Tuesday, September 30, 2014

The brink


Once the wrong word said, I’m gone crazy ─
my smile snapped;
her ribbons & wheel & steel in my head whirring,
whirlicue;
a sick spinning,
nauseous flight. 

She sets off explosions; no punches spared,
nor tanks nor guns; pulls no punches.
Nor when I stop
is she stopped,
but pistons and steam chunnelling
to distraction.

 If peace is an option, I don’t think she’ll
take it,
but lobbing spanners in,
ignition flaming,
she likes to go to the brink;
like brinking is sex.

Friday, September 26, 2014

Spiritual Growth


Women, meat, all jaws, Hughie feared;
Church-fed fear.
Pruned Hughie rattling inside himself,
no rattling outside,
but bloated sensationless, bone-dry tinder.
 

All pray: feed the soul; Hughie feeds the soul
 ‘til his soul is ballooning  out of his body,
 and he giving thanks for spiritual growth.
 

Concrete-heavy Hughie, all aching,
walking the earth like a space thing.

Wednesday, September 24, 2014

Old Houses, Children Gone



A Stranger In The Townland.


In Autumn the farmhouse
with the sun-folded field beneath its chin,
traps the daylight in its spectacles,
then flashes it away.

A swing hangs among the orchard's arthritic trees
without stirring;
without remembering
a frantic liveliness now reduced
to the occasional commotion of a falling fruit.

Once songs of apples filled the farmhouse;
but the children became photographs,
the dust settled on their frames
and soon Autumns were flying uncontrollably by.
Today, between its curiosities, a bluebottle drones.

Now that the conversation with the hillside
is ended, the farmhouse
with the sycamore stole
has become an eccentric;
a stranger in the townland.

Sunday, September 21, 2014

Pre-digital childhood

Remembering a pre-digital childhood; the, now, quaint pleasures of Autumn: orchards weighed down with ripe apples........ ripe for robbing, berries and damsons ready for picking. This was one of my first poems, I haven't seen it in a  long time.


   Held Apple High.

 

There's a place for me
up among the branches
of an ivy-draped lord.
 

Crab-appled;
golden treasures mixed
with stars of leaves.
 

There, inside the old elbow,
with Autumn breezes
close by shoulder,
 

quiet as an owl
I'd love to be.

Tuesday, September 16, 2014

from Above Ground, Below Ground

The  series of  poems for my collaboration with artist Elaine Leigh, Above Ground Below Ground, is getting its  final brush up.

This poem refers to the spookiness of the clusters of trees that often grow  around stone circles; even now the old superstitions weigh on those who would trespass after dark.


Inside the trees
is another place: unlit, uncharted.
At night even braggers refuse to enter
those grotesque tunnels.
 

At night boulders walk,
boughs flex their biceps;
high up, screeching necks
toss slicks of hair;
 

even the summer wind
squeals through like a hunted pig.
After dark  the trees stir cauldrons
of brains and guts.

 

Saturday, September 13, 2014

A Dream Song.....Sort of

A number of years ago, I knew a man who drank too much, aged very rapidly, and died prematurely. It  was suggested to me that it all resulted from his coping very poorly with aging, and the loss of his active sexual life.

A Dream Song


Hughie’s bathroom mirror has informed him
that young women are no longer prospects,
except going the financial route. 

Cognizant of that barren future, he considers his options:
a.       Pubs (without bouncers)
b.      Theatre
c.       Restaurant
d.      Sky Sports
e.    Ballroom Dancing

In e, he recognizes suicidal desperation:
a suicide he’ll achieve most painlessly
by spending long hours in a.

Thursday, September 11, 2014

Opening minds

 
 
 
A hugely inspirational talk by Sir Ken Robinson on an form of education that would elicit the very best from our children. Listen for 6 minutes, and allow yourself, (like me), to be utterly convinced. 
 
 
 

Tuesday, September 9, 2014

Getting to hell away

It's not often I'd feel happy that I got a poem the way it was intended; I was pleased with this. It gets what I wanted: a mean spirited, finger to the ex-lover ( "you folded up small"), vengeful little poem. It doesn't refer to anyone in my life, I hasten to add.
   
 
 
PASSAGE.
 

We were lovers;

now I'm off,

you're packed away;

you folded up small.
 

So with curving spine

and arms belting knees

tight under chin, I roll on;

a wheel from the accident.
 

Ahead there is space,

to wander in,

to kick up dust;

space where fires won't burn.

Friday, September 5, 2014

Readings of Dream Songs and Competition News


There will be a reading from the new anthology of dream songs, Berryman’s Fate: A Centenary Celebration, edited by Philip Coleman and published by Arlen House, on Wednesday 24 September at 6.30pm in the Irish Writers’ Centre. The anthology presents dream songs by a host of well-known contemporary poets; it will be very interesting to see the varying approaches to Berryman's innovative format (if you can call it a format). 
It will be formally launched in October at two Berryman centenary conferences in TCD and in Minneapolis. Other North American and UK launches are being planned.
Some competition news:
Ballymaloe International Poetry Award 2014 (closing date 312st Dec): http://www.themothmagazine.com/a1-page.asp?ID=5858&page=10 
Caterpillar Poetry Award (best poem for children, closing 31st March): http://www.thecaterpillarmagazine.com/a1-page.asp?ID=7253&page=12

Tuesday, September 2, 2014

A death


Struggling for each breath

- mouthfuls of air for god’s sake -,

I said “stop working so hard;

take it easy, Mam”

 

Dying,

yet still forced to work;

take it easy.

take it easy.

 

Her hand, in mine, slackened;

she took it easy,

her eyes fell to the side.

Now I  ask, did I speed her on her way?

Friday, August 29, 2014

When all the world was young


            Oh for the days of childhood, when the sun was always in the sky, ice-creams came in wafers, we skated on the pond all winter long, men whistled on the way to work, Christmases were  knee-deep in snow and the neighbours invited you in for orange squash and bikkies. Nightime was curl up cosy in front of the blazing turf fire. Oh dear, if only!               
 
 
 
                            Eleven

 
          I am eleven;
my eyes are overflowing with light
from the spangling stream,
ears brimming with its chattering
sprays and runs,
my back lush with the magnificence 
of  Summer sun. 
 

I am in a field of cowslips,
the colour butter ought to be;
in the distance a bell is chiming
but I have no duties.
I’m lying on my stomach on a wooden bridge,
my eyelids shut, my fingers fishing for splinters.
 

Monday, August 25, 2014

Live Recording of Day-long Reading of 'Paradise Lost', Trinity College Dublin, 2012




“The mind is its own place, and in itself can make a heaven of hell, a hell of heaven”
 

Here is the link to the live reading of John Milton's Paradise Lost as recorded at Trinity College Dublin on the 14th of December, 2012. http://paradiselostreading.wordpress.com/the-recordings/
It offers a good opportunity to put voices to Irish poets you’ve been reading for years. Among the many notables that took part in the day-long reading were Eiléan Ní Chuilleanáin, Macdara Woods, Philip Coleman, Brendan Kennelly,  Nuala Ní Dhomhnaill, Iggy McGovern, Harry Clifton and Seamus Heaney. I read my lines from Book 9.
A commemoration of John Berryman’s Dream Songs is being planned for this October. A collection of newly penned Dream Songs is in the pipeline; I expect there’ll be an online recording of that event before the year is out.



 

Thursday, August 21, 2014

Powerful Imagery


 
 
Francis Bacon’s Head VI can quickly inspire a poem. The claustrophobia within that cage, the tassel that suggests he has been interred with a hornet. That  grotesque scream, unmitigated by eyes. Is he caged for our protection; his protection; is it representative of a state of mind or a metaphor for his position; is it pain or aggression?
So many of his works are raw emotion; for me, no other artist hits the gut with such power. All those possibilities carry a different poem; I keep a collage of some of his and other images on our box room wall.
 
 

Monday, August 18, 2014

The Wind Claps The Slates.


 
 

The wind claps the slates;

all night they are hooves running berserk,

all night the wind is inciting them;

all night.

 

At twenty past two and twenty past three

and twenty past four I am looking at you;

how I would love to have hooves to come

crashing through your sleep, to burst into

your solitude.

 

And there I would, for better or worse,

demolish the muzzled years with as much

violence as reverberates beneath iron shoes,

as  causes such a frenzy in stone that slates

stampede.

Thursday, August 14, 2014

Following Rousseau




 
 
I'm not sure this does follow Rousseau, but the idea came from his painting 'The Sleeping Gypsy', it's a revised version.

 
                                           The desert has no

throat
to crease the silence;
wing
to ruffle the air;
leg
to displace a sand grain. 

In the desert
I am
atom, planet;
as massive, as minute.