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  • ‘Mangoes are a night food’ and other poems by Finnuala Simpson

    July 1st, 2018

    Linen

    A candied calligraphy of colours, I said
    that I would change the sheets later.
    And I said also that I could handle it but I could not, and will I fry for that?
    I may, but only if you return.

    The stink of sheep hangs on me like wisdom.
    You leave in a blur and your bag is heavy with spices,
    I hope I do not let you back again.
    It depends on my resolve, and on whether the seasons let me float.

    I’ll take myself running for the friction of denial,
    cross my legs under the tables of the library.
    I’ll spin yarns and wear black and eat fruit in the evenings,
    till I’m taller and more thoughtful than I have been before.

    And I’ll try harder, too.
    Kindness is like witchcraft, it must be brewed and stirred,
    mulled over in secret with the herb scent of the night.
    If it threatens to drown you, you must set yourself on fire.

    Do you think of me? Or am I a stop-gap to you?
    I marveled at you on the phone when you were talking like a man,
    Not laughing or stroking like you laugh and stroke at me.
    Talking figures like your car was a woman,
    You said fuck it we will fix the white van instead
    For by the time the summer comes you will be traveling.

    I changed my sheets and they were smeared
    sprinkled with both blood and mould.
    But washed away now, and quietly, while you are asleep and going south.

     

    Warren

    God’s the opposite of sentient,
    God’s gotta lot on their plate right now
    You hate phone calls but you rang rang rang rang rang rang
    Kinda like the knock knock don’t stop of the old stories about Jesus and the hearts.

    I sit in a pub like the underground volts of mole town with glistening mirrors and brown
    And think: and think: and think :
    What if I AM us
    What if we ARE me

    Amen. That boy gets bloody sleepy-eyed and ties you down with internet rope to have the best time,
    you can still be held by the every-man compass of inner direction and salt.

    Lake licking
    I’d be down for some
    front door seconds

    I love overhand
    and crying boys
    and absolute disgraces
    and civil war tales make me puke
    because we are you and I am us and they are
    watching
    Jesus Christ and the cherubim all interconnected with stones and pencils and lust

     

    Frown Upon Me

    When winter falls out I cheer up
    Semi-automatic pistol you grip and
    It’s like
    Put that down honey I’m
    Just in league with the bears you know
    Don’t be afraid
    Just because I am socialist without understanding politics
    Just because I say this is how I FEEL out loud loud
    And you don’t do anything out loud loud
    You say: I am bad at words
    You won’t kiss me goodbye in the street
    You’re a removable boy access unacceptable
    When the moon looms
    When your blood is flat
    When you are sober
    ~ Biggest mood: you not letting go of my hand drunk

     

    Mangoes are a night food

    I unfurl a peach strip of self denial,
    curling tendrils like the mannerisms that
    wind me in a high spiral,
    each time I sleep I see extensions of my worst trade-offs
    and subtle lingering traces of worn out faces and fading tastes.

    I see the way your limbs are positioned, they are unsure of
    holding company with the air (and really baby I feel that)
    yellow soft flesh without a skin and a concrete world he sings
    that you stand in hallways thinking about the positioning
    of your feet, and the happiness of our lives
    was only coming.

    I do indeed know the strangest of manifestations,
    I do certainly keep company with the eeriest of loves.
    Boys can surely contract themselves into small spaces,
    the gaps in my brain are of the overly hospitable young.

    I held onto him in our old bed and tightly traced
    the profile graced with the ability that I gave him
    his eyes were closed to look more firmly at the wall
    he knew my heart was at his back
    he may have held my hand but he did not.
    I let love drop from my ears my eyes my tear ducts
    (Love
    Is forever I think)
    I held him and said, I wish you well I wish you well I wish you
    you hurt me so much
    I wish you well I wish you well I wish you everything you can get nobly
    I love you
    Even as I fall for a better boy
    I love you
    He took my love in mime
    Stayed curled-up, inaccessible and pure
    In the dream my sister woke me with her heart at my back
    She never touched me
    I never touched him
    I think that real love is forever
    Mango is a night food.

     

    No Chill Kids

    I’m sweeping
    cold callers collect thoughts and manic and deathly
    are you grossed out by sad?
    I’m the icky girl no chill just spooky abandon to the rhythmic pulse
    gymnastics of feeling floods
    like crying toilets drunk
    maybe we’ll get cool again I’ll put weed on the balcony
    I need a lamp to grow me a glo-up
    baked
    half streaming
    live rot

    Well I take photos of lights to hold them in my wet hand cracks
    Before
    After
    Told her there were two of me that’s a lie there are a million and one
    me things
    Shakespeare was a matching addict holy hell that quill quick quick good god
    give me some Adderall
    but I’d only focus on the wrong thing

    Drunk dial
    Low capped smile
    I’d get off at the next stop but he’s gonna miss it
    while mentally I put myself down the stairs bang bang
    The street slush don’t stop us
    Every fucking night I get shot at in my dreams I’m not joking
    Last night it was my grandfather
    There’s fingers and there’s whingers but I barely kiss gingers
    Someone threaded their headphones through their jumper strings
    What a strange little hullabaloo
    I could do better if I were you
    Because I’m a neat-freak never-speak who clean eats
    I’ll go far

    Mad girls and sad girls might be onto something
    I’m crying holla holla wake up at the stars looking down on this shit attack
    Honestly get me out asap
    I’ll sail space smooth and I won’t look back
    But my bones are hollow they don’t ever crack

    I see faces places and wastes but I am the one standing on a hill and
    Pencey Prep is real as all hell
    that is, not very, dubiously transient and flickering like the flame of
    a secret place that never cleans itself so sleep me now

     

    Mangoes are a night food and other poems are © Finnuala Simpson

    Finnuala Simpson is a twenty-year-old english and history student based in West Cork. In her free time she likes to write, cook, and walk as close to the sea as she can get.

  • ‘Anchoress’ and other poems by Julie Sampson

    June 20th, 2018

     

    A Woman is About to Break
    
    'Leave yr streams for to come hether/make haste say have noe delay
    here that's above the weather/A flower of May is prung today'
    
    Gaps in the hedge beside the silent river and 
    round the corner Tawstock's Tudor gatehouse birth-
    frames the canal to another world; left behind
    plane and mower thrum, rook kerfuffle, traffic buzz.
    In the field Friesians swoon summer's late afternoon heat.
    
    The church is gravely cold,
    sun's cross-beams refract
    stained light from glass, 
    splash monuments, stream
    a river of blood along nave's inscribed stone-slabs,
    until, at the vanishing point,
    it seeps from floor into crypt beneath.
    
    A woman is about to break out of her marble abstraction, 
    begin to breath again; in this version, 
    merry new bride, 	
    she steps from her carriage; bells 
    tintintabulate across Taw's happy valley,
    hum-tones loop with Maypole's rainbow braids
    cascading chiming confetti over her white dress brocade.
               Pearl rising, falling, at her neck.
     
    Imagine; Dramas; Masques; reputation 
    wedged sometightplace between Shakespeare, Webster, Milton.
    Shut in the strict enclosure of the entrenched canon, a 	
    woman is about to break free; in this version, they say, 
    the abuser, her husband, determined
    vicissitudes of her lettered fate; thus,
    body, papers, rescued from the repository, 
    still gasping for the light of day
    only after scholars,
    carving space for contemporary daughters, decided to uncover,
    then decipher, cross-dressings, followers of Comus,
    with after-lives of Shakespeare's girls - 
    Bianca. Viola. Sylvia. Julia. 
    	If, that is, they had a voice.
    
    
    
    

    Note: Rachel Fane, Countess of Bath, 1613-1680, spent her childhood at Apethorpe Hall, in Northumberland, where she wrote sophisticated pastoral masques, including May Masque at Apethorpe. When she was 25, Fane married Sir Henry Bourchier, 5th Earl of Bath, and moved to Tawstock, in Devon. Nine months after Bourchier’s death, in 1654, Fane married Lionel Cranfield, but the marriage didn’t last; in 1661 Rachel was granted legal separation on the grounds of cruelty and desertion. Ironically, it may be due to acrimony apropos the divorce proceedings that Fane’s writings survived; kept by Cranfield, her papers were later discovered in the ownership of a descendant. A white marble statue in Tawstock church commemorates the Countess, who retained her title after her second marriage, and after death was returned to Devon for interment. Quotation, from May Masque at Apethorpe.

    Footloose, Fancy Free
    
    
    for Sylvia Plath
    
    They think I'm beneath the cold slab
    high in the footloose winds
    under York's barren moors.
    
    When they despoil the grave
    do they not know -
    but for spring-tails, brittle-bones, worms -
    how empty it is inside?
    
    Do they not realise
    how many air-miles a waft of breeze will
    carry the dormant seed -
    
    be it daisy, dandelion,
    grass green with life in gravestone crevice,
    or willow-herb at the edge of the field?
    
    But, I'm none of these.
    Look instead in the pallid face
    of the paper-white narcissi.
    
    Every little seed hooks
    to every other little seed,
    criss-crossing our country's patternings
    and boundaries - fields, lakes,
    motorways, woodlands and mountains.
    
    Admittedly, it took a while
    to get to this, my final destination -
    still black-faced sheep, occasional
    trailers on the lane.
    
    From above, on garden's east,
    we are sheltered by the wise tree
    tasting darkest history and her
    
    brood of otherworldly wings.
    She's our and their mother.
    Like children, we look up to her.
    
    She stretches her limbs to the tips of her twigs
    straining to pick up hidden writing
    rising from her roots across the woodwideweb.
    
    A clutch of doves from the east
    settling in their nest post-flight
    discarded us in the sphere of seeded grass,
    that was a few years
    after setting its mud-caked prints
    in the snow the fox hooked us up in its paw -
    we were expelled on a southern heath.
    That was almost ten years
    after the shrew regurgitated us on a motorway verge
    with the beetle she'd devoured in the pile of autumn leaves
    two decades or more after a gust of ghost-wind dispersed 
    its disclosing fruits.
    
    They'd matured inside the capsule's green fuse
    from stems of flowers sprung up
    on grave's earth during the years following
    that first winter's blackest season.
    
    On Whitehorse Hill
    
    Godgifu. 
          Eadgifu.
            Aelfgifu.
    	 Aelfthryth.
    
    	Reel the names a-
    way  aural sliding into slip-shod 
    Anglo Saxon history, away,
    like iconic eastern dolls
    they recede, expanding into distant pasts
    	the way a-
    way,  they remind us of 
    the blue-grey layers of  Dartmoor's mists and tors.
    
    The last of these - later,
           Queen of our Lands,
    	Aelfthryth,
        weaving her own fairy-tale -
                    left   
    
            following the before-day, a
        way day beside her mother's recent grave
          at the abbey on moor's western edge,
    
    stole away for a lange day
      and another  
    from the place of her birth,
    pursuing yole-ways to seek new tracks - 
    criss-crossing paths to the north,
    lych-ways on the tracks of the forking droves.
    
    Up past the cleave, over Bellestam	    where are the Nine Maidens
    she took up with Tola,
         daege, on the summerlands at the gentle green coll -
    churned milk plashing to pail -
    at dusk, sleek cows slumbering,
    they eat meatonastick,
    sleep in the hut
    raised from earth 
    under stars on a green-rush and black- 
    sedge floor.
    
    

    
    
    Sun up, up and
       a-way 
    early 
    Aelfhryth leaves the cows on butter-hill's 
      dew-covered down
    wanders along drift-lanes
    gathering seedsofgorse
    beside purple-heather and green-
      light fern,             crosses	     the steps by Cullever 
    		
    			       
    up as far as the Winter Tor,
    		  she climbs     overthestone by the brook 
    			         & over the ford of the Taw
    			         to the stile beside the gorge
    		
    		
        as far as 
    Steeperton          then 	   over the clapper & beyond
       upthetop
    to Whitehorse Hill
    near where her mitochondrial mothers came
    from the highest, wildest moorland tors.
    
    Knowing her true destiny 
    is far  a-way
    from here,
    she's come to bid farewell
    to her ancestor,
    foremother, 
    on the White Hill,
    she who went to ground a
    thousand years or more, 
    the stories they tell
    round these moor parts,
    a legend passed on by word of mouth
    down the daughters' line -
        the procession, 
                    wailing in the wind.
    
    Hands opening high to sky
    they brought her here
    fall of the year when ferns
    waved like arms of fear,
    laying their Bronze Princess
    gently on the pyre to rest
       decked
    in her bedazzled dress
    amber bead bling fixed at the nape of neck.
    
    After fire's embers died a-
      way,
    wailing, 
    they swaddled her ash
    within the pelt of bear 
    bound up with 
    a knotted woven sash 
    
    then, on agnysse min, laid her
    beside the basket,
    nested inside it, a cow-hair band,
    the rings, still glistening tin,
    two spindle-wood studs once hung from her ears.
    At the time of setting sun,
    they settled her in the cist. 
    
    

    
    When sun's down, 
    Aelfhryth
    turns west, 
    leaves 				by way of the peat pass
    				at Taw and East Dart source
    				as far as the great lime tree
    				over Black Ridge Way
    
    blue graze of sea in the distance				
          granite-clitters
              spilling down
                over the descending	
                     fringe of moor
    	
    	
      she	                             skirts the bog
    	                             by the right side of the stream
                                         at the bondstone
    marking the two Great Hills,			 
    
                            crosses	         stepping-stones by the Lyd
    climbs over  Nodden,
                            finds               the Chi-Rho stone
                                                & the ancient L stone, 
    					    by Bridestowe boundary,
    
    
    then, fairy-tale settling with her again,
    before the next day 
    of the fresh path of her new life a-
    way in faraway lands, reaching the Green vale
    Aelflryth looks down to where is the Way of the Dead 
    and her own home, from on the High Down above the Olde town.  
    

    Note:  

    Ælfthryth (c. 945 – 1000 or 1001, (also Alfrida, Elfrida or Elfthryth), who was probably born at Lydford castle, just below Dartmoor, in Devon, became an English queen, the second or third wife of King Edgar of England, mother of King Ethelred the Unready and a powerful political figure in her own right. Godgifu, daughter of Etheldred the Unready, was Aelgifu’s granddaughter; Eadgifu was daughter of Edward the Elder, King of Wessex. Aelfgifu was a popular name; she might be Aelfgifu an Anglo-Saxon saint, whose relics are in Exeter Cathedral of Normandy, or Emma of Normandy, wife of Ethelred the Unready and daughter in law of Aelfthryth. Bellestam in The Domesday Book is Belstone. The ‘Bronze Princess’ is named after the important recent archaeological find of a prehistoric cremation burial within a cist at Whitehorse Hill, on northern Dartmoor.  

    Lange (Anglo-Saxon/Old English), ‘long’; on agnysse min,’ sorrow’/’anguish’; daege, dairy-maid.

    
    

     Anchoress 
    
    Closed  within   a    breath    
            her sin             a countryside   hollow of  moss    her fingers close round
                              the  Book of Hours              held open on her lap
        margins                                   
        full of flowers                                 prayers and swirls
    she plays its music in the keep of her mind 
     the leaves crisp   her heart in this cell cold   colder than the blackest medieval night
                       where owls                     and moon  
               and those who wander in grey outside in the sanctuary of     garden                 
    green  arches             holly oak beech take you                with her to the centre
     the heart that never stops to the garden that closes round around her heart and 
    yours and takes us to that beat at its very centre       where the roses and the 
    sacred arts and the  woman looking out at the winter that has gone with the 
    whitest snow turns to her new manuscript begins to script the notes 
                              black upon its stave l’amour 
                                        l’amour de moi
    

    L’Amour de Moi, usually translated as My Lady’s Garden, a C15 French Chanson.

    At JacobStowe

    I could take you with this poem and this photo back one hundred and more years to 1898, when Annie, just 16, maternal Grandmother, pupil-teacher in the village – the one second from back on the right – had to tell Will Stone the young delectable rector (who she thought hot) the bad news – Bessie her eldest suavest sister would not be at the altar after all, was jilting him,

    or, we might travel westwards on the road to others where once 
    holy sites the sacred well lies in  hollows near damp grasses in the 
    hedge next the wildflower patch where children own hidden designs 
    whose colors hide the deep space of beyond. 
       But I won't.
    
    instead, I'll gather these flimsy lines up with her other belongings -
      collections of trochees, prosody & half rhymes, 
      her intricate imagery & end-stopped lines
     
    and  after locking the photo back in its darkness between the pages of 
    lost years in the family book
    we'll remain here within the origamic folds of the church where
    the crypt of the ancient found apse
    limns its semi circular curve
    	and outside
    keening lavender steals in with its rooted essence under the fence from 
    a nearby garden

    Julie Sampson’s poetry is widely published, most recently, or forthcoming, in Shearsman, Molly Bloom, Allegro, Dawntreader, Ink Sweat & Tears, The Journal, Noon, Poetry Space, Algebra of Owls, The Lake and Amethyst Review. Her work has been shortlisted or placed in several competitions, including erbacce, Wells Festival of Literature Poetry Competition and The Page is Printed. Her poetry collection Tessitura was published in 2014 (Shearsman Press) and a non-fiction manuscript was short-listed for The Impress Prize, in 2015.

      • ‘Anchoress’ by Julie Sampson
      • ‘On Whitehorse Hill’ Julie Sampson
      • Julie Sampson.com
    
    
  • A Celebration of Irish Women Poets on Bloomsday 2018

    June 10th, 2018

    ‘Hinnerup’ by Jess McKinney

    .
    sewing after so long
    i wonder if there exists a song
    a glass of water warmed in the sun
    for each age she’s ever been
    all the taps here run scalding
    following the dregs of wine
    flowing from hot water factories
    tell me about her lover
    stagnant on the periphery
    who lived three towns away
    making it harder to soak
    she would travel hours to him
    the wilting orchids
    every other weekend
    softening on the windowsill
    found sanctuary with his family
    reaching up into the day
    young and in love
    delicate and deliberate
    i’d like to know how she felt
    like grandmother’s thin fingers
    on the birthday that I learned to hate
    shaking but capable
    the night i faked to get away

     

    Hinnerup is © Jess McKinney

    Jess Mc Kinney is a queer feminist poet, essayist and English Studies graduate of UCD. Originally from Inishowen, Co. Donegal, she is now living and working in Dublin city, Ireland. Her writing is informed by themes such as sexuality, memory, nature, relationships, gender, mental health and independence. Often visually inspired, she seeks to marry pictorial elements alongside written word. Her work has been previously published in A New Ulster, Impossible Archetype, HeadStuff, In Place, Hunt & Gather, Three fates, and several other local zines.

    ‘Prime’ by Peggie Gallagher

    It is midwinter.
    Your hands are chilled.
    I lift you,
    gather your first whimpers onto my pillow,
    knowing as much by instinct as touch of skin.

    We lie here amazed at the dark,
    aware of the house sleeping around us,
    the quiet patterns of breath.
    Outside, the snow lies thick.

    In this landscape of wild skies
    and running tides,
    and mornings lit with rapture,
    I think
    I must have been falling most of my life
    to land here temple to temple
    in this pre-dawn calm,
    this kinship

    of breath with breath
    your hands cupped in my palms.

    Prime Is © Peggie Gallagher

    Peggie Gallagher’s collection, Tilth was published by Arlen House in 2013. Her work has been published in numerous journals including Poetry Ireland, Force 10, THE SHOp, Cyphers, Southword, Atlanta Review, and Envoi. In 2011 she was shortlisted for the Gregory O’Donoghue International Poetry Competition. In 2012 she won the Listowel Writers’ Week Poetry Collection. In 2018 she is the only Irish poet on the Strokestown International poetry competition shortlist. Peggie Gallagher’s work was facilitated by Paul O’Connor.

    Author image: Southword / Arlen House

    ‘Linen’ by Finnuala Simpson

    A candied calligraphy of colours, I said
    That I would change the sheets later.
    And I said also that I could handle it but I could not, and will I fry for that?
    I may, but only if you return.

    The stink of sheep hangs on me like wisdom.
    You leave in a blur and your bag is heavy with spices,
    I hope I do not let you back again.
    It depends on my resolve, and on whether the seasons let me float.

    I’ll take myself running for the friction of denial,
    Cross my legs under the tables of the library.
    I’ll spin yarns and wear black and eat fruit in the evenings,
    Till I’m taller and more thoughtful than I have been before.

    And I’ll try harder, too.
    Kindness is like witchcraft, it must be brewed and stirred,
    Mulled over in secret with the herb scent of the night.
    If it threatens to drown you, you must set yourself on fire.

    Do you think of me? Or am I a stop-gap to you?
    I marveled at you on the phone when you were talking like a man,
    Not laughing or stroking like you laugh and stroke at me.
    Talking figures like your car was a woman,
    You said fuck it we will fix the white van instead
    For by the time the summer comes you will be traveling.

    I changed my sheets and they were smeared
    Sprinkled with both blood and mould.
    But washed away now, and quietly, while you are asleep and going south.

    Linen is © Finnuala Simpson

    Finnuala Simpson is a twenty year old English and history student based in West Cork. In her free time she likes to write, cook, and walk as close to the sea as she can get.

    ‘June’ by Geraldine Plunkett Dillon

    I fill my heart with stores of memories,
    Lest I should ever leave these loved shores;
    Of lime trees humming with slow drones of bees,
    And honey dripping sweet from sycamores.

    Of how a fir tree set upon a hill,
    Lifts up its seven branches to the stars;
    Of the grey summer heats when all is still,
    And even grasshoppers cease their little wars.

    Of how a chestnut drops its great green sleeve,
    Down to the grass that nestles in the sod;
    Of how a blackbird in a bush at eve,
    Sings to me suddenly the praise of God.

    June is © Geraldine Plunkett Dillon

    The text of Magnificat and images associated with Geraldine Plunkett’s Dillon’s historical and cultural work were kindly sent to me by her great-granddaughter Isolde Carmody and I am very grateful for them. I am delighted to add Geraldine to my indices at Poethead. I hope that this page will increase interest in her work. Excerpts from the Preface to the 2nd edition of All In The Blood, memoirs of Geraldine Plunkett Dillon, edited by Honor Ó Brolcháin,“My greatest regret throughout the process has been how little credit she gives herself, for example she does not mention a paper she gave in the Royal Irish Academy in 1916 or her contribution to the article on dyes in Encyclopedia Britannica or her volume of poetry, Magnificat, or contributing to the Book of St Ultan, or being a founder member of Taibhdhearc na Gaillimhe (the masks of Tragedy and Comedy she made for the Gate theatre are now on a wall in the Taibhdhearc) and the Galway Art Club, where she exhibited for years, or making costumes for Micheál Mac Liammóir in 1928, or being responsible for Oisín Kelly deciding to become a sculptor – he was one of very many who said that she enabled them to do the right thing for their own fulfillment. When she wrote it was in order to provide a history of her times and an insight into what made her family so strange. Like many of her generation she did not write much about her own feelings and her humourous and optimistic nature does not really come through in her writing. I would like to have been able to put that in but could not in all faith do so. “ It is also worth noting that Joe (Joseph Plunkett) named her as literary executor, and she edited his Collected Poems in 1916

    ‘At the door’ by Eva Griffin

    Now, watch as I hang in the air
    tempting as a sunset
    and just as long.
    Storms are not inclined to wait;
    better to spill my secret wilderness
    as I leave this love,
    sucking light out of your blue.

    At the door is © Eva Griffin

    Eva Griffin is a poet living in Dublin and a UCD graduate. Her work has been published or is forthcoming in Tales From the Forest, All the Sins, ImageOut Write, Three Fates, The Ogham Stone, HeadStuff, and New Binary Press

    ‘Cooking Chicken’ by Alice Kinsella

    Pink is the colour of life
    of new babies’ wet heads
    and open screaming mouths.

    Pink is the rose hip of a woman at the heart
    of what’s between her hips
    and the tip of my tongue between bud lips.

    There’s the hint of pink on daisies
    when they open their petals to say
    hello to the birth of a new day.

    But pink is also the colour of death
    as the knife slides between the flesh
    and separates it into food.

    Pink is a suggestion of sickness when I pierce the skin,
    dissect the sinews, glimpse the tint of it and turn
    it to the heat to kill the pink and the possibility.

    It’s the quiver of the comb atop feathers,
    and the neck as it’s sliced from the body
    by the executioner’s axe.

    It’s the colour of cunt
    and the hint in the sky
    when the cock crows.

    Cooking Chicken is © Alice Kinsella

    Alice Kinsella was born in Dublin and raised in the west of Ireland. She holds a BA(hons) in English Literature and Philosophy from Trinity College Dublin. Her poetry has been widely published at home and abroad, most recently in Banshee Lit, Boyne Berries, The Lonely Crowd and The Irish Times. Her work has been listed for competitions such as Over the Edge New Writer of the Year Competition 2016, Jonathan Swift Awards 2016, and Cinnamon Press Pamphlet Competition 2017. She was SICCDA Liberties Festival writer in residence for 2017 and received a John Hewitt bursary in the same year. Her debut book of poems, Flower Press was published in 2018 by The Onslaught Press.

  • ‘Mallards’ by C. Murray

    June 10th, 2018

     

    Mallards

    This is the crossroads,
    this is where it is.

    Black cat killed a chaffinch,
    see her rust feathers

    descend, feather-blown
    they roll down stone steps.

    and your freedom —

    even the robin heralds it. Someone,
    someone has put bunting up.

    You are caught on the first step of your descent,
    in a pause of red, of white,

    in this absolute now

    Mallards is © C. Murray, Image is © Salma Caller

  • ‘She’ and other poems by Ceinwen E. Cariad Haydon

    June 5th, 2018

    You must not

     
    I did, I did.
    And, afterwards
    wind whips, rain falls.
    I cannot see beyond
    waterfalls sheeting down
    from miserable eyes,
    sluicing nose, cheeks, chin
    and feel etched trails
    of aged laughter lines,
    awash with running snot.
     
    I slap my face,
    to blot out inner pain.
    Fingerprints mark shame,
    sting of secret sin
    secreted on my skin,
    stigmata aflame.
    Lust chose me,
    I chose you.
    I did, I did.
     
    You must not.
     

    Haunted

     
    I didn’t see young Icarus fall
    from the sky that day,
    I didn’t see the rays of sun
    melt his wings away.
     
    And I didn’t see his strong white bones
    stripped of flesh by gannets.
    Nor did I hear his last faint cry,
    nor did I see the fret shroud down,
    nor did I ask the reason why
    he ever tried to fly so high.
     
    But I did dream a resting place,
    but I did dream a mountain stream,
    but I did dream a place to lie,
    but I did dream he waxed again,
    but I did dream he kissed my face,
    but I did dream he melted me.
     
    And I remember words he sang
    and I remember smelling young
    and I remember tasting sweat
    and I remember sharing breath
    and I remember touching down
     
    as I remember how he drowned.
     

    She

     
                        after Mark Doty Ineradicable Music
     
    She gestated words for years.
    I lack a birthing bed, she said
    and to find one was her heart’s desire,
    a place to labour hard. She who’s stirring.
     
    Could she trance herself
    to write? And even as
    she dreams and wavers,
    whispering poetic lines,
     
    the newborn secrets of her heart,
    she knows her voice comes
    lyrical and stronger
    if she dares to speak aloud.
     
    And though years were wasted,
    to have kept silent and denied
    she longed to scribe her verse
    would have been so much worse.
     
    Had she been cursed to muteness
    or deaf to those inspired beats
    that leave her spellbound,
    craving more creation, she would die.
     

    sci-fi nightmare

     
    suns dawned in rivers
    stars stippled mudbanks
    waterfalls drenched skies
    red grass called hither
    worms crawled up my flanks
    skulls flew empty by
     
    mountains dove down cliffs
    wide eyes swallowed air
    ears waxed to silence
    my feet would not shift
    scree slopes stopped to stare
    bones talked chalk nonsense
     
    colours crazed to black
    monsters talked secrets
    my clothes were all wrong
    thoughts began to crack
    devils took my debts
    to hell I was flung
     

    Was That Me?
    
    Sometimes, I feel I live on 
                                            in remainder time.
    There have been so many lives, all mine; 
                                                                    different days with different casts 
                                                                                                                       of actors on the stage. 
    Looking back, 
                         confusion often reigned.
    My days, 
                 like beads of wood or glass or precious stones,
                                                                                      adorned my costumes,
    held me moment-tight
                                      until things changed again, again and then again.
    And yet, 
                each bead mundane or bright
                                                             is threaded on a single string.
    With each new play, new role, new time,
    how did I dress my body?
                                   How did I learn my lines?
                                                                              
                                                              
                                               All my lives are mine and mine. 
                                                        But who or what am I?

    She and other poems are © Ceinwen E. Cariad Haydon

    Ceinwen E. Cariad Haydon lives in Newcastle upon Tyne, UK, and writes short stories and poetry. She has been published in web magazines and print anthologies. These include Fiction on the Web, Literally Stories, Alliterati, Stepaway, Poets Speak (whilst they still can), Three Drops from the Cauldron, Snakeskin, Obsessed with Pipework, The Linnet’s Wing, Blue Nib, Picaroon, Amaryllis, Algebra of Owls, Write to be Counted, The Lake, Ink, Sweat and Tears, Riggwelter, Poetry Shed, Southbank Poetry, Smeuse Bandit Fiction and Atrium and with work coming up in Marauder, Prole and The Curlew.

  • ‘Acceptance’ and other poems by Deirdre Gallagher

    June 4th, 2018

    Words

    The crisp dew of
    words,
    that sing
    in spring
    Jubilant is their ring.

    The soft gentle breeze of
    words
    which appease,
    please
    Leave tickles of tease.

    The blazing heat of
    words
    which incite,
    ignite,
    Defiant in their fight.

    The strong gale of
    words
    that wail,
    prevail,
    Woeful is their tale.

    The cold depth of
    words
    which pound,
    astound,
    Deadening in their sound.


    Acceptance

    Throat itches and scratches,
    raspiness of an otherworldly quality.
    Lips miming the words,
    their echoes silent.

    From deep within,
    the surges pulsating,
    desperately attempting to blast into the atmosphere.
    A concerted effort,
    both messenger and vessel
    willing, wishing, wanting
    the ripples to meet the surface.

    Flows and ebbs of lapping dialogue,
    sparkling glistening leaps of innocent,
    complicit laughter,
    lulls of serenity and quiet contemplation
    all in a blink of the mind’s eye.

    Each page turning as if courtesy of a fast-forward button.
    Slipping, falling, fading,
    thugs of resistance futile.

    The stark realisation,
    this is coldness,
    this is acceptance.


    Your resting place

    The glistening Shannon,
    a magnificent twinkling curtain
    rolled out smoothly,
    a veil is drawn over the valley below.

    Rosary in unison
    to the grating of the clay
    back and forth the swings,
    gathering rhythm
    only momentarily disrupted
    by the exchange of hands.
    A new crew lies in wait
    to take up the chorus.

    The many gatherers scattered
    witnesses to the careful descent
    into your resting place

    A quilt of roses adorns you,
    Each petal precious and sweet
    Keep warm my love.


    Celtic Bride

    Tumbling tresses of auburn,
    slender, lithe and graceful frame
    Bambi eyes – a depth of beauty
    instantly recognisable.

    Beaming, effortless smile
    finely crafted hands which have
    penned many a touching message,
    prepared many a loving meal,
    reached for many a tender embrace,
    and now act as protectrice to
    your very own High King of Ireland.

    Youth marked by boundless energy,
    instant engagement, rebellious spirit, insatiable curiosity.
    Inquisitive student, keen linguist, intrepid traveller,
    Cuisinière de résistance –
    tasting and delighting in the delectable delicacies
    of this glorious multicultural world.

    Erudite, quizzical
    mindful of the lessons of our elders,
    firm and steadfast in convictions,
    hopeful, driven to forge a better
    Ireland for those to come.
    Attuned to the voices of many,
    considerate and considered in rhetoric
    the consummate politician
    a fusion of past, present and future.

    Life ignites, infuses, thrills,
    courageous in pursuits
    standing strong, upright and resolute
    climbing every mountain
    with an indomitable spirit,
    there is something about this maiden.

    As your wedding day approaches,
    your chieftain awaits
    on the mountain top –
    Cnoc na Teamhrach
    This particular climb sees
    you ascend assuredly,
    with each step to the summit,
    you are brought home.


    Proud to call you friend

    Memories,
    childhood jewels,
    treasures in the recesses of my mind,
    the pounding of tennis balls on the tarmac
    during the hot Summer days.
    Both as equally eager to smash it with a formidable forehand,
    the dual recorders in sync (well most of the time),
    we were after all the instrumental saving grace
    of each year’s Nativity play!
    The dreaded own goal
    You poised for a glorious save,
    I, oblivious to your cries
    dealt the fatal blow
    I tested your patience that day,
    you the model of decorum never let it show.

    Teenage years brought a keen interest in historical pursuits.
    Con Air showings back to back,
    fabulous Super Mac extravaganzas,
    Infinite ripples of laughter and giggles
    a reflection
    bringing comfort and company
    when I needed it most.

    Never mind Tipperary
    it’s a longer way to Letterkenny,
    such was the legal route
    but boy was it worth the journey
    Success, Freedom, Fun
    not forgetting Cupid
    awaited,
    you never once looked back.

    Eyes blue and gentle,
    the small contented smile
    you’ve navigated the peaks and troughs,
    I can see
    you’re happy with your lot.
    This is your moment,
    bask in the joy,
    feel the excitement.
    I’m privileged to witness the triumph,
    but most undoubtedly
    proud to call you friend.


    Strength is in our past

    Do not mourn me my love
    I am near you still,
    notice me in the Autumn leaves
    strewn magnificently
    lining the roadside
    in your honour.

    Each leaf that falls
    memories we shared
    weightless, wistful
    gliding to their peaceful slumber.

    My time has arrived
    so has theirs
    gracefully, elegantly,
    swirls of multicolour
    our befitting final dance,
    a waltz.

    The day will come
    when the leaves will fade.
    growing dim
    flickering sweetly
    prepare yourself
    arm yourself
    Strength is in our past.


    Magnetic

    Snug, at ease
    camaraderie complimenting
    the fireside warmth
    a fitting forum for festive cheer.

    Random responses
    friendly jibes
    carefree banter
    giggles galore
    Verses of old time classics
    and one hit wonders
    giving way to ripples of merriment
    savouring the delight.

    A shadowing possibility
    this occasion might be our last
    Reminding ourselves to make it count
    holding it tight as a precious jewel –
    delicate, fragile, magnetic.


    Sorry

    ‘Sorry’
    a murmur, a mutter,
    falling indifferently, clumsily, irreverently from parted lips.
    Sometimes a habit, a courtesy, an afterthought,
    always a marker of our hard-won freedom.

    Seemingly innocuous word, a nod to our ancestors,
    ingrained in our bruised dialect,
    woven through the beaten tapestry of our history,
    stirring the ghosts, the troubled sod,
    foremost in our legacy.

    ‘Sorry’ for suffering eight hundred years of oppression,
    ‘Sorry’ for having our native tongue ripped out,
    ‘Sorry’ for building another nation with our blood, wood, sweat and tears,
    ‘Sorry’ for being denied the right to toil on our own soil.

    Let us not lament further sacrifice.


    OUR ETERNAL LOVE

    A soft gentle milken hand caressed our hair,
    A sweet embrace pulled us close for comfort,
    A listening ear let us know we mattered,
    A wise word offered in times of distress,
    Warmth so innate it had the touch of the divine.
    A curious question to highlight your sense of devilment,
    A wry smile which knew what we were up to,
    A generosity which knew no bounds.
    You offered your heart openly to share among us all,
    We lapped it up as we did every delicious meal.
    A style merchant as well as a speed merchant,
    A domestic goddess as well as a hostess extraordinaire,
    The aroma of fresh brown bread married with a brew of tea
    Danced through the air and set the scene,
    You balanced it all while raising a family of ten.
    You were our sun, moon and stars,
    You made sense of the world when we had lost our way,
    You were our safe haven,
    Our place of shelter and warmth when the journey got weary.
    You took pride in us, you took delight in us.
    You gave us everything,
    And all you asked in return was our happiness.
    We yearn to have you near to us again,
    To remind you one last time how dearly we love you,
    Express our gratitude and inadequacy at your selflessness.
    Queen of our hearts,
    No time to say goodbye.
    A ray of heaven on earth, the apple of our eye,
    A presence so soothing, babes fell asleep in your arms.
    We knew this day would come – the eclipse loomed,
    Our hearts would know this heaviness.
    Our stomachs wrought with anguish.
    We know you are among the chorus of angels,
    We need you still to keep a watchful eye,
    Let us know you can hear us.
    May God cradle you in his arms just as you cradled us,
    May you have peace and joy and comfort in your heavenly home,
    We carry forward your presence in our hearts,
    And know you will continue to guide us in this life,
    Until we meet again Our Eternal Love.

    Acceptance and other poems are © Deirdre Gallagher


    Deidre Gallagher - Biography Picture (1)

    Deirdre Gallagher has works published in A New Ulster, Crossways Literary Magazine, Poethead, Comhar, Feasta and upcoming in The Stinging Fly. Literature is passionate, powerful, restorative and transformative. It makes an immense contribution to our evolving world. A language enthusiast, she believes that we can dispel the shadows cast by checkered history and disconnection to see the emergence of a bright, compassionate, and equitable future that celebrates the advantages of multilingualism within national and global contexts.

     

  • ‘The Fold’ and other poems by Alison Driscoll

    May 19th, 2018

    The 22nd Minute

     
    The inners of the ash tree twirl fibres up Cú Chulainn’s stick
    Splintering out like a cut open stomach in centre-forward line
    The bas is hugged by black steel rods no match in a clash of the ash
    Which sees your elbow crack it like an egg in one quick blow
    As you wave your calloused hand to catch the leather bound wine cork
    It hooks in the L of your fingers and bends thumb like an Allen key
    You are laid out in black and yellow still like a fragile bee in October
    I bring you two halves of one ash root, the third one this season
    They drill screws into ivory phalange as if it was a notice board
    And your floppy hand is strapped in a headlock waiting for me to sign
     

    Forbidden Fruit

     
    Eden’s apples were the sweetest, full of wet juicy flesh
    That pools between teeth and bottom lip in each bite.
    Was it worth it Eve, to break that red fibrous skin
    And all the rules around it for one little taste?
     
    And Persephone, that pomegranate wasn’t yours to touch
    But it hung on that branch waving at your wagging tongue
    Just six simple seeds sat softly in your mouth
    Each one exchanged for a month on plush throne.
     
    A golden apple of discord at the feet of a few can start a war,
    Just ask Aphrodite whose fairest beauty brought down Troy
    Or innocent Snow White who took only one measly bite
    To be sent into a slumber among seven little men.
     
    Yet I can walk into any supermarket aisled with super sixes
    I’ll eat apples and pomegranate in little plastic tubs as I walk.
    No one is waiting to banish me for my cheek in having a taste.
    My only concern being; do I have pips in my teeth?
     

    Green

     
    Green is abandonment, the overgrown, the unattended
    The ivy asphyxiating pebble-dashed walls
    Green men moonwalking at night, the green of isolation
    The green of bilateral fields waving us home, our gemstone analgesic
    The unbiased green of maternity wards and the present tense
    Malignant weeds, the green of fresh nodes
    The margins of the seasons – nature’s etchings in doorframes
    The green of greenhouses, sweating incubated cabbages
    Green of poaceae, green of inspiration in poésie
    The green of the real life – the rhizopus in the bread bin
    Surging bile in the peritoneum tidal waves invisible
    The alopecia of trees sighing in change
    Green is the central line of our world body electric
    The green of amitriptyline; healing is just outside
    Doc(tor) leaves the age old cure
    The green of the first aid kit, the tea and the tree at my back door.
     

    Coordinates.

     
    I am your own personal gift shop map
    Spread across your torso palm flat
    I rest in the divot your white piano bones
    Leave for my head, caught like a surfer
    In this accordion wave of oxygen
     
    I have imprinted my scent into your skin
    Pomegranate noir lingers on the pillow
    My hair fanned last night as we talked
    And the coconut oil conditioner
    Tickled your cheeks and tastes like last night
     
    I can take you all over this world if you let me
    I’ll paint you sunsets stretched like Drumsticks
    Spilling from sticky smiles at the seaside
    We can collect corks from cheap red wine
    And just once share the heart of your sliotar
     
    My tongue can feed you spices you can’t pronounce
    And speak un petit peu de Français between European kisses
    My hands can knead Italian bread dripping in oil
    And show you how to treat dough like piano keys
    Until the kettle clicks and the duck down falls to your feet
     

    Anatomy of a sonnet

     
    “Count back slowly from ten with me”
    In measured iambic phalanges
    The pulse rushes in steady practitioner’s hands
    Where the pen sits like a scalpel – ready
     
    The page turns. It’s new tissue sheet
    across a bed where once lay a dying man
    His vacant grey eyes catch mine then
    We smile in solitude at the things we must beat
     
    I am the form’s medulla oblongata
    His is replaced by apparatus
    Our breath synchronises on the page
     
    I pull on the sounds of the machine like strata
    This hand is trained to do no harm
    His signs on the dotted line Do Not Resuscitate
     

    The Fold

     
    My darling, I didn’t know it was when
    you rattled off a list you could expand
    of all the things we get wrong that we were damned.
     
    I think about this crumbling quite often.
    In a bed with one half now unwrinkled, or at the iron
    when its holes etch my shirts because I forced my hand.
     
    I wonder what armoury it takes to withstand
    a blow to the once sewn together heart. What en-
    chantment protects lovers who can’t be still
    hand in hand after years? How do we avoid the threat
     
    of a wobble when we change or address
    or voicemail to house us two. When did we beguile
    each other? That love was under our remit.
    When was it you knew you were safer outside our nest?
     

    Apocalypse

     
    It is not a question of colliding in fire or ice.
    For us it’s about the muddling and snap
    of daily life. That is our only vice.
     
    When you leave dishes with dried out rice
    on the sink, why don’t you just run the tap?
    It’s not so much a question of fire and ice,
     
    but rather the things we do wrong; contrived
    as mini Armageddons in our happy
    daily life. That is our only vice.
     
    If I throw harsh words like rolling dice,
    know it isn’t really the toothpaste that
    makes me spew like fire and ice.
     
    That tube squeezed from the top is a slice
    of evidence that you do not listen to our scraps.
    Being you and me; that is our only vice.
     
    I wonder how many more apologies suffice.
    Are we lucky or damned that this is our catch?
    That it isn’t an ending in fire or ice.
    But rather us, our daily life – that is our vice.
     
    The Fold and other poems are  © Alison Driscoll

    Alison Driscoll is a writer from Cork and is currently undertaking an MA Creative Writing in UCC. Her work has been previously published in Quarryman literary journal. She has been longlisted for the Fish Poetry Prize and the Over The Edge New Writer of The Year Award.
  • ‘Prime’ and other poems by Peggie Gallagher

    May 19th, 2018

    Parlour

     
    A bolthole, a room half elsewhere
    adrift in distant grandeur,
    where breath condenses between damask drapes
    and the wing of a mahogany table.
    Where an ear might catch the scratch
    of a pen, a girl trawling the depths of an inkwell
    pouring words, slippery as a river of fish
    spilling loose of their net,
    slapping their wet tails on the brocade.
     
    What to do with such riches —
    feed them to her mother’s wedding gifts,
    pile them into fluted dessert dishes,
    fling their blue-black panic into the belly
    of the lamp ravening on the sideboard,
    the soft spill of innards silvering her fingers
    cracking their verbs and consonants
    the way her mother cracks
    the necks of chickens.
     

    The Three Card Trick Man

     
    After a line by Tom Duddy
     
    The reason I come here is not the horses,
    though bookie shops abound and a litter of crushed slips.
    It is always sunny and work is over for the weekend
    and the girl in the red dress has just stepped out –
     
    not exactly a carnival atmosphere, more
    a thoroughfare of anticipation, the mood buoyant,
    a painter’s delight,
    the air still holding the day’s warmth.
     
    There he is just off a side-street,
    part of a circle hunched around a makeshift table.
    The scrubbed nape,
    an odour of soap and aftershave.
     
    The picture steadies, the table is swept,
    and the look when he turns to her
    pales the red of her dress.
     
    Impossible to say what passes between them –
    a wager of innocent measure,
    the small treacheries of love and its necessities.
    Here I will leave them with everything still to play for.
     

    Prime

     
    It is midwinter.
    Your hands are chilled.
    I lift you,
    gather your first whimpers onto my pillow,
    knowing as much by instinct as touch of skin.
     
    We lie here amazed at the dark,
    aware of the house sleeping around us,
    the quiet patterns of breath.
    Outside, the snow lies thick.
     
    In this landscape of wild skies
    and running tides,
    and mornings lit with rapture,
    I think
    I must have been falling most of my life
    to land here temple to temple
    in this pre-dawn calm,
    this kinship
     
    of breath with breath
    your hands cupped in my palms.
     

    Early Delivery

     
    What had us on the road
    that early May morning
    when the Ballisodare bread van
    slalomed past
    and dropped two wax-wrapped, sliced-pans
    on the tarmac
    warm and fragrant
    as two babies
    tossed from their cradle.
     
    The van sped on
    swing-doors unbolted
    like a run-away train
    or a liberated pony
    lifting its tail.
     
    Prime and other poems are © Peggie Gallagher

    Peggie Gallagher’s collection, Tilth was published by Arlen House in 2013.  Her work has been published in numerous journals including Poetry Ireland, Force 10, THE SHOp, Cyphers, Southword, Atlanta Review, and Envoi. In 2011 she was shortlisted for the Gregory O’Donoghue International Poetry Competition. In 2012 she won the Listowel Writers’ Week Poetry Collection. In 2018 she is the only Irish poet on the Strokestown International poetry competition shortlist. Peggie Gallagher’s work was facilitated by Paul O’Connor.

    Author image: Southword / Arlen House 

  • ‘Fourteen days’ and other poems by Maeve O’Sullivan

    May 8th, 2018

     

    Sri Lanka haiku

    after traveller’s tummy —
    a calming breakfast
    on the Laccadive Sea

    ˜
    handbag-free
    no iPhone to count my steps —
    beach walk

    ˜
    Gangaramaya shrine…
    an old lady adds some jasmine
    to our flower tray

    ˜
    accompanying us
    uphill to the sacred footprint —
    frog tones

    ˜
    the temple’s lily pond
    stripped of its blooms —
    full moon day

    ˜
    chatter in the tour bus stops tsunami damage

    ˜
    storm breaking we circumambulate the wishing stupa

    ˜
     

    Fourteen Days

     
    Mother has stopped eating
    I google what happens next:
    others who have done this
    survive around fourteen days.
     
    I google what happens next:
    hunger-strikers and anorexics
    survive around fourteen days,
    declining to drink water.
     
    Hunger-strikers and anorexics
    turn their faces to the wall,
    decline drinking water,
    refuse all foodstuffs.
     
    She has turned her face to the wall
    though she seems quite serene:
    refusing all foodstuffs,
    just lying in her bed.
     
    She seems quite serene,
    like others who have done this,
    just lying in her bed –
    our mother has stopped eating.
     

    Buddhas of Asia

     
    After seeing the world’s largest indoor seated bronze Buddha at Nara,
    I visit the largest outdoor seated bronze Buddha outside Hong Kong.
    This difference is important: big Buddhas mean big business –
    everyone wants a piece of His calm. Later I see the smallest
    Buddha in the world, through a magnifying glass placed
    behind more glass, in a temple in Colombo;
    not long after I stumble upon the casket
    bearing some of His skullbone relics
    in the National Museum of India
    where I learn that He had had
    an early aniconic phase: His
    only representations then
    the Wheel of Dharma,
    an empty throne,
    the Bodhi tree,
     
    footprints…
     

    Europe haiku sequence

     
    coffee al fresco
    the horsefly takes
    half a bite

    ˜
    human statue –
    his companion applies more paint
    this sweltering day

    ˜
    peeling a courgette…
    the sound of child’s play
    in another language

    ˜
    boat tour of the port –
    a drone generates
    the most excitement

    ˜
    balmy night
    a swallow dips close
    to my breaststroke

    ˜
    city lake –
    a moorhen leads her chicks
    towards the evening sun

    ˜

    A Lapsed Catholic’s Prayer

     
    or two, or three,
    or try twenty –
    said in twenty churches
    and cathedrals, all
    along St. James’s
    way, with rows
    of matching flame-wax.
     
    On a May-day
    I come to rest
    in Notre Dame
    as choral notes
    drift upwards
    to kiss a trio
    of glass roses.
     
    Fourteen Days and other poems are © Maeve O’Sullivan

    Maeve O’Sullivan works in further education in Dublin. Over the last twenty years, her poems have been widely published, anthologized and awarded, and her haiku have been translated into ten languages. Her previous collections are Initial Response (haiku, 2011), Vocal Chords (poetry, 2014) and A Train Hurtles West (haiku, 2015). All three were published by Alba Publishing and have been well-received by readers and critics alike.  Elsewhere was published in 2017. Maeve O’Sullivan is a founder of Haiku Ireland, and also a long-standing member of the British Haiku Society. She is also a founder of the Hibernian Poetry Workshop and performs with the Poetry Divas collective of women poets. (Source: Alba Publishing)

  • ‘If I were spring,’ and other poems by Mihaela Dragan

    May 1st, 2018

    Quinces.

     
    Quinces seem to come from fairy tales.
    People even think of them as aliens,
    neither round nor oval
    neither glossy nor trivial
    not too dry and not too mellow
    but Lord, how they are handsome!
    They bring the Sun into a home
    dusty and drowsy,
    as if it had slept quietly among them!
     

    Cats

     
    What if, overnight,
    after a cup of cocoa with milk,
    we all wake up,
    mewling and whiskered?
     
    Crackling our jaws
    arching our backs
    becoming cats.
     
    Better than humans?
     

    Sunrise

     
    The cool sunrise, suddenly
    caused my heart to shudder.
     
    It seemed that cricket songs
    were slowly drilling into my soul.
     
    All day long, in summer,
    they surround me with their ardour,
     
    their birds’ wings spread into the air,
    flapping, moving since dawn,
     
                                 tempestuous!

    If I were spring,

    If I were spring -
    I would disguise myself without much ado
    as a beautiful swallow,
    
    I would chirp
     among the cheerful kids,
         weaving from the sweetest sun rays
         brought by the light blessing of the Zephyr,
    my cheery, noisy song.
    Which I would like, as expected,
    the cherry trees to ascertain.
    
           Or,
              better yet!
    I would disguise myself
          as a flowery pencil box
          to sneak into your desk.
    And there, I would whisper in a soft voice
    hidden behind the arm of your compass
    that spring dwells next to you,
     
                           one step away!

    Mihaela Dragan was born in Bucharest. She has dreamt of becoming a writer since she was a child. She was a primary school teacher for 10 years between 1986-1996, during this time she attended the University of Bucharest and obtained her degree in history and philosophy. Afterwards, She studied Law, changed her profession and became a member lawyer of the Bucharest Bar Association (1996). She loves poetry and visual arts equally finds inspiration in images that impress her through bold choices of colours, textures or composition. She has two wonderful daughters who chose to study abroad. With her newly found free time, she took on a new challenge to improve her creative skills and to dedicate more time to writing.

    If I were spring and other poems were written and translated by Mihaela Dragan

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