| The Innisfree Poetry Journal www.innisfreepoetry.org by Mary Ann Larkin
 
 
 REMEMBERING DESMOND O’GRADY
 Racing the sun these mornings,
 I think of Desmond O’Grady,
 not the night at the Irish Embassy
 when he charmed the cleaning ladies
 into a pounding chant of Cuchullain’s epic,
 his curved fingers beseeching them
 in an ecstasy of besotted bliss,
 
 but of how he staggered to the well
 on the Greek island each morning
 before the sun ballooned from the sea,
 trembling hands winding up
 the bucket of icy water
 to thunder it
 over his fog-bound head,
 shock the blood
 through the heart’s chambers,
 thread
 the fuddled mazes of the brain,
 
 and, as he clutched his quivering torso,
 how he made obeisance
 to the earth and to the water,
 pure and cold,
 as was the poet,
 cleansed now and ready.
 
 
 MRS. CROSSLAND’S FIRE
 
 What keeps coming back
 is not the opals the fire mined
 into the early morning dark
 or the lone fireman,
 turtled beneath his pack,
 slow motioning down Channing Street
 into the burning house,
 but the way Mrs. Cunningham,
 two doors up,
 set out her porch chairs
 for Mrs. Crossland and her daughter
 and, after bringing them coffee,
 wiped away the ashes,
 from her white porch table
 all night long:
 The ladies lifting their saucers,
 Mrs. Cunningham bringing
 still another damp cloth
 to banish the soot
 from Mrs. Crossland’s fire
 as quickly as it falls.
 
 
 MOTHER READING
 
 I had forgotten Mother reading
 Keatings’ History of Ireland,
 the green buckram cover,
 the letters in gold
 so I knew it was important
 like the encyclopedia or the Bible.
 The book moved with her
 from nightstand to table
 with her Camels and coffee.
 It’s not a book you read straight through,
 she told me, absorbed all the same.
 She read Keatings along with
 the society pages that taught her how
 to live in this new land
 where no pebbles traced the way back,
 where the old people shivered into silence.
 
 A cousin had given her the book
 perhaps knowing of some yearning in her
 not to be a stranger
 with no old tales to tell her daughters
 of the queens almost before time was:
 Sea Lamb,
 Queen of the Winds,
 Ruler of Wild Oxen.
 
 Did she smile to read
 that even the fish sang
 in that lost land of abundance,
 that the willow-leafed arrowheads
 were carved with the half-moons of women,
 that Brigit the White Swan,
 the Bride of the Golden Hair,
 was also Mary, Goddess of Poetry,
 her namesake?
 After dinner and into the night, my mother
 learned her people’s story.
 You should read this, she’d say,
 it tells all about Ireland.
 But the book looked too severe
 and I could find no plot.
 Still, I wondered
 why the reading took so long
 and why you couldn’t
 just go straight through.
 
 
 Copyright 2006-2012 by Cook Communication
 
 
 |