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Friday, August 26, 2016

Haiku

Mowada hangs from eaves
Ready for winter weaving
The bag has a bark

Draught horse gallops hard
In rhythm of up and down
Summer rides bareback

Autumn blows maple
Through an open wooden door
Trees shed October

A runner zooms by
Bees sip juices from blossoms
The world is buzzing

Elephants hosing
Water at one another
The pool laughs out loud

In Kikita’s springs
Mount Fuji’s purity loves
Wrinklehead Sculpins

Dragonflies dry wings
A frog grabs a grasshopper
Storks feed once again

Blue ceramic bowl
Tea brushed to peacefulness
Quenches inner thirst

Green frog on a rice leaf
Waits till it’s his time to call
Plop! – watercolours

Crabs scuttle beneath
the wasabi greening sand
under the alder

Pure water washes
Sand from the wasabi fields
Back into the stream

clouds, intensely blue,
find a mirror in the water,
turn violet there.


Saturday, August 13, 2016

Idioms

He spoke idioms that made me smile.  
Heavy rain would ‘drench you to the skin’.
A severe wind would ‘clean corn’.
He pronounced ‘clean’ as ‘clane’.
Or if someone added fuel to the fire of a fight
He’d shrug, ‘Skitter flies high when hit with a stick.’
And if you told a good story, he’d chuckle,
‘That one’s worth putting up on top of the dresser.’
His soft-hearted wife would ‘cry for the ducks going barefoot’.
It’s not that he had a knapsack of clichés.
It’s that he thought it all worth saying.
It was his heart’s desire to say something
That rattled the word chest and gave
language a dunt with the elbow of his tongue.
‘Dullness wasn’t worth the full of your arse
of boiled snow.’ Because he wanted you to listen.

Bring a name


The roots of trees bond the earth 
and hold the ground up.
Not the poplars, or the birches, 
threading the morning sun.
We trust our legs to walk what 
might have been a swamp.

Don’t bring me all the facts if you 
have them to hand.
Don’t bring me a suitcase, glasses, 
a woman’s wig,
Nor a menorah if I ask for 
candlelight.

Bring a name, like a bird with a twig
 in its beak,
As the wind carries grains of salt 
and grains of ash -
Hartzog, Zylberman, Cohen, 
Fleischman, Barron, Wolf -

I have no memory of them to keep 
this boat
Afloat on the green waters 
windowing their grave.
Who will see the stones my left
hand leaves?

Monday, August 8, 2016

Cold and Want In Dungarvan

Blight crosses the wave-groomed coast. Grips Dungarvan.
The rector writes that famine is sore in the land.
Spud stalks rot as if locusts have devoured them.
Stooped forms in muck lanes have faces like hooked fish.
The gentlest breeze could blow their skeletons to dust.
Men are picking stones from Abbeyside Beach for one shilling a day.

Bad landlords tumble down cabins leaving the people homeless.
Devonshire’s agent is putting cattle seized for rent in the pound.
Fearful shopkeepers keep a weary watch all night.
The town is like a fox crushed in a deadfall slab-stone trap.
The Union Workhouse is full of sick starving people.
The doctor notes dropsy, diarrhoea, whooping cough, opthalmia.

Winter snows in. Barefoot paupers are told to return
Each day for rations, to have their “destitution” tested.
A woman who has walked twenty miles for Indian meal
Dies in tatters in a drift of snow. Dogs gnaw a boy’s legs.
When hungry paupers riot the Hussars draw their swords.
Power falls like a stuck pig on the butcher’s block.

Fr Toomy waits at the back gate of the Workhouse
With holy water to bless the corpses in the dead cart.
He checks to make sure the withered forms are dead.
Starving people grub up the roots of turnips to eat.
Farmers are eating seed potatoes. Next year’s crop.
A baker doles out black slate-hard biscuits no one can eat.

Skin-bags of bones litter the lanes and fields like rotten sheep.
They melt into the primal clay by the sides of ditches.
A woman carts her dead son, begging money to buy a coffin.
But coffins are a luxury. So the dead are wrapped in hay
To shield them from gawpers as they are hurried to the grave.
Two-wheeled dead carts slither, grating snow-stippled lanes.

While snow flocks to gnarled wind-blasted branches,
And gales rack the slum of fields and gouged thatch,
Open graves tick time in Kilrush and Slievegrine.
The tongues of church bells know only a death-knell ring.
The clouds in the sky have turned to black stone.
The dead huddle like outcasts on a moon-paled sunless star.

The good and kind like Carbery who do their best are overwhelmed.
Every night moon skulls, sunken sockets, stick limbs stiffen in death.
The vacuous moon drags the sea night and day like a dog dragging gut. 

We follow the barefoot tramp of Vilna


How many boot linings did the Torah scrolls make?
How long did they have to dance round the burning scrolls,
Before pearly Vilna became Armageddon?
Before the boy who took the herring fell over?

No longer marbled in human memory,
Ash earth in a world of forests, flowers and stars,
How do you remember the murdered people?
Their blood mingled with ripe red forest apples.
The light of a thousand colours died in their eyes.

The stony sun did not burst into crystal shards.
A barefoot tramp grabbed the last tatters of sun
In the Jerusalem of Lithuania.
He helped to save Hertzl’s diary and Chagall.
He knew the winter snow would spring into green shoots.

Orphaned because you could not save your infant son,
You carried a hiker’s bag of grey sticky ash.
Like you Avram Sutzkever we must make witness.
Do more than climb the mountain of desolation.


Friday, August 5, 2016

Diane Arbus's Poetic Soul


Shooting the pastoral defaced by litter, she chased colourful comics
Blowing on the wind. Ran like mad to keep up with flying Dick Tracy.
She was Dick Tracy on the trail of the uncanny. When Amy stumbled
from the duck pond dripping grass and water she saw an angry inept mermaid.

Often, she was swamped sick with lethargic gloom. During convalescence
she felt a strange rage every night at 4am like a werewolf. How to make
the raw wild power into energy? She said she was like someone who puts vaseline
On her glasses to make it look more like what she normally saw with her slight defect in eyesight.
Eye to the keyhole waiting for the odd to shoot itself through the looking glass.
Hyped on clarity, discovering the real differences between things,
Flesh and material, densities, air water and the shiny. Looking hard for revelation.

Uneased. Guggenheim dizzied her with its small series of offices - judgment day in a bad dream;
Florida smelled bad like god cooking chicken soup in the sky. A nudist camp was like walking
Into an hallucination without being quite sure whose it was. She noticed that sometimes they feel
The impulse to slip into something more comfortable. It was as if God forgave Adam and Eve
And told them to stay in the garden and muck it up.

A magic mirror. She reflected back what anyone wanted to believe, like Atlas
Holding up a bubble and groaning. She reflected: Messiahs passing by across the street
In Washington Square living on the brink of a black pit; A human pincushion
and a headless man in a horror show that admitted babies free; a furry Rasputin
Who denied that Shakespeare wrote his plays or that Moses was a Jew and was like a seer
Who had forgotten his own secret; Max pretending to be Uncle Sam because he thinks people
Would like to think he is. She discovered a theatre of fictional beings looking for their stories.
She didn’t press the shutter, those images did.

Backstage at a circus with squinting spangled mothers spanking their squealing children
Or stuffing plastic milk bottles into their mouths while she bumped into an elephant
She realised the farther afield she strayed the more she went home. It was as if an arbitrary god
Had plonked her down in the wrong place with glee and what she had to search for
Was who she really ought to be. Her notebooks were the poetry of an artist who was always
answering to someone who wasn’t even asking.

Wednesday, August 3, 2016

Somme Interior



He was on the butcher’s block that July in Picardy.
The horizon drummed and quivered in a continual glow.
The German bombardment burst the earth into black trees.
He bumped into the sergeant carrying a piece of meat
On his right arm - the raw-pulp remains of his left arm.

He felt suddenly weightless through space in a rainbow sky.
When he came to, he saw Stan buried to his waist in earth;
From the waist down Stan was missing still facing the enemy,
His helmet tilted at a rakish angle on his wax face.
He crawled back to his lines like a whipped dog.

Days later he saw that the German wire had not been blown.
Some of his battalion hung lifeless in the wire,
the backs of their bloody heads bashed in like broken bowls.
He tried to shoot a surrendering German but missed.
He said nature tried to hide the slaughter in cottage gardens.

He was back to search for corpses in the pungent shitty mud,
He had carried men’s bones and maggots on a shovel
to common graves, from the green water in shell-holes
handled chalk-white slimy bodies that fell to pieces
in his hands as he searched them to find out who they were.

He said he never saw God’s hand on the grim Somme.
But along the parapets he saw purple thistles,
milky-juiced sow-thistle, mustard, the yellow spurs
of toadflax, button-flowered aromatic tansy,
pale purple willow-herb, scarlet poppy, cornflower,

and white ox-eye daisy. On the rusty barbed wire
Bindweed flourished, crimson ramblers, nasturtiums, and nests.
The trenches had hanging gardens of goosefoot, chicory,
nipplewort, grey-leaf fumitory, white-whorled woodruff,
goosegrass, sun-spurge, pimpernel, yellow-eyed forget-me-not.

Some of the soldiers coped by singing nerve-jangled songs.
“Do you want to find your sweetheart? I know where he is,
I know where he is, I know where he is. Do you want
to find your sweetheart? I know where he is. Hanging
on the frontline wire. We saw him, we saw him, hanging

on the frontline wire, hanging on the frontline wire.”
Dad scraped the snowy lather from his skin, hacking
Wiry white hair. The old soldier’s interior was still
an aftermath of war. Doesn’t lyrical Tagore remind us
the first flower that blossomed on this earth invited the unborn song!

Vesuvius blows its stack



When he spoke in his 60s of Dungarvan's Ormonde Cinema
he saw through the radiant eyes of an eight year old boy.
In the spiral of his memory Last Days of Pompeii summered on,
a Steve Reeves muscle-bulger swords-and-sandal peplum flick,
the mighty spectacle of a bacchanalian city getting pumiced by God.
The returned-home Roman legionnaire Glaucus saves the Christians before Pompeii turns to ash.

We’d agreed to watch his flick at the first night of our movie club.
See! The yawning jaws of the flesh-ripping alligator death pit!
See! The awesome eruption of Mt. Vesuvius as it avalanches down into a boiling inferno!
See! The martyred Christians thrown to the gaping fangs of crazed lions!
Pompeii! City of the pagan hordes, of revels and orgies, of spectacle and splendour,
the city that lived in sin and died in flame. Stuck in the drainpipe of his memory.

We climbed the fiery summit in a wash of Eastmancolour Supertotalscope.
He told us that Sergio Leone not Mario Bonnard was the true director of the movie.
We asked if this was his first encounter with the good, the bad and the ugly.
There is no doubt Mr Universe Steve Reeves was a sthenic hunk in a skirt and a sword,
especially when he grabbed the heroine off her runaway chariot and tossed her on his horse’s back.
He told us that Reeves had ripped his shoulder out for real when he’d hit a tree.

The movie arrived at the most exciting years-waited scene he wanted us to see.
Glaucus is thrown into a hidden pit of water and fights an alligator to the death. 
The hero unjaws the alligator in a far-too-short few-seconds battle where he has to move
a model from side to side to make it look like it's not a bendy flip-flop piece of rubber.
I saw it dawn on disenchanted him that this feeble wiggling scene was the image of heroic
bare-handed combat that had blazed for nearly sixty years at the centre of his memory map.

Now, having got the people out of town, Glaucus is down at the harbour.
The sea is on fire, so Glaucus leaps off the wharf, dives under the flaming sea,
swims underwater out to a waiting boat. He says that when Reeves did his first breast stroke,
his shoulder ripped again. He would have been burned if he'd come to the surface.
He boasted that Reeves had refused to take the lead in Leone’s spaghetti westerns.
And that he’d had the role of James Bond for the asking.

Looking like someone had spat on his dog, he pooh-poohed the notion that Opus Dei
had backed the movie and the martyring of the Christians.
He ignored the question whether the short skirts objectified Mr Universe’s muscle-honed body.
I reminded him that he had remembered Cheyenne knife-fighting in yellowish-red quicksand
when the entire series was actually shot in black-and-white.
He became the resident rowdy face-slapper at our film-theory fest.

Tuesday, August 2, 2016

Morning ....

Morning. The sun spills green on the gentle hill.
Unstoppable light dances on diamond waves,
The seeping glow is the sun swelling in a trance.
Then the sea breeze sings itself to easy sleep.

But his soul inside is a chamber of loneliness.
Time whispers through withering vines of absence.
The bitter nettle of separation stings his heart.
His soul’s collapse goes down into meaninglessness.