From a clear blue sky
thunder,
bombs
and death
to man, woman
and child.
When it settles,
the dust is spread
over breakfast tables,
Tel Aviv to Washington;
the milk in our cereal
stained;
a grey powder
on our bread.
Poetry by Irish poet Michael O'Dea. (poems © Michael O’Dea, Dedalus Press, Amastra-n-Galar, Lapwing Publications)
From a clear blue sky
thunder,
bombs
and death
to man, woman
and child.
When it settles,
the dust is spread
over breakfast tables,
Tel Aviv to Washington;
the milk in our cereal
stained;
a grey powder
on our bread.
A rewrite of a poem from 2019. I regularly return to the topic of holy wells; their magic, their timelessness. People have been offering prayers at wells for millennia, but, in modern times, there is a atmosphere of precariousness around them; in a way it adds to their specialness. Many have been neglected, forgotten, destroyed or, since drying up, have lost their following, but all, since their thread sews centuries together should be preserved and respected.
Holy Well
The bottom of the well is a mosaic of wishes;
each one shining.
I have left my dream dancing in a tree,
a tree growing on solid rock.
Perhaps the dancers fall into the well;
perhaps their after-life is a gleam;
perhaps wishes become dreams;
perhaps our after-life is a dreaming.
Here the spring weaves itself into lush pasture;
where gods, immemorial, have changed
water to verdure,
perhaps this, indeed, is the place to sow a seed.
So, I'm a grandad. Felix arrived in February, when I started this poem; only now completing it or at least editing it further. It's all colour for the little fellow now, but seeing him in February, it really struck me how extraordinary the process of human growth and development is.
Cursing death;
the grim reaper
has slashed again
and we are bereft.
We overlooked
the kindly hand
that delivered her
from suffering.
I’d been here, a year maybe; and decided to see what was
covered by the overgrowth in a corner of the garden.
I hacked and cleared and found a small ravine
in the half-light of over-hanging trees, hazel and sally, with
a waterfall spilling down thin layers of rock, turning a corner
to a semi-circular enclosure, carpeted with anemones,
perfect for a bench.
I could see there was an old crossing-point over the stream,
a path climbing upward with a low bank running alongside.
Not far away, on the other side, the remains of an old dwelling;
barely more than a hovel. I imagine buckets carried to and fro,
clothes washed, boots sloshed clean as they headed in for the night;
the traffic of playing children, of adults driving their cattle,
of neighbours sharing their time.
There is an aura to places like holy wells, mass rocks, old laneways;
the marks of lives lived prompt visions, memories almost;
as though ghosts, pinned in by modern technology, have been
consigned to spend eternity in these haunts. Silences are held breaths;
the hills, drumlins, are billow-like behind me, it’s easy to picture
the farmers heading up to check on their sheep, dig their ridges;
meeting them, like this, is a solemn experience.
I wrote this a year ago, but left itvery much under-cooked; I think this is a fuller, more satisfying version.
Céide Fields
These walls, stone calligraphies,
almost six thousand years old,
predating Sumerian cuneiform,
built on the tablet of geologic time;
its pages stacked above the ocean,
stripes of the Céide cliffs
closed under the cover of bogland.
Peat that preserved their script,
a retelling of Neolithic life;
the walls of their fields like a net
thrown onto the land;
a farming community
perched above the roaring Atlantic,
their livestock in enclosures,
their lives lived in that lattice-work.
And now I think of Tom’s new walls,
the limestone boundaries of his fields;
how he has written his lines into this history,
albeit much further inland.
How he has added to the great patchwork,
six millennia in the making
and kept the stitch;
how glorious his walls stand.
When the snow started
the flakes wandered aimlessly,
casually, slowly downward.
All drifting, passing each other;
no plans, no destination,
no rush.
And still, each carries
the unvarying symmetries of snow:
the hexagonal branching of arms:
60°, hexagonal symmetry;
mirror symmetries, radial symmetries;
crashing like rebellious rich kids.
Vanessa atalanta has an Italian ring to it,
but she flies
among the briar blossoms here in Donegal.
When I first came to this house, I found
her in every room; her wings folded above her body.
In Winter, she’d sometimes be stirring; but now ‒ never;
what did I do?
She is, herself, an airborne flower
and I am always delighted to have her, for a moment,
in my cupped hands; but in December?
On reflection, I have been removing the briars
and pulling the running ivy;
bringing the garden to heel, you might say;
there are a lot of new houses going up around here.
Without presence,
our distant friendships
are doomed
as words are cold
on slabs of stone.
There’s a telegraph wire beyond my garden,
There is very little wisdom I can give; I’ve lived
long enough but seem to have learned little, and
looking around just now, that may be a human truth.
I am holding whatever happiness is in this moment;
my loves, dreams and wishes are blossoms now;
tomorrow: who knows! The future is a brittle vase.
We give our gods human shape;
they suffer our failures and weaknesses,
indulge in our desires.
And we believe ourselves god-like
with the right to dream of more,
infinitely more.
No surprise then, we meet them
on the nth storey of Babel,
staring at us; mirrors.
Years drift
languorous as smoke.
Those I knew
insubstantial now
as the memory
of their voices.
How we waft
on the gentle current
of time.
Waving
Age hides itself
until you need a new passport
or bump into a childhood friend.
Then the frantic effort
to find some familiar landmark
in that landscape:
eyes, mouth, smile;
digger life has shifted the earth
and you are lost.
Sometimes it's the voice
you remember;
its call from the depths.
Sometimes, in the eye,
turn of a mouth, you find
the key that was lost in the grass.
And now, face to face,
with the truth of your own age;
you must smile and lie.