Thursday 3 March 2022

Four Poems by Kevin McManus

 


A Pagan Place

On hallowed ground,

Where the whitethorn meets the blackthorn,

a threshold through the spiritual veil.

When you are with nature you are with the earth,

walking through a living landscape

feeling the spirit of the country,

We change in the thin places

we connect in those liminal spaces.

 

The veil is thin at the borderlands.

at the forest edge,

light coming through the trees,

casting upon the sacred oak,

beside flowing river water,

over rocks and boulders,

by the sea as the waves meet the shore.

 

A connection with those

who were rooted to the same places in the past,

to the people of the mounds,

the hill of Uisneach,

Tara, Bru na Boinne,

Knocknarea, Carrowmore

Rathcroghan, the cave of cats,

into the womb of the world.

 

The soul of the Caileach embodied

in the hallowed places.

Magic is hiding in plain sight.

Spirits move from the outer and inner worlds.

The curtain is translucent

over the three days and nights of Samhain.

To be open and receptive,

to pull deep within the grove of trees,

transcendence in the temenos. 

Lost souls

Sitting alone at the bar in Kilburn,

mid-afternoon on a mid-Summers day

wearing a suit stained with blood,

sweat and booze,

drinking the last of this month’s rent.

 

He took the boat in 57’

leaving behind Mayo,

full of hope and fear,

an address in his pocket,

for a ganger and a start,

money for a week to tide him over,

Sunday best on his back,

new shoes squeezing his feet.

 

No Irish need apply,

lodgings hard found,

working every hour God sent,

paid in the crown at the weekend,

missing home, laughs to hide the pain,

another from the top shelf.

 

Saving for the summer holiday,

putting a little by,

back home for a week to the old sod,

buying pints for the lads,

bragging about the wages,

gold chains around the neck,

bought from a suitcase.

When did you get home?

When are you going back?

 

Back to back breaking in blighty,

years passing on,

body getting tired,

drink taking hold,

no money for the holidays,

or the funerals at home.

 

Nights in the doss house,

sleeping on the rope,

days on the streets,

dreams of a long-gone family,

passing away in the cold. 

Thaddeus and Eleanor danced after the storm

Thaddeus stood at his doorway observing

the formation of an all-engulfing storm.

He was no longer satisfied with silence

or listening to the gentle sound of rain

tinkling against his window,

lulling him to sleep.

He wanted new challenges,

new tumults to ascend.

 

Thaddeus awaited the scream of the wind,

above him his eyes lifted

to the stratus skyline,

the wind surged forward and

endlessly pounded like hammer blows

upon the earth,

overhead in darkening skies,

cadaverous clouds streamed

in abundant chaos.

Thaddeus welcomed the storm;

in fact, he embraced it and danced

within its swirling torrents.

 

In a previous life he battled it,

he outstretched his arms and cursed it,

the storm appeared never-ending to him,

it was all consuming,

waiting to devour him,

he was pulled into the deluge and sank

into the black depths of the dark water

as he struggled to swim,

to stay alive as the unremitting waves

battered him,

to fight against it appeared futile,

but he learned to endure the lash,

the agony of its rampant fury.

 

Thaddeus learned how to stop fighting it;

the more he resisted the further he sank,

Thaddeus learned how to float.

 

His saviour was Eleanor,

she taught him how to ride the storm,

to ride the crashing waves of the tempest,

she gave him safe harbour

in the volatile chaos that was his life before,

a shelter from the swelling seas,

a comforting light of hope

that guided him home past jagged reefs

into the arms of a nurturing cove,

her voice was soothing to him,

her words like the melody

of a familiar song

he had heard before

but couldn’t quite remember where.

 

When the storm was over

and the carnage complete,

when the corpses had been counted

and the branch was on the bough,

Eleanor took Thaddeus by the hand

as they transcended light and shade,

they ethereally floated,

spectres on the shrill breeze

beyond time and latitude,

With no earthly constraints to hold them

to root them to the ground,

they rose together elegantly upwards to glide upon the heavenly currents.

 

When Eleanor took Thaddeus by the hand,

they danced after the storm. 

 

 

The gloaming

 

Inside,

shadows silently slide

across the grey floor,

climb up the papered wall

and darken the window.

 

Outside,

the dusk hangs on the withered tree,

its limbs slashed, mutilated and torn.

Barbed wire twisted around its torso.

Piercing deep wounds into its old decaying bark.

     

Above,

a murder of crows swarm,

a dark dance against the dying evening light,

a chorus of their shrill harsh caw,

before reposing on high oak branches.

 

Beyond,

over the brown heathered hill,

the setting sun casts its colours,

 

an orange glow across the heavens,

then steals away to ascend again.




Kevin McManus is a poet-writer from Leitrim in Western Ireland. He has published six novels, a collection of short stories and two books of poetry. His latest poetry book called “The Hawthorn Tree” is published by Lapwing Publications, Belfast.  His poems have been published in various journals including the Cormorant, the Madrigal, the Honest Ulsterman and The Galway Review. He is currently compiling a new poetry collection for publication later this year.  


 

 

 


 

 

No comments:

Post a Comment

Nine Poems by Rustin Larson

  Chet Baker   Just as a junkie would fall from a second story hotel window   in Amsterdam, I once fell from a jungle gym and hi...