Sunday, July 18, 2021

The White Square

 

The white square;

that dense emptiness;

the pressure it exerts.


I point out that there is nothing there,

that you are struggling with nothing,

that there is only you.

Friday, July 16, 2021

A Time


 Didn’t our lives come together? Once. 

Wasn’t there a time that was ours; 

the two of us? 

Isn’t that so, wasn’t there?

A time, once?

Wednesday, July 14, 2021

Survision Issue Nine

Includes 33 poets  from Ireland, England, Wales, USA, Canada, Australia,  Italy, some in translation https://survisionmagazine.com/currentissue.htm

And entries  open for submissions to the James Tate Prize 2021 for a poetry chapbook. 1st Prize: €120; 2nd Prize: €80. Both winners will win a chapbook publication + 10 free copies. There is an entrance fee of €16 for each manuscript. Deadline: 31th August 2021, midnight. Info: https://survisionmagazine.com/jamestateprize.htm

Friday, July 9, 2021

Gulls

 

Dazzle-bellied off the graphite sea,

curds flying from the churned-up agitation

of the tide; the ocean’s mouth foaming, venting

furiously onto the beach at Rossnowlagh.


Inside the thunder-ear, climbing the grey air,

slicing the storm, they stitch cloud and water, screaming

obscenities at each other; thrashing and wheeling

in the cage between a ferocious earth, indifferent Heaven.

Friday, July 2, 2021

The wish

 

Grinning in the sunlight, the river

plays jazz on the stones.


I sit, feet dangling,

its frequencies lighting my face;


toss a coin for happiness

into the honeycomb of bright water,


It settles among the pebbles

that all wishes become.

Thursday, July 1, 2021

Sitting Outside

 

He sits, comatose, outside his door;

the beer tins, spent cartridges

scattered all around.


She wakes him, suggests dinner;

he insists on having one more,

pulling the trigger releases a gasp.


Next time she comes

he’s slumped back in his chair,

a trail of beer running away from him.


Sunday, June 27, 2021

Perspective

 

My house is a box;

I move from bed to table to television and back,

bed to table to television and back.


From above I am a mouse scuttling;

stopping starting fidgeting nibbling sleeping.

From further up an ant.


The greater the distance, the more inexplicable

the behavior;

more’s the pity we don’t see ourselves from a height.

Wednesday, June 23, 2021

Goya

Goya from The Disasters of War



Goya

Of course not!
Of course no one that ever cracked open a head
has seen a symphony pour out.

No executioner has seen the flow of an amber fireside
with its intimate and tangling caresses 
drain from the split skulls of lovers 

 nor have soldiers who shoot dark holes 
 seen rafts of memories spilling, 
 carrying the children, the birthdays, the orchards, 
 the dances. 

 When they shot the poet, Lorca,
 the bullets sailed in a universe, 
 yet when the blood spurted it was only blood 
 to them.

Sunday, June 20, 2021

Our Finest Belonging

 


Sorolla - The Siesta

When we lay there, our bodies were grass,

a sea of meadow, the sweep of wind carrying

us along, flowers of rye. We, the droning

bumble bees in buttercups; we, the chirruping

finches, chomping cattle; darting suddenly

within briary hedgerows, rustlings, commotions

and hunters’ silences; and only vaguely conscious

of the faraway cataracts of traffic.


How sumptuous the flow of light and warmth;

how sinuous our bodies in that current,

the colours of the field embroidering our bodies.

We, agglomerations of the soil; we, the criss-crossing

zeniths of nerve and muscle: the fields risen on legs

now part of the swathes of breeze-blown beauty,

settled, nested into our finest belonging.

Thursday, June 17, 2021

Magical Ride

 


The countries of the world are passing over;

seas in sunlight; streamers of islands, far-off volcanic chains

stippled on a serene blue ocean, archipelagos for dreamers;

cumulus snow-covered mountains are towering himalayan

at the edge of my world west and south; burren-coloured foreboding

the continents north and east. My eyes, ships, have travelled

all the world and other worlds; seen more wonders

than all the explorers and all the travellers of myth and legend:

shimmering mountain ranges, the light emitting from within them;

grotesque creatures that evolve as you watch; unimaginable

monsters risen from the deep or birthed from the ribs of the land.

I have seen great curtains hanging from the heavens,

obscuring all of America, and when they’ve cleared

I have seen the fingers of God spread across the universe.

I have seen misty Kyoto on the Donegal hills where sometimes

there’s been nothing, the whole planet obliterated, a void.


All of this is my way of saying, whatever about plane, boat or car,

a seat by a window is a magical ride.

Tuesday, June 15, 2021

Beauty

 

Youthful beauty:

what a treasure that was,

like snow.


Settled on your face,

extended wings a moment,

then flew.


The skin, slackened

on your bones,

took the shape your humours.


In the end

life detaches itself from dreams;

then beauty is pointless.

Thursday, June 10, 2021

Bluebells

 

Bluebells


in memory of Peter 1929 2021


We had watched the bluebells arriving

in ones and twos, clusters then crowds;

their lights switching on like houses

on the hillside settling in for the night.

We’d watched the blue covers extending

down the fields, and the Castle Caldwell trees

bathing ankle-deep in those waves.


We filled our eyes with the beauty,

harvesting it for thinner days;

the day the brilliant blue light dimmed on the hillside

was the day it went from your eyes.

We stopped the car to see it quenched

like a plantation felled or the bay’s muddy floor at neap tide,

and thanked God the granaries of our memories were overflowing.

Wednesday, June 9, 2021

Walking through summer's

 

swathes of bluebells,

setting rain and sunlight

ringing

or, perhaps,

languorous lanterns

spilling moonlit midnight

onto the ocean floor

or

thoughts

bubbling through

the fresh green moss

of toddlers’ imaginations

or

those souls

whose light

must wait

for yet another year.

Sunday, June 6, 2021

Screaming

 

You were screaming.

I looked inside,

a child

was using the cavern of your mouth.


Her agitation,

its minuteness

caused laughter;

she was convulsed with that frustration.


No one wanted to see

your mouth,

the red raw wound;

no one wanted to look inside.


You screamed.

Friday, June 4, 2021

I said to my daughter

 

His gentleness now stone;

she, her love, a tree;

the bark climbed her body

till, finally, her eyes were shut;

he and his anger now a flower;

her generosity a shell.


And so it goes

till all is turned.

I remember her arms:

now blades of grass.

If only we had known,

but how could we, that was then.