Air-slicked,
slivered,
low to
the ground,
arrow straight,
pointed,
concealed in speed,
flecked
and silvered,
particle, weight
and eye.
Poetry by Irish poet Michael O'Dea. (poems © Michael O’Dea, Dedalus Press, Amastra-n-Galar, Lapwing Publications)
Air-slicked,
slivered,
low to
the ground,
arrow straight,
pointed,
concealed in speed,
flecked
and silvered,
particle, weight
and eye.
Happiness didn’t intrude on him too much
so instead he took to filling himself with booze,
which zinged his mind, sent him dancing
(after a fashion) home most nights.
He became known for dancing,
which was not to his advantage; it was a style
of dancing that people considered unseemly,
so they left him to himself, to dance himself home.
Made him very angry with everyone, he took to arguing
with himself, but in his isolation, he lost his volume
control, found himself kicked out of the bars onto the streets;
the streets where the traffic passes in an unending blur.
There seemed no reason not to argue with a blur; he did
continually, eventually becoming physical,
but the traffic didn’t stop
Cherry-blossomed with sunlight:
our black branches
above January’s whitened hills.
Let’s gather the berries
of these Fabergé-brilliant wonders
into the bright cans of our eyes;
let’s harvest their sparkle;
drench the old stones
that have long since forgotten to smile.
While walking the red water
into the bloody sky, above pitch
black trees, pilgrims to the shore,
a hundred thousand starlings fly
my chest to the blade-blue corners
of the world. I flap my coat, they rain
black cinders onto the lake, rekindle,
resurrect and flash; the clouds’ fire
feathers spread further eastward, and
there’s calm like I’ve swallowed the
wind; suddenly colossal, I hunt the sun
beyond the curve of the known earth.
face drift
in patterned glass
you
disordered
complete
and broken
your transience all in that one fleeting moment
Kisses her closed eyelids, cheeks;
breathes warmly into the well of her ear,
catches the lobe between his teeth,
gently pulls; runs opened lips slowly
downward to her shoulder; she shivers;
counts the vertebrae of her neck with the tip
of his tongue, and beneath the collar of her blouse;
a lizard with electric feet scuttling down
the length of her spine; she opens her eyes;
a momentary shimmering of the air between her
and the window, then focussing, looks out onto
the field like the small exhilarations of her skin
are blooming there; his arms around her,
his fingertips kissing her still.
His was a wintry man;
life bent him crabbed
like a thorn tree near the ocean,
shaped to gnarled contrariness.
He was a thorny man;
drink sharpened his anger,
kept his lightning bolts charged,
loose as the change in his pocket.
He was a raggedy man,
ripped by the snags that held him;
only his poetry escaped,
blazing like the gorse in June.
A lifetime may not be enough
to recognize yourself;
I have a friend who, like the guy
who wears shades indoors,
doesn’t see what everyone does:
his affectation reveals exactly
what it was supposed to hide.
Reaching down into that sack
that’s always emptying;
scrabbling for ideas, having gobbled
the best of them years ago;
the left overs chewed
to the point flavourlessness.
Ambitions skinnier than wish-bones;
the best ideas: elusive sparks
that fly and quench.
Always running after notions
that were a May afternoon’s falling petals
forty years ago;
always straining for the psychedelic sky
colouring a different planet.
Parents with kids that go online,
sitting in the other room thinking everything’s fine;
you gotta keep watch, the dangers are immense;
the internet’s full of paedophiles and presidents.
Old Man Conversing With Blackbird
There’s an old man conversing with a blackbird
high in a sycamore across the street, whistling
up at it, grinning.
Odd-looking guy, long grey hair, pale face;
heavy coat pinned tight around his neck
almost down to his ankles; you can’t miss him.
Nuts, I’d say; oblivious to people passing,
looking at him; not dangerous though,
maybe to himself.
Only person on the street going nowhere,
like a rock in a stream; I think someone should come
and get him; put him somewhere safe.
How many paintings did Cezanne paint of Mont Sainte-Victoire? In different light, from different angles, at different times, in different seasons, different weathers.
I look at the Gap and see the mountains change chameleon-like through the course of a day, much less a year. Irish weather is as changeable as it gets: bright sunshine alternates with rain frequently, not in a season, but in a day, an hour. With the shifting clouds, shifting colours; shifting cloudscapes. In driving rain, the mood changes: darker shades seem to bring darker moods. In mist, the mountains become vague and mysterious; suggestions of other things.
All in all, this place is a dream for landscape painters, but for poets too.
Croaghonagh at Barnesmore in Donegal from a particular angle is a fearsome-looking cliff, from other angles less so. But with the never-ending procession of changing weather types, it seems almost alive. I wish I had the painter's skill to convey this, indeed, I wish I had greater skill in poetry to achieve it. But that, of course, hasn't stopped me yet.
Croaghonagh
This morning, cloud
streamed as jauntily from its neck
as any scarf that ever trailed
backward over a 1920’s Roadster.
At three, threatening
fiercely,
it glared across the valley
with a thunder-rolled brow.
After sunset, the light reflected
off the burnished
undersides of clouds,
dressed it in a burgundy evening gown.
Come dawn, it will be transparent;
birds lighter than seeds
will glide through its space
on elegant outstretched wings.
.
The first throws fits;
vents his frustrations down telephone wires,
leaves nuts and bolts scattered all over the sky,
never cleans up.
The second lives in the hawthorn hedge,
stayed there all Christmas long,
brought soft drizzle to soothe a world in need;
dampened down the edges of noise;
left silver haws shimmering.
The third, a wind of the high sky,
keens an impossible pitch,
close your ears or you will mourn too.
Fourth, and most annoying, one that steals the sun's heat
when you've removed your shirt on the beach,
and still has the gall to leave you
inside the picture of a warm day.
And the wind imprisoned in an abandoned house:
kicking the doors, swinging in the rafters,
panicking in places no one can find;
a wind beside itself with the terror of its own company.
She has a delicate face;
casts her eyes downward;
I noticed her mascara;
her eyes would be the brighter for it.
I saw the crescent of her eyelashes,
the curve of her cheek;
she was not speaking then
and did not know I was looking at her.
I was slightly behind
and to one side,
and formed an opinion
based on that view alone.
I fell in love
based on that view alone:
the delicacy of her fine-boned face,
her downcast eyes.
To me, they spelt gentleness or fragility.
In life, there are a few occasions that are urgent,
that are, like the lighting of a match,
brilliant flashes.
On a park-bench, listening to the sound of leaves falling,
he became, suddenly, aware of the sound of heartbeat inside
his chest. The lub-dub of valves closing, then of the flow of
blood through those chambers, out into the arteries, and
around the labyrinthine vessels of his body.
The city silenced, the traffic that had flowed along the three
sides of the park now stationary, he was aware of himself
being present as he had never been to himself before.
Among falling Autumn leaves, a man sits in a state I’d almost
call ecstasy while the city growls continuously around him.