Abe
and Beatrice : St. Louis County, May 24th 1941
From
great expectations greater things come forth,
a
bustling farm, nurtured stock, cold and spritely waters
abundant
in our wells;
From
greater expectations greatest things come,
simmering
song, happy dogs, Henry Ford's new-fangled truck
dropping
goodwill porch-side : this is all we needed, is everything we want
Advertisement in the London Times, Spring 1976, for David Monrow's Upcoming Recital in
Wigmore
Hall on June 13th of That Year
Mr
Monrow cannot attend, it grieves me to mention,
morning
light gave its electrics to a black-eyed stowaway,
day-time's
hurried fields
are
absent also,
gored
by starving tractors
watching
us the willowed youth
sat
on farmyard gates,
while
David, our dearest soul
entered
his hayloft,
his
skin troubled by vinyl's hiss,
oldest
song gone away,
fathers
all absent, thus
music's
lustre was doused -
among
the hissing of worried hay,
I’m
afraid that Mr. Monrow
will
not be joining us today
Forsan miseros meliora sequentur
A House is Not a Home
What
Heidegger says, Derrida doubles,
about
deconstruction -
nothing
matches all in the brutal axis of time, evil,
a
man's need to strangle by penis,
hoping
his horses are saddled up by dawn,
to
ride to posterity on a gallery wall.
Nothing
matches how brick, when aligned to brick,
becomes
a mass of time, benevolence,
the
family's succour
giving
lungs its reasons from within;
scientists,
Gods, even barbarians, saw this logic when they decided
what
dawn meant for them;
a
house cannot be a home for any woman, child or man
when
deconstruction comes so swift,
begotten
of no God, no science,
or
savage whose only logic was to eat, breathe, be warm,
no
Moskal beast could reconstruct these pieces,
dust
from each brick a thousand endless tons
that
fills his lungs and rots his throat
when
he roars for a prayer of water in the gut of peklo
Bummed Out in Nellcôte
If I
put false gods before the Almighty
I
guess it may as well be you
who
sails on oceans on mucus sheets
with
no hope in a life of prayer,
just
a warm breeze note to the one I cling to
like
a child to its mother through a hurricane -
I
just want to see his face,
turning
all my ears away to a breeze
begging
through a bullet hole your body glares.
A
whitewash wooden church in a small midwest town
is
looking for Jacob and James, Rachel and Ruth,
I
turn my eyes to you,
like
Jesus and his holes
wrapped
up on a rusty jism couch,
and
I know you've seen the Almighty's face
and
you're free to sit on the wrong side of my shoulder,
and
I know the Almighty will forgive you
when
your disciples are selling cat food on my TV screen.
I
followed an ambulance through the town of Saint-Tropez
to
see what dead people
look
like that moment they die -
I
hope they've see his face
walking
chest high in weeping corn
to
that wooden church you built me in Nellcôte
Gotcha
So I
left his shapes behind me,
sort
of like a setting sun, starved of light,
love,
warmth - former bosses passing through
have
those anaemic aversions, I’ve learned.
Taking
guitar lessons now, is he?
I
think it's a guitar, possibly banjo -
he
does have that fat mafioso-hair, in wavy ripples
like
Big Pussy, that hillbilly speedboat slob in Live and Let Die -
knocked
out on the jetty. Must be a banjo?
Christ,
I think it is. You see, he's one of those
"no-one
ever stops learning" types
who
would climb Everest solo
and
die 2/10ths of the way up, just to prove something to his wife, his kid -
(one
kid only, of course, nine years after marriage, career comes first) -
I
leave him behind me,
remember
shaking hands, late August,
pub
like a trawler full of fish, soaking,
slapping-off
decks; "Don't forget Ken, let accounts know
I
did those three extra weekends for you" - "Sure will".
He
didn't. It's a banjo then. Anything sunlight leaves
squeezes
through his hair
like
a garden-hoe clenched in stone, gangling weeds.
I'll
leave him behind me - some day -
a
splat of banjo on railway platform,
dissonance,
the look across his shoulder at me
as
he crouches -
his
look away. Gotcha, big boy - gotcha
A Padlock Swings Gently on a Smoke-Stained Metal Door
Artane Dublin, 1981
Valentine
never left us on a noose
nor
immolated by aftershave desire,
a
noose choking half a century from factory hands,
disco
shoes Cheryl Ladd wears at sunset, oxygen its aperitif.
A
padlock noose makes modern music
on
spring time's chilled metal penance,
a
shadow Valentine's babies point at,
wondering
if that's a late late taxi cab
or
40 years of trieste
turning
ash into braver shadows -
the
ones that brighten
rather
than darken. Bravest shadows alight - guiding the heart of the sun
Beit-Hanoun
Through
snapped-neck bricks
I
hold clocks that cry,
first
time I've seen numbers bleeding
while
flesh chills itself with silence,
Beit-Hanoun's
tears
washing
midnights free from calendars,
In
its alibi undreamed of in houses held firm by dust,
its
time and hour raped, bloodied, its skyline opaque and numb,
Mansour
and El Masry's creeds
like
a tongue coughing on its mud -
not
simply a word of God, of any God,
a
word instead of a place our tribe can sit
watching
strange-horned beasts
turning
strange to feral
and
trample the day from our clocks -
choking
the light from our timeless moon -
and
when I fumble through these ruins
I
wonder if brick and bone
can
be stitched like love is to its past,
for
nowhere else do I know such a calamity of matter,
except
maybe
alphabets
of failure and memory,
welded
in sorrow
on a
shattered maquette
The Girl
Somewhere in Poland, 1943
When
you're living later than a clock could understand,
Adonis
wraps his jaws around a pizza
hearing
Mick Jagger pleading with Jesus,
that's
when I'll give silence its saddle made of gold,
ride
my horse toward that boxcar's salt-wet throat
knowing
Jesus says nothing more than needed
when
repo-men are dying in their thousands
holding
out on a spit-numbed cartridge
on a
flight home to the moon.
Doesn't
matter if I win that Mustang or I lose a roof from my floor,
that
girl's still there, on a street somewhere in 1943,
looking
at me one more time last Sunday night,
the
grocer Neumann's daughter, eyes blacker than that black and white
spinning
as a coin that landed on a crack that split the moon,
the
girl with the lightless star
gone
into orbit on that wintered beat in her astral heart
John Doyle is from County Kildare in Ireland. He returned to writing poetry in February 2015 after a gap of nearly 7 years. Since then he's had 7 poetry collections published. His 7th collection, "Isolated Incidents" was published by Pski's Porch in Summer 2021.
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