Friday 19 August 2022

Six Poems by Aine Rose


 

Blood Brothers

 

We dragged you from a yellow house,

over to my family home, passing

potholes that held secrets of stolen breath and silence.

 

We poured you red wine in my mother’s

wine glass and unrolled you a yoga mat, the bends

of spines and twists of waists

 

were knives that carved pumpkin-eyed slits

onto our fingertips, to spell iron-bound pacts

of black leather jackets, wide-eyed dances.

 

How far can one person stretch before they snap?

You were the gnarled toe bent

in a shoe a size too small. A few days earlier your father was found

 

floating in heaven. I always said October

felt like something I couldn’t put my finger on, 

bright grey days that pushed the light away.

 

 


Eyes widen at the window

breezed wind   whips

over long green grass

songful burst    whisked   up

only to echo                      away

Hazily the sky took on a sudden thirst

   of crisp light peach

once      I watched you tiptoe through

                                     trespassed fir trees

                    like bottle cleaners in a sink

          the gluggy suck and blow of suds,

                                     a tidal storm    twists glass clean.

      Then a tractor bounces      past

            a hum of gravel crunch and puff

Inside,             a lone tulip mouths its way towards

Summer,         passing on a float

freedom,

her cheeks a frigid blue-pink

birds                become bass drum

for early morning        eyelid blink

you lay next to me      nose-up on   pillow,

as a shrew       bending its way through         clay

your skin a blanket of    toned milk cream

thin curling seabed kelp

            are dark hairs                 knotted on chest

legs rooted into forested trunk

while the         sound of season outside

mirrors a rhythm like this one

choral singsong           pounds            the ebb

and swirl         of inhale and exhale.

The changing pulse of            two everlasting           beats

 

 

Spinning Class

 

Again winks the first touch of Winter frost. I mount the bike, jockey

leg extended tight

away from imaginary horse, down a hill, spinning spokes are sounds of

cobwebs spun into silver cloak. The fir trees stand tight, forested as

pencils wedged in a clear plastic case,

maybe some giant sneezed frost as far-reaching cloud, or a baker

dusted icing-sugar over their spruces, the bike spins on along,

narrowly escaping ditches cramped with brambles growing in and out

and up and over; pin and needling its way in ragged dance,

thorny fingers trace slender curvatures to carve iced morning air, one

stem reaches out to pluck me in, entangle me down to underworld

ditch. The sun is a blind pulled tight over eyelids, dazzled, down I

focus to a brown puddle that conceals the first quiet glimmer of ice,

gently resting like a frozen square of cling film, floating down and

melting like some candy floss to warm tongue, the pace uplifts and I

keep spinning up a country hill that makes tree-logs of tiring thighs,

before, I, breathe, breathe, spin past a herd of sheep huddled in a

sheltered corner, their skin the colour of murky ground beneath. They

seem to look at me. The bike sluices onwards through the air,

passing the priest's house wrapped in leafless tree's embrace, their

prickly branches vesselled like lungs on the horizon, a quick error in

the change of brakes and suddenly

my legs are like puppets, momentarily, dangling all limp and pokey, an

octopus trying the pedals, or an upside-down woodlice legging its way

nowhere.

Redeeming myself back on cruise control through air that chips away

at temples, the tip of my nose remembering being a child with you,

spinning our way down country lanes.

You told me you felt you'd die young. Not long after a game of Lego,

hiding from your big brother behind the leather couch in the good

sitting-room. Above a jet white trail slices through the morning sky,

geometrical successes delight! It cuts like a saw through the faint

smell of roast chicken escaping from an old farmhouse in the distance,

potholes empty and fill like molluscs in the seabed, wide-eyed round

like the slow blinking eyes of cyclops, or the lashy stare from a cow.

Faster and faster I spin, spinning bike turns on wheels spinning, the

spokes hum like a steady sound from a snare drum, cycling in this new

place I learn to call home.

 

 

Sunset

 

A hot-red    pool

piled into a      sea of bright    cherry

   gore that channelled    its way into

               that bloody    sunset in Skibbereen

then a              broken   egg-yolk

turned and churned

quick hit

hardened    splat

coagulating its way     towards me

a window-pane stood between         us

tapped heavy with handprints heralded

the unknown

       fingering their way feverishly      up and down

whispering an amplified hysteria       of their            own,

a child's palm              planted in washable paint

oh the noise of it all

            it smouldered              my eyes    blurred drunk

my double vision the genesis of a      sunken day

 

like yellow butter spread       ablaze

veiny clotty clouds

wet the bed

in its own blinding light

an arsenal of               charged dreams

finds its way to a fine-pink

neon line

to rest electric

above the windmills

that moved like           magmatic scarecrows

cartwheeling deformed

radioactive

blazing orange

to settle

down

below

 

 

where’ll we go

 

Looking at you I wonder where’ll we go

towards half-light, orange, licking the bay of Galway

I promise to search for you in its afterglow.

To Fanore where time seems to quander slow,

with waves that slurp and sting in spray

looking at you I wonder where’ll we go.

On Flaggy Shore that time the sky drank dark and indigo,

gripping your fingers under a dinner-table, like devil’s play

I promise to search for you in the afterglow.

Between us there grew a steady, swelled tempo,

piercing low, with the blue of your eyes that sang of the way,

oh looking at you I did wonder where we'd go.

In that sitting room we knew of feelings powerless to throw

where grá grew around embers of birth through break, decay—

I'll promise to follow you in the afterglow.

You said you’d count the minutes, or was it days, no?

Until you find me again, waiting, someday

looking at you I wonder where we’ll go

Oh! I promise to search for you in that afterglow.


 

Canteen

 

the cupboard opens to

coffee-stained cups

heaped

together fleeing as sheep

their cream turned murky around the rims

a nineties pop song teases its way

through diluted morning air

softening the already-softening edge of a balloon

for the woman who pledged

no more than forty

the other day

a drop of milk rests drunk

in the village that’s the multicultural fridge

stacked pots of cream cheese

spills a moulded bridge

on soup carton bungalows

unclad bricks tomatoey-red

all not to be borrowed

à la canteen château

a sliced avocado slouches

in a plastic-filmed sac

hoping to be

the boat rowed away



Áine Rose is an artist and poet from Donegal, Ireland. She has a bachelor’s degree in Speech & Language Therapy from Trinity College, Dublin (2017) and a postgraduate fine-art degree from the Burren College of Art, Ballyvaughan, Clare (2021). She has been awarded the Emerging Artist Bursary Award from Arts & Health funded by Irish Health Service & Irish Arts Council (2022). Her work has appeared in Morning Fruit, Icarus, A New Ulster & Irish Arts Review. Website / Instagram



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