The Hunter of Ostara
After A.E. Stallings
The
small boy furrows
his
brow as he considers
where
he should look now—
between
the cushions
of the
couch? In the armoire
that
never opens?
Where
are the chocolate
bunnies
and the marshmallow
eggs?
He will ferret
them
out, this master
seeker,
so skilled he wins the
hunt
every Easter,
and his
sunken chest
puffs
out with pride as they place
the pin
on his vest.
Later,
much later, he
is
surprised to win a prize
for his
poetry,
and
more surprised that
critics
complain it’s full of
“mere
Easter eggs.” What,
he
wonders, is more dear
than a
hidden Easter egg,
that
wondrous plunder?
Jellies Invasion
After “Sea Urchins” by A.E. Stallings and the “Jellies Invasion” Exhibit at the National Aquarium in Baltimore, MD.
The aquarium
exhibit hosts alien,
spectral cherubim
under glass. Light shifts
playfully through translucence,
a display that lifts
my mood; the jelly-
fish are superstars, with a
glamour that belies
their scary stinging.
But the exhibit warns of
disaster brewing:
thriving in warm seas,
the jellies will bloom and blight,
and they soon will seize
waters that once were calm.
An invasive species, they’ll
explode like a bomb;
even oil spills might
do less damage than these frag-
ile pieces of fright.
And yet, no spite lurks
In the brainless blobs; their rise
Is not their own work—
the anthropocene
has raised them up and dis-
placed them. I dream
of the ominous
jellies on the shore,
waiting to sting us,
when we moved here, love;
and yet we found home, while the
jellies still must rove.
An Irish Malediction
(After “An Irish Blessing”)
May the road rise up to meet you,
and may it beat you with a blackthorn stick.
May the wind be always at your back
and may it blow you far from here.
May the sun shine warm upon your face
--your pale, Irish, defenseless face.
May the rains wash away your fields,
and until we meet in hell,
May the Lord hold you in the palm of His hand
and clap.
“Butter rubbed on a cabbage leaf was applied to the head of a child who was suffering from "scabs." After a few days the leaf brought all the scabs off clean and the skin inside was healed.” [From the Schools Collection at Duchas.ie, as told to T. Holland by Mrs. O’Mahony.]
Did my mother have “scabs” on her head
One day when she visited from Kanturk?
Did she sit with a tortoiseshell cat on her lap,
while her grandmother Johanna, behind her,
methodically buttered a cabbage leaf crown
and gently, gently patted it down, and told her,
“now, now, enough of that fidgeting,
Maeve….There, now we’re done. Sin a bhfuil anois”?
I wish I’d known to ask, but it would’ve been weird
to ask my mother if she had “scabs”
and really the question would have been
whether Johanna was the wise woman,
the Cailleach even, whom I imagine,
with wisdom to let scabs do their work
and skill to peel them, peel them off
and let the air in.
Did she know how to bruise what needed to be bruised,
And heal the bruises she could heal?
And did she draw out the pain and hunger
of her warrior sons and daughter and leave
cabbage leaves of healing for those to come in her wake?
I stir the archival sparks and wonder.
To Save the World:
A Villanelle
The world is
burning! It all is going to hell!
Where should I
turn? Whatever can I do?...
I’ve got it! I
shall write a villanelle!
I’ll write it
well, and sure, it will compel
my faithful
readers to arise and rescue
this burning world
that’s going so fast to hell
that every “tick
tock” sounds a death knell
for something that
was cherished—something true.
I’ve got to write
a mighty villanelle
to fix what’s
broken and to softly quell
the rising tide of
fear, and to undo
the world’s
burning and its course to hell.
Some may say that
I must be unwell
to think it
matters what I say or do;
but I’ve got to.
To write a villanelle
will be a way of
casting a magic spell
to help save our
world by saving me and you
from despair that
would burn our hopeful love to hell.
We’ve really got to write a villanelle.
Brian O’Sullivan teaches English at St. Mary’s College of Maryland. His poems have appeared in Rattle, HOWL New Irish Writing, ONE ART, contemporary haibun online, and other journals. He is a poetry reader for Chestnut Review and a regular panelist at a blog, ThePoetrySpace_.






