Tuesday, July 23, 2024

Away

 

As a crumpled up page,

thrown there,

discarded;


in a vague way

the shape of the fist

that scrunched it;


a man

on a pavement

near a doorway


where cigarette

butts are strewn;

his face


bent close to his feet,

into his coat,

away.

Monday, July 22, 2024

What shape is our love

 

1.

What shape our love:

a circle I believe.


And what colour that shape:

buttercup yellow.


What constitutes the circle:

the village of our lives.


2.


We experience no gravity,

no ground;


when we step we fly,

when we fly we swim.


Dolphin-arced,

designed for infinity;


big and little hand,

we orbit the sun.










Wednesday, July 10, 2024

Still in Love with You

 

The sun playing the water;

I could hear those notes long after sunset.


Still in love with you was the song singing

 in the small hours awake;


that rise and fall,

the way the winds carry over the sands in your head;


how that play attaches to the nerve system;

how the choirs of sunlight sing you present .












Tuesday, July 9, 2024

His View on The Loss of Habitat

 

The loss of habitat:

criminal”, he says.


Not nearly enough consideration,

governments must do more.”


A worldwide effort,

nothing less."


Humans have been careless,

they've destroyed enough.”


He likes neatness,

his lawns to be uniform, green, carpet-like;


not a daisy to be seen,

a bee’s desert.

Wednesday, July 3, 2024

Sebald's Icicles

 





So when Sebaldus heaped icicles on the fire

and watched them blazing bright as firewood,

was it his faith in the benevolence of God;

had he sat in snow at -5 warming his hands by

curtains of icicles, stalactites with flaming innards?


Or had he a nuclear bent to his mind:

the emission of energy contained in crystals,

solar-induced bond dissociation in the ice lattice.

Did he foresee the nuclear radiance and the heat

that leaves people clinging, shadows to stone?

Monday, July 1, 2024

His Days

 

His days are the fields his cattle graze,

the years run from under his feet in meadows

of primrose cowslip meadowsweet fireweed: the months flying

till once again pools of sunshine, daffodils, defy February gales.


His evenings are the savage streets of New York, Los Angeles,

where he dodges bullets stumbling down fire escapes,

slips in slicks of blood running into dark alleys

then he’ll drink a cup of cocoa before flicking the world to darkness.


On a Sunday morning he drives the tractor into town for mass

and he’ll chat an hour or two over a pint in his local;

when he wipes the Guinness from his lips and walks out the door,

he returns to his days, the fields where his cattle graze.

Friday, June 21, 2024

She in her house

 


She in her house


converses a lot:

asks questions, answers them;

debates, argues;

always wins

the argument.


Her decor spare;

a tidy mind,

all planed to her liking,

stores pat;

a trim house.


Coming, going from her door

with the working hours;

has friends,

keeps them separate;

eventually they disappear.


She might be seen

passing a window,

then another;

always seems she’s looking

for something.


Early morning sun

in the front,

late evening round the back;

she in her house: 

a stone in a box.

Tuesday, June 11, 2024

No One Knows

 

No one knows


what wars were waged in your head.

That you were bruising on the inside was clear,

but locked up in silence a human safe

only your eyes spoke and they of pain.


And hands shaking, cigar burning

precariously close to your fingers; a storm warning.

You, sat in our company; in your own private weather,

your own private sea.

Sunday, June 9, 2024

Love

Let’s pare away what’s not needed;

carve it back

to the vein

running rich through the stone.


Not the media noise:

lazy visuals,

pulp pop.


Let’s remove, cut and cut

till we have it massive:

the elation we feel

lying side by side.


Monday, June 3, 2024

The Arrival of Civilisation

 

The mangled corpse: bludgeoned; skull gaping,

gore-spattered, blood-soaked. That intimacy with

slaughter, we call it savagery; their basic weaponry,

rock and branch; that engagement with violence.


And later, with the wielding of swords, the blood-bath

battles; that crush of thrashing bodies, flailing armies,

harvesting death; we call it barbarism, that intimacy

with carnage: the hacking, slitting, piercing of bodies.


To the release of rockets that kill, maim and demolish from

distance; no blood-stained tunics nor eyeballing death;

we call it civilisation: that delivery of devastation and death

with corporate efficiency, distribution worthy of the 21st century.

Thursday, May 23, 2024

Monet's Water Garden

 






Each lily is a flaring match,

a stud on Monet's 

liquescent

 mind.


.

Tuesday, May 21, 2024

May Stroll


May’s detonation of summer growth; 
walking down a lane between two hedgerows 
overgrown with cow parsley 
like confetti suspended in its fall,
I feel the intoxication 
of the bees nectar-induced drone; 
the surge of life, an internal fireworks, 
its ticker-tape brilliance, 
the exhilaration of it.

Thursday, May 9, 2024

Labour

 

Death has arrived into your breathing:

you labouring to stay alive.

I’ve never been so aware of the lungs as bellows;

how basic the mechanism is

now that all the brain-work is past.

Straining for oxygen all these hours;

we standing by your bed parsing each breathe,

the minute modulations in the sounds,

you hauling oxygen from the room to your blood.

Thursday, May 2, 2024

Dog

 

A long way off, across the open strand;

small, minute even, a couple walking a dog.

Picturesque and sweet somehow, their 

silhouettes across the deserted expanse of sand.


And as we stand there looking, the dog starts

to run in our direction. Tiny at first but building

into a shape we recognize, a pit bull coming

arrow-straight to us. 


She sees it early, recognizes the breed, 

knows it’s coming, crossing that quarter of a mile 

directly for her and she is petrified. And it does, 

and is now jumping at her, now a frozen stump. 


The dog persists, not aggressive but it is

a pit bull and she is terror-stricken. 

Across the strand, a quarter of a mile off,

 the couple watch their 'puppy', 


miniaturised to cuteness with distance, 

playing with strangers. And perhaps too, maybe,

 just maybe, one of them is nonchalantly running 

the dog's lead through a half-closed hand.



Wednesday, April 24, 2024

Strokestown International Poetry Festival 2024


From the 3rd to 5th of May poetry lovers will  be in Strokestown along with many of the finest poets around including Rita Ann Higgins, Jane Clarke, Peter Sirr, Eiléan Ní Chuilleanáin, Ger Reidy, Tony Curtis, Pat Boran among others; quite honestly a very impressive line-up.

If you haven't spent some time in Ireland's Hidden Heartlands, this is certainly the perfect excuse to visit. Strokestown Park  and the National Famine Museum alone are worth the visit; other attractions nearby include Roscommon Castle, Elphin Windmill, Lough Key Forest Park and more.

However on this weekend poetry is the star; I'm reading on Friday night with a group of Roscommon poets. See you there.

Festival website: https://strokestownpoetryfest.ie/