Religion aside, the cross
as a symbol of freedom:
its four corners open
so it cannot contain;
its crossbeam embracing the sky,
poised for flight;
its shape more defined
when light floods about it.
.
Poetry by Irish poet Michael O'Dea. (poems © Michael O’Dea, Dedalus Press, Amastra-n-Galar, Lapwing Publications)
Religion aside, the cross
as a symbol of freedom:
its four corners open
so it cannot contain;
its crossbeam embracing the sky,
poised for flight;
its shape more defined
when light floods about it.
.
Walking through the house: a trespass.
Your order, comforts, colours;
your breath, but not your breathing.
Walking inside your head
with no permission;
blundering into that unexpected museum-like staticity.
Walking in your space;
the ghost of you constantly passing
but the sunlight falling shadowless onto the floor.
(rewrite of a poem posted a few years back)
My mid-morning kitchen;
the clouds have opened;
a billion motes are dawdling
in a slant sunlight.
Afternoon, on a park bench;
a pool of sunlight before me;
inside, a cosmos of flies
demonstrate Brownian motion.
It's midnight; I stop to watch
moths in a lamp-light,
they are meteorites streaking
from invisibility to invisibility.
here's some advice from Ogden Nash:
Always Marry An April Girl
Praise the spells and bless the charms,
no universe.
Male body in a coffin
crucified yesterday.
What is life, Lord;
what can we not see?
Thrown there, a pair of boots,
well scuffed, parched;
a lolling tongue
thirsting for dubbin.
Laces trailing away
like wire after an escape;
the boots waiting,
endlessly patient.
Leather whose memories
are those of old hands,
who remember the stories
in their sleep.
.
Danced a hornpipe on the stream
to its continuous applause.
60% water, the moon full,
I was, indeed, at the top of my form,
clicking the stones
and stomping up spray,
quavers and crotchets draining
from my heels;
and the rooks on the tops of the trees
were roaring me on, breaking into jigs
themselves, they were,
and the sky full of jingly silver
and shooting concertina notes.
The old men walk a circle from the home;
their old suits holding their bones together.
They stop at the bridge to inquire how life goes;
the river speaks differently to each, then slithers along.
Once, an old man lay down in middle of the road
just over the bridge and was killed almost instantly.
Old people see visions in rivers, they understand, walk on,
and maybe next day come back again to learn some more.
No one knows what he saw in the river, but no one doubts
that it was the river that directed him to his bed.
Into the earth they go, those lives barely more than dreams.
Nurtured, schooled, and delivered before the full flowering
of youth to the guns and bombs of wars spurred on by the
vainglorious who, beating the drums in the far distance, turn
on the tap of patriotic souls. And how they let it drip; oh, if it
had been a tap of water, it would’ve been mended long ago;
the pity is we don’t hear soldiers dying.
Portuguese singer/songwriter José 'Zeca' Alfonso at his best: Grandola vila morena, with its haunting accompaniment of marching feet is, even by the high standards of Portuguese music, extraordinarily stirring. Sometimes a song gives me the feeling that I must write, rare enough really, but when that sense lingers it is down to the strength of feeling the singer and song arouses, and this is definitely a case in point.
Grândola, brown town,
Land of fraternity;
It's the people who command
Inside you, oh city.
Inside you, oh city,
It's the people who command;
Land of fraternity,
Grândola, brown town.
On each corner there's a friend
In each face there's equality
Grândola, brown town,
Land of fraternity.
Land of fraternity
Grândola, brown town
In each face there's equality
It is the people who command
In the shadow of a holm oak
Which no longer knew its age
I swore as my companion,
your will, Grândola;
your will, Grândola,
I swore as my companion
In the shadow of a holm oak
Which no longer knew its age.
Daffodils are
yellow-brained aliens
standing one-legged
in the April snow.
Star-headed,
they gaze into the emptiness,
open-mouthed,
silent.
The waves make mountains;
they are as impassable as the Himalayas.
A life time is short;
I’m not going to take them on;
and that, somehow, seems a defeat;
a wide gaping failure;
as though the waves came ashore and found me
and declared to all and sundry that I am a coward.
Underside of a ripple moving through the water;
sleek and graceful.
Elegant too, sitting by the pool as though it was
the flowing water that shaped her.
And the pool, still in thoughtfulness, as I would be
if she stepped away.
The backs of my hands ancient:
aerial photo of mountain range,
parched landscape, countless miles.
My life, neither cuneiform nor hieroglyphic,
not hardship, but travelled;
travelled across that lonely landscape.
Oak-aged, Leonard’s voice.
Dancing in the early hours, turning
on the spools of his words;
arms pouring like wine downward,
filling her full with his lilt;
her eyes soft as the vowels he intoned;
her feet unsure, carefully stepping
on the cobbles of song;
singing it one beat behind
as though each word arrived one moment too late;
swaying,
the glass of wine in her hand
precarious
like a life on the verge of spilling.