A Laburnum speaks to me
It came in a plastic pot full of dry soil
languishing on a black refuse sack.
A gift with a flourish of self-importance.
I would not have brought it into a garden
where native rowans struggle to survive.
But I planted it in a corner near the wall
tumbled the weak root from parched soil
into a pre-prepared well in the rocky earth
poured an overflowing bucket of rain-water
around, to ensure it sucked a chance at
life.
Days later it spoke to me:
I have sealed
the tap
poison beside
the roses
despite the
crawling briar
the tangled lines
of horsetail
struggling
weaves of bindweed
hairs of ‘Johnny-run-the-hedge’.
I have
pursued the intensity
of living in muted
solitude
found a
personal niche
but beware my
bark
the trifoliate
leaves
a pendulous
droop
of yellow flowers
swaying
beauty.
May will glow
into toxic
buttery
blooms.
Clinker built
Waves
lap the shore over-run each other
a
constant drowning of the next swell.
Pine
stems needle sky but snow slides down
overlapped
branches, lightening the load.
Mountains
on horizons compact and fore-shorten
ship-lap
to a flat plane, misty grey, blue, black.
His
nine-planked boat, with red deal gunnels
and
steamed oak ribs, mirrors lake movements.
The
hull he makes, moulded into a precision larch-clinker
water
of a pressing wave works a gentle uplift on his craft.
Clinker – refers to a model of boat-building particular to small fresh-water craft in Ireland, where the outer boards are overlapped on each other, rather than the smooth butting of planks that are then caulked to seal the joints. Clinkering creates a hull that is lifted by the action of water on the over-lapped edges.
Building a workshop.
He built the long shed with lodge pole pines
laid carefully in a rectangle whose
diagonals
were checked, measured twice and matched.
He thought those staves would last forever
a time for him that could never be counted.
We climbed his ladders to fix bark-slatted
boards outside, cut edges from Cong sawmill
nailed to creosoted four by two cross-beams
felt on the inside dimming seeping
draughts.
There, he spent hours in his own kingdom
flattening pieces of copper into killer
baits
repairing broken candlesticks, leather bags,
chairs, tables, clocks, fishing rods,
anything
to be fixed lined up on a chisel-chip bench
central plank an inch lower to catch
detritus.
Spun a rickety lathe, turning spalted beech
bowls, signed underneath, his simple
vanity.
He built a long legacy in that small space.
The hill of the lights
Stephen was there nursing a glass of whiskey
warming himself in the winged chair
close to the Stanley, the tumbler
warming on the hot plate.
He terrified us with stories of Cnocán na Salts
knowing we would have to hurry by
on our way home, fearful of
what might lie in wait.
In a west wind, fairies sounded like spruce
branches rubbing off each other
unknown ghouls shook dead furze branches
goblins rattled solid alder cones.
It was Cnocán na Sí or Cnocán na Soilse
a name bastardised by English sappers
plotting landscape for strange tenure
measuring valleys with crows’ feet.
Salt, what you shook to keep fairies away
gatherings, where you tickled a crowd
whiskey, how you warmed stories.
warmth, why you nursed it on.
What
Naoise, Daragh, Radha and the unborn must learn
(for
all my Grandchildren)
You
will never learn in school:
How
to pick blackberries
knowing
how to choose the good ones.
How
to climb a tree
knowing
how to gauge steps with your eyes.
How
to plant potatoes
knowing
how to mind them until they mature.
How
to gather mayflies
without
crushing their delicate green wings.
How
to mind bees
without
taking too much honey from them.
How
to bung a brandy bottle
without
drinking from the cork end.
How
to walk by the lakeshore
negotiating
slippery stones that would tumble
you
into the dark water
How
to catch grasshoppers.
negotiating
clumps of scutch that would trip
you
into hummocks of reindeer moss.
How
to know a beard lichen from the hawthorn
is good for starting a fire
on a wet March day on the Rouillauns.
How
rubbing myrtle on your skin
is
good for keeping horseflies at bay
on
balmy summer days when they bite hard.
Will
you ever:
foot turf
bend ribs
steam larch
teem a boat
build a greeve
polish bog oak
dap daddy-long-legs
pluck woodcock
catch minnows
collect words
learn poems
tie a knot.
You may never learn freedom behind
desks
but I hope that you can discover
how to love and be loved.
Art Ó Súilleabháin was born in Corr na Móna, Co.
Galway and spent some years in Boston USA. He worked in Dublin and Mayo as a
teacher, in Castlebar as Director of The Mayo Education Centre and lectured at
the Catholic University of America in Washington DC (as a Fulbright scholar) before
returning to Corr na Móna.
Art has published a number of collections of poetry as Gaeilge for children. He won North West Words Poetry Gaeilge in 2017 and he has been featured in Poetry Ireland Review, Writing Home (from Daedalus Press), Hold Open the Door (from The Ireland Chair of Poetry), Vox Galvia, Trees (from Cinnamon Press (UK)), The Mayo Anthologymand The Haibun Journal, to mention but a few.
His first collection of poetry in English (Mayflies in the Heather) was published 2021. Art has read for Sunday Miscellany. He won the Bally Bard Festival in 2022. Art was selected for Poetry Ireland Introductions in 2022 and read at the Dublin International Literary Festival.
Most recently he was the featured reader at The Heinrich Böll memorial weekend and has been granted two weeks at the Heinrich Böll artist’s retreat (sponsored by the Göethe Institute in association with Mayo County Council).
"Building a Workshop" is a favourite. You may smile to know that when I read it the first time, I read "deities" instead of "detritus." I also enjoyed the list for the grandchildren -- so true! Thank you.
ReplyDelete