Grounding

“The wild-often dismissed as savage and chaotic by “civilized” thinkers, is actually impartially, relentlessly, and beautifully formal and free. Its expression-the richness of plant and animal life on the globe including us, the rainstorms, windstorms, and calm spring mornings-is the real world, to which we belong.”  Gary Snyder.

Feeling ancient

AncientAutumn 016

 

Some days start with difficulty the aching

of my bones through the night unrelenting

worries roam interrupting shallow sleep

these times invade the darkness of my peace.

Progressives dissolve into prancing parody

eyes no longer on the ball

no honesty just the need to win

there is no distinction here, no pride

voices reduced to a numbing incoherence

overused words and a worn out score.

 

Meanwhile the crying of the people

lie unheard echoing unanswered

there seems no shame in this bickering

dressing it up as something different.

Even a blind man could see or hear

something important, something vital

has been lost, has been forsaken.

And there is that unending emptiness

watching the dance of a prattling clown

and the gesticulations of a puppet mouthing

over rehearsed words and tired phrases

but who is who and which is which?

 

And so we are left with that odd echoing

a Welsh word “didoreth” comes to mind

I feel like closing the door on this silliness

but I worry for my children’s future

and all those children struggling out there

and they deserve so much better

something, someone far, far, better.

Than this. So we shall not be silent.

 

 

Safe to cross

SAFE TO CROSS

Big brown columns plunge their feet
into murky waters, secure my bridge.

The river flows slowly, undeterred.

A boat sends its lonely laments
answered by a gull´s circling screeches.

The river flows slowly, undeterred.

Sunset signals old lanterns to start
they throw pools of yellow hopeful light.

The river flows slowly, undeterred.

It is safe. I can continue my walk unafraid
Cross this bridge to find a new home.

 

Veronica Marjon Van Bruggen

 

Burnt

Burnt out

Burnt out.

Burn out.

Such odd phrases an evocation a reminder

Of a bonfire

Or a rocket falling backwards to earth

Nothing certain. It describes nothing. No feeling of the way emptiness

Seeps into the core of the soul

No give. No giving any more.

No seeing who or what you are.

Other people’s words empty tunes

Bells that toll but fail to ring true.

Demands are made sweating begins

Empty hands shake holding nothing

And that hiding place sleep. Sleep fails

Lying in darkness surrounded by ghosts

Of past words days the nightmare begins

Involuntary shouting swearing announces

That feeling of shame of failing

That stays through the following day

Overrides everything

Those positive achievements

Those days and times when a battle was won

The commendations waved away as worthless.

Burnt out says everything says nothing

It is a meaningless phrase.

DSC_7553.JPG

And a storm follows you.

DSC_8893.JPG

And a storm follows you.

 

It may have been just an accident of a kind that led me to find

A few lines and the search for more words of Farrell’s work

But as hard as I searched I couldn’t find a book by him at all

So I scanned the stacked shelves lined with lost memories,

The feint remains of times, of days, of others hands and eyes

And I found a surprise, a collection of that other Thomas’s verse.

 

I carried the prize to look it over thoroughly in Bannerman’s Bar

As I sat and began to read the terse few lines of The Return

Two neatly folded cuttings fell to the floor. Thomas’s obituaries,

And the odour, gathered oldness and age wafted to me from the faded

Fragile paling page and I could see the book had never been opened,

Had never been leafed through either. Pages hidden within pages.

 

It may have been the absence of those tell-tale lines on the spine

Or the lack of dog eared folds that might give away the sign of a verse

A reader had once dwelled on, a preference of some kind I suppose.

And while I sat there I was reminded once more of our stay at Ahakista

In that August, and the hellish night when Farrell out alone disappeared,

And his body never found in spite of all the searches over those days.

 

The Fastnet Race too was destroyed by that storm and as they said

In the Tin Shed pub it was the worst kind of blow to come out of nowhere.

And that strange remembrance brought another as they sometimes do

Of our stay that time with a friend in his old tumbledown cottage

Overlooking Dunmanus Bay; and of the moment of finding your uninvited

Arrival when we’d returned from walking the mornings gathering shore.

 

And I can recall watching too as you smiled, unable or unwilling to explain

The reason you’d followed us. And I remember it felt so odd, so strange

That realisation we’d been followed by you, tracked down by you even,

After telling you in the plainest words to go the other way. It seemed

You’d chosen to ignore my words or perhaps heard the words differently

So you turned up anyway and proceeded to act as if nothing was wrong.

 

And I watched you, a stranger, wheedle your way in with our friends,

People you’d never met and didn’t know, and I began to hate you then.

And even now sitting with my thoughts of that time I realise I still retain

A deep, deep disdain, a feeling I’d thought I’d left in that place long ago.

Thirty five years after Farrell’s unexplained death a woman revealed

The story of walking that night with her son’s along the wind-blown edge.

 

She came across Farrell adrift in the towering waves of a sea in its rage

And described the way that he looked at her and drowned himself in order

To prevent her losing her own life too, if she’d tried to rescue him from his doom

From the certainty of his grave, as she had wanted to do and so leave

Her boy’s watching, alone and motherless. An old belief of those who worked

The sea prevented them from saving the drowning and so interrupt God’s calling.

 

Could such a thought have been in Farrell’s mind

As he chose to give his own life for hers, those boys.

And it is that thought that stays of the unselfishness

Of his act of sacrifice, his readiness to let go and slip away.

These memories and stories prompted by the pristine,

Untouched pages, contained one within another,

For reasons unknown, the portent of a story

That may never be heard and may never to be told.

 

And so I write to let go of that feeling

Of being haunted by you

And the storm that follows you.

 

 

James Gordon Farrell Novelist.

(1935-01-25)25 January 1935 – ­11 August 1979(1979-08-11) (aged 44)

Bantry Bay, County Cork, Ireland.

 

Ronald Stuart Thomas

29 March 1913 – 25 September 2000

Pentrefelin near Criccieth.

 

Lost in translation

Lost in translation

 

I lent you a book

shared some knowledge

you made promises

promises to be broken

I struggle with such interaction

I am told it is this age

nothing can be taken for granted

so nothings changed

life is fragile

we who grew up in a certain time

know that

have always known that

nothing can be taken at face value

nothing can be taken for granted

yet I listen to fools

who are taken seriously

facts mean nothing

it’s just your opinion

and if you shout louder

fact means nothing.

I leant you a book

that meant something to me.

 

Tribute to Eva Hoffman.