reassembling of the way I thought, sent me cascading outward,
Lying, watching the sky think, composed of nothing but separating atoms,
I, you might say, was reassembled in the magnificence of that one moment.
Exhilaration, a reassembling of the way I thought, sent me cascading outward,
Sunday, May 13, 2018
Napalm.
(a poem about distance)
Nice to feel the sun on your back,
cool yourself down in the sea;
watch the girls on the beach:
beautiful bodies.
Nice too, the sounds of the seaside:
a speed-boat buzzing,
the tide washing onto the sand,
children screaming.
Monday, May 7, 2018
On Murvagh Beach
There’s so little difference
between sea and cloud
that the whole scene might as
well be upside down,
with the bisectors of St John’s
Point, a finger stretching
across the horizon, and
Mullagmore, a finger, Adam’s to God,
reaching back. To the left, white
clouds are hanging,
sheets from a bed, down the sides
of Ben Bulben; to the right
the Bluestacks are slumped beneath mosquito nets of rain.
Smokey light is filling the bay
like ether, lulling the world,
so waves that have raced across
the ocean, surviving the fury
at Rosnowlagh, now collapse,
spent, onto the sand.
Murvagh beach, pooled with clouds
we’re walking through;
two silhouettes moving along the
bottom edge of a canvas now cause
a tin of paint to splatter upward: a bevy of
oystercatchers taking to flight.
Saturday, May 5, 2018
Riverrun
Riverrun
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.
Saturday, April 28, 2018
Transept.
Transept.
Transept.
Transsssssssssssept.
A word like a vision,
s slipping over the lips
like water over a weir.
Transept.
Something lighter than a spacecraft
orbiting;
a fume
somehow escaping;
transssssssssssssssssssss,
a small perfection,
fragment of renaissance art,
a sssssssssnip of eternity.
Elemental
Trees keening winter
nights away,
their wails woven into
the wind;
heads of hair like
seaweed taken from the strand,
flails knotted in
insoluble puzzles.
Underground, roots twisting toward some source,
shaped by memory;
trees, like abandoned
lovers,
scratching down the
marble of night-time.
Monday, April 23, 2018
Above Ground Below Ground
Above ground
my limbs fan out,
carrying spoons
to fill with light.
You tear them up.
Below ground,
my roots fan out,
drinking straws
to suck in water.
You tear them up.
Without me
there is no life
above
or below ground;
and still you tear.
Labels:
destruction of environment,
pollution
Wednesday, April 18, 2018
Tuesday, April 17, 2018
Piper's Music
The piper is a mythological entity, so, free from shackles, his significance is unlimited.
Now the piper plays the
notes of earth:
the slow air of the
soil settling beneath our feet,
the centuries that have
run like water,
the season-spattered years
of crying, laughter,
wars and famine;
the bones beneath us,
the resurrected bones;
the notes of time long
gone, times never been.
He plays the cycles of
life and death, mountain to sea-bed,
flower to seed.
His notes are the snowfall
of white-thorn in June,
flurries of its petals
in January.
The air is an air long
gone, still coming;
he plays it slow; too
slow for running ears;
too low for ears never
listening.
Friday, April 13, 2018
photograph
I find you among the strewn things in the attic
and pull you clear.
You all but demanded to be lifted
but then go mute.
I drop you back, watch a moment to see you settle;
you’re giving a porcelain vase your lop-sided smile.
It’s not the memories that holds me that bit longer;
but your smile in that heap of junk.
Sunday, April 8, 2018
Smoke
In the bar in which they used to meet,
I see him, in what was their place;
eyes fixed on the floor-boards before him,
cigarette smoke dreaming upward.
And then I see her sinuously, in silver tresses,
climbing the light; her slender body uncurling
from his downturned head, and I understand,
she, a resurrected soul, is leaving him.
At One End Of A Bench.
At one end of a bench
an old man wearing Winter
clothes
regards the fountains and
Summer
through melt-water irises.
This man needs my ear to
be a conch
so that he can call to the
past down these auditory canals.
And when he calls, his
wife and sons will resurrect,
return, reverse like filings
into a family.
It is mid-morning in
Stephen's Green;
the usual sounds: clacking
fowl and fountain symphonies,
outside the thrash of
traffic and voices.
In a moment:
two strangers on a bench
are traveling backwards to Mayo;
elsewhere a beggar has recreated
himself in a bank window
and somewhere, busy in a
kitchen, a woman is conversing
though the voice that
answers has not been heard for years.
Labels:
from Sunfire (Dedalus Press)
Tuesday, April 3, 2018
Faint
Strange to say, those memories are barely more than water
now;
fluid, indistinct, and always rushing away from me;
that they were ever more is immaterial, I am not who I was.
I do, of course, acknowledge that you have been part of that
change,
and for the good, I have not forgotten your part, and I am
thankful.
But I have difficulty remembering you. Your face refuses to
settle,
more or less as water spills, it refuses to fix in my mind;
your voice comes and goes, otherworldly and faint, like a signal on the shortwave.
More strikingly though, your spirit has become remote from
me;
not by choice, but
with the passing of time, the mountain of featureless days
that I’ve kicked up behind me, the dust of accumulated years
between us;
distance has anaesthetised me; I no longer remember the feeling of you being here.
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