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by Michael Pattwell


  Somebody I showed the poem to told me that it reminded him of himself and how he felt as he lay in bed at night when his parents were having a row.

  The reader can take it as it suits.

  The “scuttling feet” are, of course, the men arriving, usually running, at the fire station.

  THE BOX

  The Devil lived

  on a high wall

  outside my bedroom window

  in a slatted box

  made by

  the town's coffin maker.

  Waking at night

  to his shrieks,

  straightened arms and legs

  clamped in fear;

  locked in dreadful shackles;

  down-pressed by the fiend-weight -

  a vampire sucking reality

  through barbed incisors

  deep-sunk in reason.

  Waiting, waiting, waiting

  for the release of silence,

  the scuttling feet,

  receding engine.

  Willed for tears

  frozen in fear.

  Unbreathing, unmoving, unliving.

  The shriek fading at last.

  Unbelieving dreadful anticipation.

  Quick breaths

  relieving thumping heartbeats

  starved for air

  and audible now.

  Thud, thud, thud,

  double-thud.

  The pile-driver of dismay

  starting a new rhythm.

  New throaty growls.

  Rising, strident,

  Shrieking again.

  The insatiable demon

  fed on little boys' fears

  still hungry.

  Tight-shut eyes

  seeing dark red only -

  crimson washed in black -

  infernal shades

  of screaming frenzy

  from the box.

  Or from my head?

  A little boy

  in a bed

  with bedlam all around.

  TO DESPAIR

  (My Unwelcome Companion)

  I am

  perched perilously

  on your cliff face

  while wild screaming breakers crash

  on black limpet encrusted rocks

  a long way down;

  a very long way down.

  Sea-salt

  from shattered high-flung foam

  stings my taut clinched lips

  and I want to let go

  to free-fall into the oblivion

  of the dark raging seas

  to lie at last

  on it's craggy weed-tangled bosom

  where I can rest forever,

  washed for all times

  by the tides ebb and flow,

  but I can't.

  I can't, I can't,

  I can't let go.

  I am tied to this turbulent life forever.

  My eternity of torment

  can never be terminated.

  FIRST REACTION

  (On hearing a diagnosis)

  He had never smiled before

  Or stood up when I came in

  And I saw reflected in his eyes

  What he was going to tell me.

  For some reason

  The traffic on the Merrion Road

  Had an urgent hum

  And grew very loud

  And my first thought was

  'Sure, life goes on anyway'

  And while I sat on his plush chrome chair

  Talking about

  Surgery and

  Drugs and

  Radiotherapy and

  Actuarial assessment of life expectancy

  I was thinking about

  The people on the Merrion Road

  Just going about their business

  On just another day,

  And I missed the god

  I once believed in

  Because now, without him,

  I had nothing to blame.

  Later, driving home,

  There was a man with a shovel

  Clearing dykes in Kildare

  And I saw him, reflected in my mirror,

  Staring enviously at my BMW

  Little realising

  How much better off he was,

  And I missed the god

  I had tried to believe in

  Because, without him,

  I still had nothing to be angry with.

  FRIENDS

  (For Paddy)

  Sitting on a wall

  in the sun

  near Tyrellspass

  sharing the secrets

  of childhood

  or

  sheltering under a tree,

  raindrops, like dancing pennies

  on the canal,

  talking

  about the future.

  THE ISLANDER

  (i.m. Donie The Island)

  Was it the lonely cry of a curlew

  Or the anguished caoin of Amergin

  For his lost love

  Raised the rooks

  To mass and soar in raucous flight

  On the day you left?

  Was the singing of a blackbird

  In a blackthorn hedge

  The song of Scéine in sweet response?

  Or were they the island sounds

  Of your world

  Making your requiem

  When you set out for your

  Final journey home?

  Did the evening sun

  Warm your back

  When you set your face to the island,

  Braced yourself,

  And dipped your oars

  With the ease and skill

  Of a life-long boatman,

  Leaving neither splash nor ripple

  As they slid beneath the smooth waters

  Of the fiord?

  Did a stray sunbeam glinting

  On a copper-clad steeple,

  Peeping out

  Between Reen Point and Dinish,

  Give you your bearings

  And a sense of place

  As you made way

  To the mystical sea

  And the mystery beyond

  For those whose time is spent?

  Was there a blue brooding haze

  Swirling out through Ballaghbeama

  In the mountains on your left?

  On the right did the yellow gorse

  Of Inchaquin

  Give a golden glow

  To the early summer sky?

  Did your heart lurch in your breast

  When you heard the lark’s even’ song

  Above the hills and fields

  Of your beloved Killaha?

  Did you hear the bell toll

  From Dawros Church

  To set you on your way?

  With your boatman’s eye,

  Did you keep your stern

  Full on the island

  That gave you and yours

  Your distinguishing name.

  From your wake

  Did wavelets open out

  In V formation

  To caress the shore

  And kiss for you the stones of Dinish, Your island,

  The essential you?

  Did it stand out

  In the failing light

  In summer silhouette?

  Dinish. The Island.

  A monument to you having been.

  Your name.

  Written for eternity

  In the ebbing enchanting waters

  Of Inbhear Scéine.

  'Katie' is a very important poem for me because it marks a growth in maturity for me, a man in his early fifties at the time it was written. Katie is a real person and is the sister of a close friend at the time. I got to know her very well and to care very much for her as a person. She openly proclaimed her homosexuality and I, being very close to being homophobic at the time, was more than a little surprised. Through her I learned that homosexuality was not to be feared or mocked; that homosexuals were
real people of great sensitivity. Katie was, and I’m sure still is, though events in our lives took us in different directions, a very fine person of very great talent.

  It was a wonderful opportunity to broaden my mind and through that change in myself I opened up to many more changes of attitude and opinion. As it happens it was most fortuitous that Katie became my friend as it prepared me for when, years later, somebody very close to me and much loved by me “came out”.

  As you will see in the poem, Katie is originally from North Mayo.

  KATIE

  You fascinate me Katie.

  You, who on falcon's wings

  flew above the world

  into which you were born.

  You looked out beyond

  the Ox Mountains and

  the semi-circular Moy.

  You flew in ever widening circles

  until

  hovering between the sun and

  towering Nephin

  you found freedom from that world

  where parochial oracles may call you

  out of balance with

  their own narrow normality.

  The world fascinates you Katie.

  Your eyes light up

  and sparkle with enthusiasm

  for life,

  yet proclaim a gentle femininity,

  pierced with passion

  for your Sapphic lover.

  You recite with tender feeling

  the word pictures of your poems.

  To look through

  the light in your eyes

  is to see beyond the moon and

  to glimpse the volcanic furnace

  of your mind;

  the kiln of your ideas.

  But most of all, Katie,

  your guileless openness

  haunts my dreams.

  MAROONED

  (For Mairéad)

  A lifetime

  Marooned on an island

  Formed by the silt

  From my weeping soul.

  Surrounded

  By shark infested people.

  Sometimes swimming

  Against the tide

  Of propriety;

  Across conventional currents

  Trying to get off

  Getting nowhere.

  Flirted

  With romance -

  The tide

  Rising again.

  Shelter

  Found in the harbour

  Of your friendship.

  Refuge at last.

  Finding in you

  A haven and

  The real meaning

  Of love.

  The next two poems were written in memory of a beautiful young girl who I knew very briefly in the mid nineties. She was a troubled soul but with a lovely adventurous spirit. She was invited to a wedding but through indisposition was unable to go so she went to a particularly favourite place she liked to go to in the countryside and got ill there and died, all alone. I was left with a terrible feeling of guilt as she had asked me to accompany her to the wedding but I, in my old-fashioned foolishness, declined. I felt it wouldn’t have been proper for this lovely young girl to be seen with an “auld fella” like me. I have regretted that decision ever since.

  MAY DAY

  (i.m. N. McD.)

  The swallows returned to the canal

  on the day I last saw you.

  They soared upwards in tight turns,

  spread-winged and spread-tailed,

  reaching for the sun,

  serving notice of summer. But you never saw the summer

  did you?

  Hidden in your special place,

  alone,

  you closed your eyes

  to dream the long dream

  of love fulfilled.

  For you knew the pain

  of unrequited love.

  Your passion was for life

  and life just passed you by.

  Or so it seemed

  to your callow soul. They buried you

  on the first day of summer.

  Oh! you had cried for help

  and your cries were heard

  but left unheeded by the innocent

  and by the guilty.

  I heard them too

  and saw and understood the pain

  but stepped aside. They buried you today,

  the first day of summer,

  leaving but a memory

  of days you never had,

  of laughing eyes

  and guilt that never

  dies.

  NICE

  (i.m. N Mc D.)

  For God's sake!

  Don't say she was nice.

  It's a no word.

  N N N N - the sound of negativity.

  Followed by ice.

  Cold and hard.

  A thin sound of i and e. Sibilant. The natural sound

  of a snake.

  Say she was passionate.

  Passionate for life -

  about life -

  the life that passed her by

  and left her dead

  alone

  on a bare hillside.

  Say she was sensitive.

  Sensitive to life,

  to the needs

  of all she met.

  So sensitive she had to die,

  alone,

  on a bare hillside.

  Say she was beautiful.

  Beautiful in form. Yes.

  Beautiful in spirit, Oh yes!

  Shared with all she met,

  shared with the wild landscape

  her last companion,

  alone

  on a bare hillside.

  SHEILA

  It snowed all night

  And all the next day.

  Traffic was hushed to a whisper

  Building up black slush on the roadside.

  Footprints in the feathery white

  Betrayed the journeys of walkers

  As I picked my path

  To her front door.

  Ninety, and looking all of seventy,

  Wrapped in a tartan rug,

  Gas fire hissing, warm and snug.

  Black and white photos of Tom

  On every surface; a young Tom

  Just as she remembered him,

  Though he was dead for twenty years.

  She told me how much she still missed him

  “Oh! I’m fine,” she said, “I have stuff in”.

  Then she talked of old snows

  And old times

  And memory that grows

  Dim with the passing of years.

  “I’m ninety,” she declared, “But I don’t feel it.

  I want to get up and dance

  But the knees just won’t let me.”

  THERE IS NO DEATH

  (i.m. Tom Mulqueen)

  The tide is gone out.

  Rivers run in rills in wet sands.

  Dunes change shape in a winter wind.

  A tree, above high-water mark,

  Trying to touch the low, scudding clouds,

  Stretches its blue-black branches

  Drawing attention to themselves

  And the tree which they are

  As if boasting it was once a seedling

  In a skilled gardener’s hands.

  Hands that are still now;

  Frozen in permanent clasp

  On well-worn wooden rosary beads

  Like the myriad seeds he has sown

  Over many years.

  It seems like they could,

  With his touch,

  And a warm sun-beam

  Reflected from his face,

  Be coaxed into new growth.

  Out on the head-land

  Waves surge, break and shatter

  On rocks ringed with white foam,

  Reducing them, year on year,

  To polished pebbles, to be washed ashore

  To chatter in the back-wash,

  Nudging one another to nothingness
r />   In a constant friction of stone

  Rubbing shoulders with stone.

  For such is the cycle of life.

  There is no death. It is

  But the home-curve in life’s circle.

  In eons to come what great power

  Will boil the pebbles to fluidity

  To rise up again in vast columns,

  Afire at first and then cooling,

  Into new shape as new mountains,

  Bigger and even greater?

  For the grave is but the nadir

  To the rising arc of new life.

  PART VI

  LOVE AND ROMANCE

  DIGGING WILD GARLIC

  In a shaded nook

  Of matted grasses

  Whorled weeds and ferns,

  Where stone walls of random rubble

  Met and wed,

  A minaret seed-head

  Swayed in the breeze

  On a long, white, stalk.

  Touching, tracing, parting

  Maidenhair, buttercups and harebells interwoven;

  Following stem to root;

  Probing fingers; parting soil

  - Unyielding first

  Then soft and moist and succulent -

  Sinking deeper

  In sand-soil and earth fluids;

  Following the Judas shaft

  To touch and caress

  The smooth orb of its fount.

  When you decide to help me

  Our fingers touch

  Deep in the carnal warmth

  Of its earth womb;

  Severing resistance;

  Parting root tendrils

  With swift finger strokes;

  Hurrying now in hungry anticipation;

  We touch again

  And draw to the surface

  With low yielding moans

  The fruit of our quest

  And hold it - hold it ‘till

  It floods senses - and memories -

  With shuddering sensual sensation.

  EASTER TIDINGS

 

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