tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-62837243116525639322008-06-25T09:29:28.167+01:00Poems by Padraig O'MorainPadraig O'Morainhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06924269210116414135noreply@blogger.comBlogger30125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6283724311652563932.post-6496694170557317622008-01-26T18:40:00.000Z2008-01-26T19:01:02.713ZFirst collection to be published this yearMy first collection, <span style="font-style: italic;">You've been great</span>, will be published this May by <a href="http://www.poetrybusiness.co.uk/smithdoorstop.aspx">Smith/Doorstop</a> which publishes the poetry magazine <a href="http://www.poetrybusiness.co.uk/thenorth.aspx"><span style="font-style: italic;">The North</span></a> as well as books and pamphlets. The collection of 20 poems was one of four winners of the <a href="http://www.poetrybusiness.co.uk/competition.aspx">2007 competition</a> run by The Poetry Business which is associated with Smith/Doorstop. Also winning and having their collections published are <a href="http://www.juliadeakin.co.uk/poetry.htm">Julia Deakin</a>, <a href="http://www.poetrymagazines.org.uk/magazine/record.asp?id=16825">Yvonne Green</a> and Ann Pilling.Padraig O'Morainhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06924269210116414135noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6283724311652563932.post-5232531779222299712007-11-12T10:07:00.000Z2007-11-12T10:10:24.366ZAftershockBricks scattered like toys after playing,<br />a pig rooting in a flowerbed,<br />the cot, the couch, the fireplace buried,<br />masks hiding the mouths and noses<br />of men who lift stone from bone,<br />children sifting ashes for what is broken,<br />tumbling already out of memory.<br /><br />What survives: cup, comb, picture frame,<br />bunting got ready for a festival,<br />crops waiting in accusing ripeness,<br />a girl who startles birds to flight and laughs.<br /><br /><span style="font-style: italic;">Published, 2003, in <a href="http://www.therialto.co.uk/index2.htm">The Rialto</a>, Issue 54.</span>Padraig O'Morainhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06924269210116414135noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6283724311652563932.post-82659079037448622012007-10-13T16:13:00.000+01:002007-10-13T16:14:12.950+01:00That's itThe nurse hoisted him into the car,<br />shoved the wheelchair into the boot,<br />pecked him and said goodbye and meant it.<br />He was a shell, not full of years but emptied of them.<br />As his daughter drove past the gagged<br />windows of the old tobacco factory<br />towards the bright ribs of the new stadium<br />he spotted a girl walking, eighteen or nineteen,<br />white trousers stretched tight.<br />Great big arse, he thought.<br />He managed a twitch. His daughter said,<br />What you thinking about Dad? He said,<br />That's it, great big arse.<br />That was it all right. She did not ask again.<br /><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">Published, 2003, in <a href="http://www.ambitmagazine.co.uk/">Ambit</a>, Issue 172.</span>Padraig O'Morainhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06924269210116414135noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6283724311652563932.post-79044748335713923542007-10-13T16:12:00.000+01:002007-10-13T16:12:51.054+01:00Chatting her upA boy and girl drag themselves to the back of the bus.<br />He mumbles the slurred syllables of methadone.<br />He intends to impress his dark haired, dark eyed girl<br />who folds her hands like a nun and contemplates the windscreen wipers<br />while he displays for her admiration<br />the tapestry of his suicide attempts.<br /><br />He took the sharpest kitchen knife to bed<br />mother in an oooh of horror found him too soon.<br />On the empty stairs of the flats at two a.m.<br />he slung a rope across a bannister and would have launched himself<br />but for a man from God-knows-where hunting down a deal.<br />I would jump from the balcony he says but with my luck<br />they'd have built a fucking swimming pool there before I hit the street.<br /><br />She giggles, then sits in silence<br />watching the rain smack against the windows<br />thinking perhaps of sipping multicoloured cocktails<br />by hot Spanish poolsides in the healing sun.<br /><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">Published, 2003, in <a href="http://www.ambitmagazine.co.uk/">Ambit</a>, Issue 172.</span>Padraig O'Morainhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06924269210116414135noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6283724311652563932.post-15098102128612331472007-10-13T16:09:00.000+01:002007-10-13T16:10:55.790+01:00The undertaker's assistantThe undertaker's assistant puts her finger<br />to the tip of a tilted coffin<br />to guide the inexperienced pallbearers.<br /><br />She stands at the ready in black livery,<br />perky buttocks in clinging trousers,<br />jacket pushed out by cocky breasts.<br /><br />But what makes me stare is that black ribbon<br />looped around her saucy pigtail.<br /><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">Published, 2002, in ROPES (Review of Postgraduate Studies), Issue 10, NUI Galway. (ROPES does not have its own website).</span>Padraig O'Morainhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06924269210116414135noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6283724311652563932.post-68835808534295646282007-10-13T16:07:00.000+01:002007-10-13T16:08:38.669+01:00The calf-manThree or four times a year a van drove into the yard,<br />the calf-man climbed out and unlocked the doors<br />to show to my father, who feigned scepticism,<br />two or three calves, blinking, lying in straw;<br />they gawped from the dark of the calf-smelling van;<br />the calf-man poked them with his stick to get them up.<br />My father's resistance always unravelled in the end<br />and the two men prodded a gangly calf to a shed;<br />then the calf-man came into the kitchen to be paid<br />towering, reeking of cattle, his dung-stained coat<br />buttoned tight, his cap scarcely covering his great skull.<br /><br />He refused tea while my father wrote out the cheque;<br />they argued a little over the luck money<br />before he left, the van moving up the hill<br />past the elm trees, to try his chances in Malone's<br />and only then, if he thought he had got a bargain<br />would my father look at us and grin shyly<br />while outside the calf lifted her head and bellowed loss.<br /><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">Published, 2002, in <a href="http://www.therialto.co.uk/">The Rialto</a>, Issue 51. </span>Padraig O'Morainhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06924269210116414135noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6283724311652563932.post-10545776225623036462007-10-13T16:04:00.000+01:002007-10-13T16:06:48.322+01:00Last danceA knot loosening in his brain<br />has closed the book of expectation.<br /><br />He shuffles for miles in purple tracksuit bottoms,<br />mumbles the thing again and again.<br /><br />What comes out of his mouth defies meaning<br />what matter now are words already spoken.<br /><br />The suits have gone to the charity shop<br />but for one that will do later.<br /><br />The job was good, they let her keep his car<br />it sits in the driveway looking big.<br /><br />He dines on scrambled eggs and meat cut up small,<br />the same for her, she can't be bothered.<br /><br />The bedroom-slipper shimmy the nightly dance<br />she catches him on the street trotting home to mother<br /><br />and partners him back to the room<br />the smell of cigarettes and disinfectant.<br /><br />While she sleeps he shuttles between lock and lock<br />muttering the thing is, some step to be taken, but what?<br /><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">Published, 2002, in <a href="http://www.interpretershouse.org.uk/">The Interpreter's House</a>, Issue 20. </span>Padraig O'Morainhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06924269210116414135noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6283724311652563932.post-61527556653052057682007-10-13T16:02:00.000+01:002007-10-13T16:04:07.699+01:00BloodlineWe seldom speak of you in this house<br />where you stabled your plough horses.<br />You are that silence between sounds we rarely note.<br />Are these hedges compositions from your hands?<br />Did you grunt in these ditches,<br />drag out slippery weeds<br />from dark, sucking mud?<br /><br />We changed what you thought might last<br />past your time of horses and scythes<br />- they crumbled, there is neither bone nor rust left -<br />we sliced off one river bank,<br />weeds dance in your ditches;<br />a motorway storms through your High Field<br />like a bully roaring in a schoolyard.<br /><br />There are still apple trees, chestnuts, a few primroses.<br />We carry you in our blood into the fog.<br /><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">Published, 2000, in ROPES (Review of Postgraduate Studies), Issue 8, NUI Galway. (ROPES does not have its own website).</span>Padraig O'Morainhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06924269210116414135noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6283724311652563932.post-83672588349217592492007-10-13T16:00:00.000+01:002007-10-13T16:02:21.782+01:00War of Independence: Unrecorded incidentWilly Murphy is not in the war.<br />He carts gravel and clay<br />along the birdsong roads of Kildare,<br />milks a cow, can shoe a horse<br />draws turf from the Bog of Allen.<br />He is not in the war. The Tans do not know this,<br />nor do they care: all are guilty.<br />When he hears the lorries stop outside<br />he leaves his bed at midnight,<br />flits by the hedge of the field<br />to the sheltered pond at the far corner, slips in.<br />He thinks of men dragged behind lorries,<br />torment in the barracks, an infant shot for sport.<br />The lorries start up. Engines fade towards the Hill of Caragh.<br />But sometimes they leave men with guns behind, to wait.<br />He waits. Mud seeks to suck him into its black mouth<br />whispers your time came then, you have no business here.<br />The lorries do not come back.<br />The dark lightens and a bird sings.<br />Another day in the story begins.<br /><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">Published, 2001, in <a href="http://www.poetryireland.ie/">Poetry Ireland</a>, Autumn issue </span>Padraig O'Morainhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06924269210116414135noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6283724311652563932.post-52316872324987766002007-10-13T15:59:00.000+01:002007-10-13T16:00:23.998+01:00PrimrosesArthur Morrin and Peter Kane<br />built our house in a patient time,<br />hoisted blocks, hammered nails,<br />gouged window spaces out of hostile<br />stone in the walls of an old stable<br />while chestnuts fattened on the trees outside<br />and while snow fell and froze and melted.<br /><br />Our dray always lurched into this hollow<br />in the shimmering heat of Summer<br />when we swayed on top of a load<br />of hay and waited in fright to fall off.<br />We had a tractor alright, an old<br />monster on giant wheels that could have done the job<br />but my father would rather horse and dray.<br /><br />Rust and rain have taken the tractor,<br />the horse is slaughtered, the dray decayed<br />the motorway buried the lurching hollow<br />where we perched on the hay in terror.<br /><br />But primroses which someone<br />- perhaps the grandmother taken by an epidemic<br />in the 'Twenties, one of the lost millions -<br />planted on a bank appear every Spring<br />and the children still laugh at the good of it.<br /><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">Published, 1999, in <a href="http://homepages.nildram.co.uk/~simmers//index.htm">Snakeskin</a>, February issue </span>Padraig O'Morainhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06924269210116414135noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6283724311652563932.post-81363862747608079292007-10-13T15:57:00.000+01:002007-10-13T15:58:47.129+01:00With Niamh in Harcourt Street Children's HospitalThe intravenous drip machine doggedly<br />hums through the night,<br />breaks into fits of frantic ticks<br />as if it wants to fight its way out of the room.<br />I have my comforts: book, newspaper, flask of tea<br />and most importantly: a naggin in my briefcase.<br />A child wails on the wards, always;<br />shoes clack on tiles;<br />you, inscrutably<br />suck on your soother;<br />I eye the briefcase.<br /><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">Published, 2000, in <a href="http://homepages.nildram.co.uk/~simmers//index.htm">Snakeskin</a>, September issue</span>Padraig O'Morainhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06924269210116414135noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6283724311652563932.post-42410808838471009702007-10-13T15:55:00.000+01:002007-10-13T15:56:52.762+01:00Another dreamerThe grocer sits and smokes behind his counter<br />- pock-marked lino top with tobacco burns -<br />explains to any listening idler<br />how to get rich, run a country, rear children.<br />As he speaks he flicks<br />tiny tobacco flakes off his lips.<br />Customers seldom come in:<br />there is little to want on his hungry shelves.<br />He addresses the few with certainty.<br />His yellowed fingers weave the air.<br />His navy suit, thin as tissue paper,<br />dances on his shoulders.<br />He confounds his listeners<br />with big-money cant<br />conned from the business pages<br />which turn yellow<br />while the light dulls<br />to the cold of three decades<br />and the dark moves in<br />thick as the walls of Fort Knox<br />with all America's gold<br />locked up behind them.<br /><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">Published, 2001, in ROPES (Review of Postgraduate Studies), Issue 9, NUI Galway. (ROPES does not have its own website).</span>Padraig O'Morainhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06924269210116414135noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6283724311652563932.post-30175883025809318542007-10-13T15:53:00.000+01:002007-10-13T15:55:19.383+01:00A night outWife and husband wordless,<br />tongue-tied in the Corrib Lounge.<br />She looks away, her face is closed.<br />He scowls into the dregs, plods to the bar.<br />She regards the bottom of her glass;<br />her lip twitches. He sidles back<br />with a thin smile and another pint.<br />Nothing for her: she will do the driving tonight.<br /><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">Published, 2001, in ROPES (Review of Postgraduate Studies), Issue 9, NUI Galway. (ROPES does not have its own website).</span>Padraig O'Morainhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06924269210116414135noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6283724311652563932.post-61728893226017345042007-10-13T15:51:00.001+01:002007-10-13T15:52:59.942+01:00Chinese painting: Young lady with butterfliesSee how the butterflies quiver round the shoulders:<br />it's a delicate little piece, isn't it?<br />Yes, I mean the painting, not the girl, you scoundrel!<br />See the way they sweep and swoop, hover and peep,<br />see how she skips in fright, look, she's terrified!<br />And the dress, the way it swirls, look at those folds, that silk!<br />It will add to your home should you decide to buy.<br />Yes, terrified! She flings her small hands in the air<br />but as she hops away she keeps her poise<br />and - yes! - the butterflies seem to flirt with her!<br />And she seems to frolic with the flirting wings<br />- a man of your discernment would appreciate such grace -<br />and as they dance around the shoulders, as they soar and drift,<br />see how she sheds her formality -<br />(as I'm sure you know that was no small thing<br />for a Chinese girl in the court in those days)<br />- in dismay<br />yet keeps her gracefulness despite her fear.<br /><br />She skips so daintily because the feet are bandaged,<br />the toes bent back, it would hurt too much to flee.<br />They say that inside the bandages the feet went bad<br />but a man of your learning would know that already.<br />Wonderful how art can transform such material<br />into something you would pay to put on your wall.<br /><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">Published, 1997, in <a href="http://homepages.nildram.co.uk/~simmers//index.htm">Snakeskin</a>, August issue </span>Padraig O'Morainhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06924269210116414135noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6283724311652563932.post-50212942043712823602007-10-13T15:48:00.000+01:002007-10-13T15:50:28.181+01:00Influenza, 1918The dying woman roars again<br />and the stench of lavender and disinfectant<br />attacks our revolted senses.<br />Her awful roaring tears through the bedrooms<br />and echoes through the great floors below<br />and down into the dark cellar<br />where their father sketched a dragon<br />across the wall for the children at Halloween.<br />Her roars hammer at the children's heads<br />and terror stains the deepest well of their minds.<br />The influenza will fling her howling<br />she believes into everlasting hellfire<br />and though she is a guiltless woman<br />she roars in her delirium<br />for God to pardon her and cleanse her soul.<br />Her pallid husband goes in and out of the room.<br />The women shush the children away<br />for fear they will tumble with her into the pit.<br />The softness in her voice is gone;<br />its hard horror dries up their mouths.<br />The cattle bellow in the yard outside<br />and the doctor's Model-T Ford<br />importantly rat-a-tats up the avenue.<br />The gravel patiently awaits<br />the wheels of the inevitable hearse.<br />The women drink tea but terror drives taste away.<br />They reek of disinfectant and lavender.<br />They long for fresh air, trees and flowers,<br />a man yoking a horse to go to the fields.<br />The woman roars again: forgive me!<br />Her children press their hands over their ears<br />but now it is too late for that:<br />her terror has begun to ring<br />and echo down the passage to their graves.<br /><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">Published, 2000, in <a href="http://www.poetryireland.ie/">Poetry Ireland</a>, Spring issue </span>Padraig O'Morainhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06924269210116414135noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6283724311652563932.post-60833994210248288932007-10-13T15:46:00.000+01:002007-10-13T15:48:25.637+01:00Dancing with the GermansAt the start, our women itched for exotic Germans<br />who stuttered with empty tanks from neutral skies,<br />London, Bristol, Liverpool, crackling behind them,<br />and drifted onto soft, Irish grass among bored cattle;<br />where we arrested them, rattled them swiftly to camp<br />to plot impossible escape, brood on Fatherland,<br />wait for triumph or shame, finality, a new start.<br />We were not hard on them (we got no thanks),<br />paroled them to public houses, dance halls, our girls.<br />When they stepped out to Jimmy Dunny's Orchestra<br />they tantalized the Newbridge women<br />for they were novelties, starched, stiff,<br />every man an officer, or as good as!<br />Then on a chilly Saturday night at war's end,<br />shrivelled faces framed in barbed wire fences<br />stared awkwardly from a newsreel at our women;<br />who learned new names: Belsen, Dachau, Treblinka;<br />innocence shuffled away. Bands tuned up in dance halls;<br />later in Lawlor's Ballroom Jimmy Dunny played<br />smartly polkas, old time waltzes, two-steps, but no-one wanted<br />to dance with the Germans, in the shocked silence.<br /><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">Published, 1999, in <a href="http://homepages.nildram.co.uk/~simmers//index.htm">Snakeskin</a>, September issue </span>Padraig O'Morainhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06924269210116414135noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6283724311652563932.post-59734499093631090532007-10-13T15:45:00.000+01:002007-10-13T15:46:06.766+01:00ExileHis childhood died in a nightmare.<br />He was in the front garden<br />of a country cottage<br />like a cottage in a story;<br />his father was there too, digging:<br />everything was perfect.<br />Then the child looked across the fields<br />to the small hills, like hills<br />out of a children's book,<br />and a mushroom cloud loomed up<br />from behind the small hills,<br />sombre and monstrous,<br />as colossal as a mountain.<br /><br />The child knew the world was dead.<br />A cloud of grief and despair<br />unfolded in him.<br />His father noticed nothing<br />and kept on digging through the death.<br />The child woke up but it was true:<br />the cloud was there, the world was dead.<br /><br />He still wants to return.<br />Once I saw him look in winter<br />over the city's snow capped roofs<br />and past the icy suburbs<br />and across the white fields<br />to the hills behind the city,<br />and I saw him shake his head<br />and flick his cigarette<br />into the slushy street,<br />where it hissed and died.<br /><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">Published, 1999, in <a href="http://homepages.nildram.co.uk/~simmers//index.htm">Snakeskin</a>, October issue </span>Padraig O'Morainhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06924269210116414135noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6283724311652563932.post-32520438172501159012007-10-13T15:43:00.000+01:002007-10-13T15:44:37.340+01:00Lambing timeYou could read a book in this light! the boy cried<br />laughing at how the moon lit up the field<br />as his father moved softly from sheep to sheep<br />as they gave birth in the brilliant moonlight<br />to glistening lambs who got a lick from the ewes<br />and shook themselves as if they had no time to lose<br />and went straight for the teat and got down to work<br />and it was like magic, like something in a book<br />to the wondering boy who knew nothing yet<br />of the hour of terror in the abattoir<br />of machines for driving spikes through heads<br />of blood darkening on tiled floors<br />under brilliant slaughterhouse lights.<br /><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">Published, 1998, in <a href="http://homepages.nildram.co.uk/~simmers//index.htm">Snakeskin</a>, February issue</span>Padraig O'Morainhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06924269210116414135noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6283724311652563932.post-55390822929143215942007-10-13T15:40:00.000+01:002007-10-13T15:42:51.780+01:00Stronger than deathDeath introduced himself to the country boy<br />in a sweet smelling, rank fruit market,<br />in a great loud barn by the quays in Dublin<br />where he stood all agog beside his aunt<br />listening to the uproar he never heard before<br />of forklift trucks, clanging and commotion,<br />men bellowing, iron screeching on iron.<br />His aunt seemed quite at home, bargained<br />for oranges, apples and pears for the shop<br />until a man came up, whispered to her<br />of sorrow, a phone call and death.<br />All stopped, they raced to her van,<br />hurtled back to Caragh and the country<br />through frenzied traffic that terrified him.<br />His aunt seemed to him to be possessed<br />by whatever dreadful thing she had been told<br />and said nothing. He did not know what to say.<br /><br />She left him at her mother-in-law's house<br />amid whispers, silences, clasping of hands;<br />his grandmother gave him tea and cake<br />and told him his aunt's father was dead.<br />He recalled a tall, thin man with glasses<br />smoking one evening on his grandmother's sofa;<br />now he saw what was meant by death:<br />bad news flying up the Dublin road,<br />strangers whispering in the market place,<br />shocked and frenzied women hurrying home.<br /><br />He longed for Ladytown's fields and his mother:<br />since death came screeching into his life,<br />he felt as if he had been gone forever.<br />A key clicked in the door. His mother stood there.<br />He will never forget his delight<br />that one who was stronger than death had come<br />to save him from this knowledge and this place.<br /><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">Published, 2000, in <a href="http://homepage.tinet.ie/~writing/05.Cyphers.html">Cyphers</a> No. 48</span>Padraig O'Morainhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06924269210116414135noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6283724311652563932.post-62062288519997016082007-10-13T15:38:00.000+01:002007-10-13T15:39:23.173+01:00No sanctuaryDoesn't it sound like peace in this chapel?<br />Stooped old men in a dark choir, girded with rosaries<br />peer from monks' hoods with wrinkled faces,<br />raise voices to god in harmony,<br />swelling and soaring, the stained glass windows seem to listen:<br />you'd think humanity had surpassed humanity.<br /><br />One of these men will walk from this church in anger,<br />one will leave with a sly smile twisting his lips,<br />one will plot and plan and pretend<br />and one will strike a bitter blow to fix<br />one who played a bitter trick on him. Yet<br /><br />the faithful visit here for peace and for goodness<br />and these men's hands make miracles of stone and earth<br />and miracles of ink and paper, lives and voices;<br />every patch of grass, every field and corner<br />speaks of peace and of work and of goodness.<br /><br />But here too men speak spitefully of other men<br />and here men thwart other men for bitter decades,<br />detestation and dislike make friends<br />and men who whisper ill of other men are praised;<br />men plot to deny their brothers' advancement<br />and go to the grave with curses for prayers.<br /><br />Peace visits this place no more often<br />than cities that glare with neon,<br />than streets where good things are done and hearts broken,<br />than streets where hearts are mended and bad things done;<br />and there is no refuge from the world in the end<br />in this place there is no refuge,<br />there is only the world in the end.<br /><br />Published, 1999, in <a href="http://homepages.nildram.co.uk/~simmers//index.htm">Snakeskin</a>, September issuePadraig O'Morainhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06924269210116414135noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6283724311652563932.post-68639494088950892382007-10-13T15:34:00.000+01:002007-10-13T15:37:43.806+01:00Once offOn a burning childhood day,<br />in that corner of the field<br />where our small, slow river<br />meets the farm next to Malones',<br />where the bank of the river<br />swells into a little hill<br /><br />- where once, years ago,<br />men bare to the waist<br />worked in the water,<br />laboured with shovels<br />and struggled to dredge<br />the riverbed choked<br />with reeds and weeds and silt<br />and in that corner<br />flung a mound of mud<br />that became the hill -<br /><br />I pulled off my clothes<br />and ran down the slope<br />into the meadow.<br />But beneath the bare blue sky<br />a breeze touched my flesh<br />and whispered of danger:<br />What will they say if they see?<br /><br />So I sneaked on my clothes<br />before I could be caught<br />and walked home wondering<br />at the daring of the deed.<br />I was eleven, maybe ten.<br />I did not do it again.<br /><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">Published, 1995, in Navis.(Navis does not have its own website and may have ceased publication).</span>Padraig O'Morainhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06924269210116414135noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6283724311652563932.post-21563457307328139972007-10-13T15:31:00.000+01:002007-10-13T15:40:07.196+01:00The greatest teacher in Western EuropeI am the Greatest Teacher in Western Europe, Larigy said.<br />Under the taut skin the skull grinned. The glasses glinted<br />when it was time to beat the boys - his favourite time of day.<br />Brother Larigy never hit us straight away for our incompetence<br />but loved a feast of beating at the break, so he saved us up.<br />Once he let us off, we thought, to play in the first snow of winter<br />but when our frozen hands started to thaw and began to hurt<br />he took the leather out - a slim leather, nine inches long, and stiff -<br />and lined us up and slapped us, doubling our pain and his pleasure.<br />He liked to threaten to pull boys' trousers down and watch them squirm<br />but once a boy whose house Larigy used to visit turned and hissed<br />'I'll tell' and Larigy let him go and flinched as if he had been hit.<br />One day we were sent up to the water tower to see the dentist<br />when we came back a Higgins twin couldn't say the prayers for bleeding<br />- Our Lady of this pray for us, Our Lady of That, pray for us -<br />Larigy slapped his face until the blood poured out. We resumed praying<br />with blood streaming out of Higgins' mouth at each Our Lady.<br />The greatest teacher in Western Europe? As far as we could see,<br />better had he been a bachelor scratching a living up<br />a mountain, spending his nights muttering in the pub.<br /><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">Published, 1998, in <a href="http://homepages.nildram.co.uk/~simmers//index.htm">Snakeskin</a>, February issue</span>Padraig O'Morainhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06924269210116414135noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6283724311652563932.post-19292680396680876062007-10-13T15:29:00.000+01:002007-10-13T15:31:10.900+01:00The meat man's rant to the vegetariansEating shite out of a plastic box again,<br />you moaners and whingers who eat to live?<br />Eat? Greens, beans - and not the beans you get in tins -<br />roughage, dear God, chewing, mandibles straining.<br />Eating as an act of public contempt<br />for gobblers of steak and bacon and chicken,<br />for scoundrels who want sugar in their tea.<br />Looking at ye eating would make a man sick,<br />taking out your plastic - ha! - lunch boxes,<br />opening them reverentially,<br />commencing to chew with grim little smiles<br />whatever sludge is contained inside.<br />Eating you may reflect on your goodness<br />compared to those who have not seen the light<br />or lack the moral - if you can tolerate a pun - fibre.<br /><br />I would rather be marked down as a sinner<br />in the book of vegetarian crimes<br />and sentenced to a hell of roast beef and gravy<br />than dine in paradise on the likes of that.<br /><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">Published, 1999, in <a href="http://islandireland.com/booksireland/">Books Ireland</a>, May issue.</span>Padraig O'Morainhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06924269210116414135noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6283724311652563932.post-53080776418861737282007-10-13T15:23:00.000+01:002007-10-13T15:27:17.022+01:00Eco-warriorHe crouches<br />like a leopard<br />over dials<br />sniffs out prey.<br />Like a man who shoots little birds on Sundays<br />at the edge of the forest<br />he hunts decibels<br />on hard margins by motorways;<br />tracks transgressors in company registration files<br />studies spoors in county development plans.<br />He sucks sustenance for his long stalking from environmental impact studies,<br />perches now and then on trees<br />daring growling chainsaws,<br />happy as a child in a garden<br />absorbed by action who has become the doing itself.<br /><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">Published, 1999, in <a href="http://islandireland.com/booksireland/">Books Ireland</a>, December issue. </span>Padraig O'Morainhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06924269210116414135noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6283724311652563932.post-19938635002195079072007-10-13T15:21:00.000+01:002007-10-13T15:22:21.462+01:00Unfinished workThe rat trembles on the lawn like a leaf.<br />Our cats have snapped its back. They look bored.<br /><br />I pray for them to finish it<br />and drag it to a neighbour's garden.<br /><br />Instead they piss off and leave the job to me.<br /><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">Published, 2000, in ROPES (Review of Postgraduate Studies), Issue 8, NUI Galway. (ROPES does not have its own website).</span>Padraig O'Morainhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06924269210116414135noreply@blogger.com