Poetry by Irish poet Michael O'Dea. (poems © Michael O’Dea, Dedalus Press, Amastra-n-Galar, Lapwing Publications)
Friday, May 22, 2020
An Long Corcra - The Purple Ship
An Long Corcra
An spéir glas leathsféarúil,
díon craiceáilte mo theach,
bobaire lán le cruthaíocht.
Na páirceanna gorma spraíúil,
droimneach mar bhraillín sa gaoth
faoi righne na sléibhte dearga.
Agus mise, captaen an long corcra,
ag seoladh farraige mór mo shaol,
gan aird a thabhairt ar compás nó réalta
ar bith.
I don't think I'd have written this in English; what a pleasure it is to be writing poems trí Gaeilge, and again, if any reader spots a grammatical error I'd be very grateful for the correspondence. Here's a translation.
The Purple Ship
The hemispherical green sky,
mad roof of my house,
prankster full of invention.
The playful blue fields,
undulating like a sheet in the wind
under the strict red mountains.
And myself, captain of the purple ship,
navigating the ocean of my life
without compass or star.
Wednesday, May 20, 2020
A Person
1.
He paints all sorts.
Familiar scenes,
but there’s always
something missing:
a tree with trunk
and crown, no middle,
house with windows,
blank space ‒ no door.
2.
He lives rough;
his back the wall of
his bedroom.
He listens to a
radio, low static-filled sounds
that dribble from
his privacy into the street.
3.
I’m looking at the
doorway;
the paintwork is
scorched.
It’s been like
that for a while now;
he, himself, is
missing.
Monday, May 18, 2020
And then
And then
And then
And then
You get to where
you are.
After all that
After all of it
After all
that
You arrive at where you are.
Here
Here
Here
This is where I have arrived at.
Personal Observation
The page invites words like snow invites footsteps;
the climber’s
challenge of a cliff with no footholds.
Countless times my
imagination has proven itself to be
(i) the empty
snowscape
(ii) unfit for the challenge.
Saturday, May 16, 2020
Trump Watch
For years I couldn't quite grasp how Germany walked itself into despotism. Now I'm beginning to get it.
Friday, May 15, 2020
Trains
We recorded trains speeding past:
successions of
windows,
film strips flashing
across our eyes,
flapping away into
the night.
You described trains
passing apartment windows
in an Italian city:
photographs of strangers:
a cup halfway to a
mouth,
a head bent to a
drawer.
A photographic
exhibition:
snapshots of the
disconnected
lives of modern
cities;
ephemeral
existences, dispensable people.
In your apartment we
watched our footage,
it delighted us:
trains are film strips;
they roll and roll
and roll
and each frame is a
kind of death.
Thursday, May 14, 2020
Butterfly Poem
One solar bright afternoon, I stopped to watch
a butterfly ‒
white wings with orange tips ‒
fluttering for a few
moments above the May
green foliage on
the roadside at
Lough Eske,
then settling on a
leaf, a candle flame suddenly still.
Spectacle may be the
Grand Canyon’s sheer fall or
a bengal tiger
crouching on a snow-bound Himalayan crag;
but in the vastness
of a Donegal hedgerow
it is a splinter of
life flying between paper-thin wings
more dazzling than rose petals
more dazzling than rose petals
Monday, May 11, 2020
Speckled Water
The pools
the pools of stones
hide the eels
eels
the eels of mottled water
I dipped my foot
dipped
I dipped my foot
into the teeth
the teeth of writhing water
oh how it ran
ran from me
shiny side of a ripple
how those teeth took my foot
the eels of speckled water
Saturday, May 9, 2020
From a Child's Window
The child is at the window; he is there every evening
at this time, as the
clouds of the world are catching fire. He knows
the fields behind
his house: the hay-shed with the tunnels through the bales,
the wrecked car
under the elders where some of the hens are laying,
the field with the
maze of pathways through the furze.
Beyond that, the
railway line where the lesser known world begins.
He has been there,
where the fields are wide and there are no houses,
to the water hole
where the small fish dart from weed cover to weed cover;
that’s where the
prairie begins, where cowboys travel alone.
To the left, the
railway line cuts straight to the white gates;
he has seen the
gates; beyond them trains travel days, weeks
across parched
deserts, open steppes, past wadis, oases. The passengers
seldom look:
tuxedoed gentlemen with glinting teeth are tipping whiskeys
lit by a million
lights in crystal glasses to feather-boa’d women
whose champagne
drinks sparkle back from the tips of their slender arms.
He knows the station
is to the right, and there’s the bridge he loves to stand on
when the four
o’clock is coming through. The excitement as the engine appears,
slowing to the
platform, then starts up, and the carriage roofs passing beneath him,
he loves that; then
the last of it, the tail slithering away from the station.
Where to? He does
not know. It goes into a place he has no thoughts on;
the evening train
into the hours he sleeps through; that is where darkness is.
Labels:
childhood imagination,
Roscommon town 1960s,
Trains
Thursday, May 7, 2020
International Incident in Local Pub
Early
twenties, long
fair hair, blue-jeaned, Dutch I'd guess. Camping
on the beach probably;
sitting
now
with her travelling companion at the next table.
I’m
in the only bar in the locality, Friday night, thronged with locals
enjoying the weekly music. The two girls have a different style, they’re
noticed, but that’s the height of it; you
get summer visitors in these parts.
At
the bar, shimmying, the local Ronaldo. Thirty-five-ish, pint in
one hand, massaging
roll of belly between tee-shirt and jeans with the other; he’s
outlining a
game-plan to
three acolytes:
‘gwan horse!’
But
the girl’s
spread-eagled on his
cross hairs and the
performance
is
for her. He’s
watching,
every
few minutes his eyes travelling over
to
her table.
And
suddenly he’s off to her table. He’s full-sail
on the open sea, and
that’s noticed too, but that’s the height of it.
He
asks her to dance.
On
the dance floor
he’s doing a jive-waltz-dribble sort of thing, interrupted occasionally
to lob the odd word down her ear-hole. There’s
twirl, lots of twirl, and
twinkling feet;
the
locals know the story,
little
smiles on their faces, the
pair
are the only ones dancing.
Back
at
the bar, anticipation-pricked, he’s warming the lads; shimmies
becoming daintier, more intricate like; he calls another
pint......and a glass.
The
glass crosses the floor, the pint with it.
Stool
patted, down goes the arse and it’s chat, chat, chittidy, chattedy,
chit-chat;
he
massages his belly
and then another pint.
“Glass
?”
“No
thanks.”
Back
at
the bar, horn-filled, brimmin; Rono, ya beauty!
But
they
bolt. The
two girls gone.
The discovery takes a moment or two.
He roars, runs after them, across the lounge, out the door, slams it shut; leaves the lads
scattered, astounded feathers behind him.
And the music, as they say, played on.
Sunday, May 3, 2020
Late Afternoon in a Different Time
Late Afternoon
The sky was ablaze
with gorse,
I played hide and
seek on the tracks between
till a high wind
tired of that, so I took the boat out onto the lake,
went fishing for
pike.
Countries changed
into dogs, bears, ugly guys with misplaced noses;
I looked at the
hills, they were wreathed in white thorn,
then turning onto my
stomach, I let the sun lie on my back
while I read a
little, Treasure Island.
The swallows were
wheeling over Wyoming canyons;
I shifted in my
rocky lair, but could see no indians coming;
there was a stirring
under the palm tree,
and a spider walked
up my arm, I watched him for awhile;
he had made a
scrawny web of Italy so I blew on him
and the sun moved
toward five.
I could see the
burst football was not about to play,
so I poked my finger
into the blue and looked at it with one eye shut;
the sun was a
scorching white ball that no one could look at directly;
I mopped the sweat
from my forehead and drained my canteen dry,
then turned onto my
side. There were blossoms on the apple trees
and a voice like
metal came through the privet hedge.
The voice was
calling tea-time; a familiar voice to be sure,
but an escapee from
another sky.
Thursday, April 30, 2020
Spring Music
Kay’s
at the window playing concertina to the Bluestacks,
Clar,
Donegal town and
the sea,
a
grinning
guitar string beyond.
The
wind’s taken up the
rhythm, playing the birches;
and
the
pampas plume, no
dancer himself, is
jinking
to and fro;
a
kill-joy
stem
jerking
him earthward over and over.
There
are
birds
on the wires spaced like a code, clouds perched
between them in
shades of
white to cream, ivory and
pearl.
A
plume of smoke rising diffuse in some distant trees
is
solidifying, where the sky begins, into molar Ben Bulben,
and
all is plush and wonderful in Spring’s fresh greenery.
Tuesday, April 28, 2020
Giorria
Noiméad
ar
a
shuaimhneas,
ina
thiarnas
ciúin, folamh.
Go
tobann ag
ropadh tríd an scrobarnach
mar
a bhí
mé í
láthair.
Draíocht
an nóiméid,
é
ina shuí ina áit
féin,
imníoch,
ach an méid atá
nádúrtha
dó
í
dtús
Aibreáin, é
ar
faire ar chnocán féarmhar.
Agus
draíocht a éalú,
an
aclaíocht
sin
agus
an diongbháilteas;
treo
áirithe aige, an
cinneadh agus an bhogadh
déanta
ar
an bpointe.
Transl.
Hare
One moment at ease,
in his quiet empty dominion.
Suddenly flashing through the undergrowth
because I am present.
The magic of the moment,
him sitting in his own place,
anxious, but the amount that is natural to him
at the beginning of April, him on the lookout on a grassy hillock.
And the magic of his escape,
the agility and the single-mindedness;
a particular direction, the decision and the movement
made in an instant.
Saturday, April 25, 2020
I love You
This is an updated version of a poem I posted about two years ago.
I
love you
The
chives’
purple
heads standing on their
bottle-green stalks
were
June’s bright soldiers above the dun-coloured sandstone;
beyond
them, on the hillside opposite, the soft pile forestry
was
our
wealth, especially in the rich glow of evening sun.
I
moved closer to you, held out my hand to find yours already there.
to
be links in this
chain of
beauty; and then I said, ‘I love you.’
It
was not just the
moment, but
the
magnificence
we
were
part of;
happiness
was bubbling, the words came like breaking into a song.
Wednesday, April 22, 2020
Childhood.
A cloudscape that
forms and deforms
one carefree
afternoon when you’re in your back garden.
A warm sun; lying on
your back gazing at the sky;
change as remote as
care.
But infinite time
that it is, it flashes by,
childhood changing
shape without ever having had a shape.
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