What skies beneath our feet,
what immensities we trample;
how much gentler our step would be
if we saw the minute wonders of the world.
Poetry by Irish poet Michael O'Dea. (poems © Michael O’Dea, Dedalus Press, Amastra-n-Galar, Lapwing Publications)
What skies beneath our feet,
what immensities we trample;
how much gentler our step would be
if we saw the minute wonders of the world.
Far down, a glimmer of light;
down inside the earth, a wonder
to our young eyes.
We lowered the bucket
through the ferns and darkness
to collect magic,
and drew it up,
heavy with water
and mystery.
Pristine; icy; we drank
beautiful water,
and believed it to be purity.
The clouds are on the fields;
limestone walls their arms,
and thorns glistening black;
white berries of rain are
dropping from haws; haws
like rubies on slender fingers.
Limestone-locked, sodden
fields in thrall to water:
caged cress-green reveries;
long memories and dumb
to speak, as the sea might,
of sorrows buried in their depths.
October leaves on the footpath and pond
were galaxies, star-shaped maple;
colours of evening, hearth colours;
of a year whose duties have been seen to;
of hands when the deal is done.
Russet, reds, yellows, browns:
colours of contentment, of retiring.
In November they were rotting, blackening
sodden heaps, turning back to humus,
my October stars. In December they were gone,
but left hand-shaped traces all over the path,
waving back, waving back, those happy souls.
Church, state, company, brother/sisterhood ask for loyalty,
not to what is right but to their advancement.
It is time now for a thousand whistles to blow:
ask not what you can do for your country – ask what you can do
that is right.
In keeping with the principle of relativity,
when the branch gave, she travelled past galaxies,
enchanted by their beauty, gently down,
admiring Autumn’s Doppler Effect on the stars,
the shift from green to reds, browns and yellows.
Near the speed of light, she might have mapped
the universe but for this reverie,
so when she touched down (with a frightening thud),
the research was left undone; subsequently
her attention was diverted into a different field.
Her hair
fell, long entwined tresses
down the length of her back,
down past her knees.
Sunlight nested there,
in those long ivy trails;
small birds must surely have flown
garlands about her head?
But today it was patterns
of run-off water on the strand;
the way the past is preserved;
still beautiful, if stone.
cross the bridge
of your childhood
rolling it up
as you go
keep it
over your shoulder
ask for directions
to the desert
you’ll have arrived
when you are nowhere
unroll the rucksack
set up home
White is infinite:
infinite symmetries,
infinite perfections.
Intimidating therefore:
imperfection on white
is unforgivable.
I turned on my side, shadows moved between the wardrobe
and the ceiling, and over in the corner near the door. I closed
my eyes. Main Street was in the pours, its shops streaming down
the car windows, neon flashes, on and off, our faces dim
as 30watt bulbs, on off, on off, the car a prison of rain drumming
bad temper into our ears, and shapes of people fleeing both sides
of the street, like we too should be getting away, moving somewhere.
I opened my eyes to see Jesus in the wallpaper and closed my eyes
as quickly not to see Him, behind my eyelids a legion of angels
descended in iodine-coloured light from where coal-black clouds
had opened Heaven onto the earth. Open again, the lights of a car
travelled across the room, and left it blacker; where, I wondered,
can cars go in the pitch black night?
Gods; we make all that is in the world
beautiful when we are lovers.
In our sunlight all that was ordinary
is now spectacular, part of our happiness,
gathered around us, by us, to fulfill our
knowing of each other. All that is mundane,
the daily effects and events shine
with the gleam we see in each other;
all we live within heightened to exhilaration.
Love sees its perfection where it lives,
celebrates its belonging, and is complete.
If the stars fell
like snow
so all around
was a glow of lights
streaming
down our eyes,
making a surprise
of happiness,
I’d remember you,
between two lines
of July-dancing
sheets,
pegs in your teeth,
fast clouds in your hair;
ah, to be there
again
making a surprise
of happiness.
I wonder how it is taking leave of your loved ones that last time,
or watching the daffodils fade knowing it ito be your last season,
or hearing the words ‘rest now, breathing is too difficult’, knowing
those on the shore are letting the mooring line slip into the water.
Water
Water held my face;
the wind tried to steal it.
A fish jumped,
I had a brainwave:
why don’t you and I
make our home in the water?