Saturday 12 July 2014

REMEMBERING NOT TO FORGET
   
Poetry is like sunshine it's free

http://adrianfox.org/






Lou, lou, lou

Lou, lou, lou you had true conviction.
Your songs were evolution pollution
The reason for me living
In your solution.

You took me beyond reason
To the point of no return.
Lost in shell shock treatments
Not in stroke down blues.

I heard your walk in 74’ and your lingo
Changed my life forever, no longer
A little boy in Shawaddy Waddy fever.
I fell on the floor like the man
Who fell to earth, I lost my virginity
To a Bowie /Reed score.

New city blues took no prisoners.
My velvety velvet under-ground
Reverberating sounds.  No rules
Or regulations no nouns and vowels
Just mean streets that reflected
My scene like ‘I’ll be your mirror’.

All these memories are grooves
On vinyl and sleeves, Johnny the fox
Meets Jimmy the weed.


Is this a Beckett play?

People and places leave traces
But detailed memory is gone.
Like a jet-stream disappears in blue
I’m here in hell writing words so true.

The scene is jogging memory like
A header or a footer, a margin of life.
I’m here right in the thick of it all
Middling a moment-us moment
Even if it ends up in smoke.

I just can’t put my finger on it.
Mingling with clouds and it’s gone.
It was a line that kept me straight
Now I’m back in blue.  Another
Appears like the fin of fish, mac-
Reel, you keep casting in and out.

I’m standing on a wooden pier, shivering
Dripping wet.  Cold jelly fish stings
My father is telling me to get back in
They’ll do you no harm, now get back in
Or I’ll throw you in, time is flying by.

I’m at Gyles quay, it’s cold, I’m young, in sun.
Is this a Beckett play going in and out?

Of memory or did I steal the stage.


OR-GASM?

I woke up in a wet dream.
A wet dream I can’t recall.
She never even gave me
A flicker of life, snippet.

I was left in the dark
Groping for a stylus
Touch-pen, fingering
The rim for a start button
Like an erog-in-us zone.

Seems all I’ve got is a kindle-
Fire to light up my dull day
And make this pome come

Like it never happened.



BLUE MONDAY

I think it was a Friday
In a blue Volkswagon Beetle out-
side of it don’t matter where.

Blue Monday was on the radio
And I had to pull over to hear
That beat.  It was a new day
Back then in nineteen eighty
Something, the radio was
Held up by an ammo box.

So the brit told me at the border
He pulled me over at the galvanized
Fortress.  Those days are gone 
Thank fuck! , it’s all one now.
Dublin to Belfast in a peaceful
Land on a Blue Monday.


CRUS-I-FIX

The monkey-pole hangs
Over the bed like a noose
Hanging there in space
Like a Salvador Dali
Crus-I-fix.

Was it real?
Was it true?
Everything has a grain
Of truth running through.

Hope in despair
Lost in care
Returning to
Infancy
Wheel-chair
Disability.

Where is empathy?
Somewhere out there
Out there somewhere
Is the color blue true
It makes reality real.


This pome is just
A moment us moment.


Not a poem.




STILL LIFE

The ethics of medicine left me here
without memory dreams or imagination
This is a blank verse by a man-shell.
I bought a Bodhran to beat the blues
But couldn’t beat a rhythm.

In the stroke of lost memory
all I got is dark and light.
Shadow beats out from my heart
not yet willing to depart my
Lonely sad blues. 

My hope in words to find in me
 a pulsating rhythm that finds
its way from source, negative
capability, hope from
a dead poet.

This is a metamorphose nocturne
A change from light to dark.
Shade encroaches everything casts
A darkness down.  Words go down
Almost drown, a pomes kiss of life.

i have to live in this hell cell because
a cruel entity exists in your heaven.
That isn’t very Christian, humane.


When will we have the ethics of humanity?



DOING THE BOOKS

‘There is no easy way down’
                                Mark Eitzel

I cried every night my dad was out in a gun-
Battle, a sensitive boy.  I would have done any-
Thing for my father but kill, he asked me one
day to prime a bomb in the boot of a car. 
I said no and walked away.

He cheered like he scored a goal
Watching the shooting results (news).
18 soldiers dead they said, they were sons
Of mothers, I said and left my dinner
and walked out.  My father was an ignorant
Bastard.

I’m now doing his time, the longest
Detainee in Ireland.  Held under a special powers act
on her majesty’s service, the same service that holds
me under a welfare wheelchair.  My days are numbered
this is my inheritance.  You can fight for civil rights but
you can never kill, there’s two sides to every story.

The first poem I had published in a magazine was called:

 ‘Bastard life’, I’m balancing the books.





THE MAN WITH NOTHING ON HIS MIND BUT ART

The man with nothing on his mind but art.
Hopelessness is a daily chore, suicide is
His only friend.  Art weighs things up-
And down, no god, no mother
No country.  Art has saved his soul
He lives in a black hole at the center
Of his uni-verse.


Memory is a twisted wreck of art.




THE WAVES
‘remember humanity forget the rest’
Bertrand Russell

The world has been in a negative cycle
Hurtling backwards through a crusade.
A child washed up on a beach like
A wild-life film scene of future/past.

A downward current causes this motion
The waves undulate a cycle, life-death
stalls this emotion, an upward perspective.

The people aren’t spongers, asylum seekers
They are just humans from another mindset.
Negativity makes us see
A bigger picture.


DIS-
imperfection is the language of art’
                                                   Robert Lowell

I don’t want pity or sentimentality.
Turn away from a turn away society
Locked in a locked in disability
Taught to love angel perfection.

Love my flaws my imperfection
Look up to wheelchair emotion.
We are on this ground not yet

Up in heaven, the miracle of life
Is in humanity.  Reach out warm
Truthful hands, break the stigma

Disability holds.  Separate the syl-
Labels, let life unfold!

We have the ability.




For John Berryman

I live a poetic cycle.
Keats, Carver, Kavanagh.
An ode to life, pure gravy
On Grand Canal bank (the dodder)
My mother the mountain.

In a love mode, without
a member to distort life.
I wake to find a purpose
Imaginative loco-
Motion.



I catch the 9 am from there.
Jump on a roll of die
never know where I end.


Never know where I’m going


never know where I’ve been.
Sometimes it’s so eerie out there
It’s like living on Berryman’s brow.

This is an ode to life without
The human gene.
I wear a sullen false face
Like a un-Cheshire cat
My smile turned upside down.



It’s an accidently on pure-
Pose pome, I don’t know if this is even
A pome in higgledy piggeldy form. 

A barren lonely land-
Scape, a stage from
Waiting for Godot.

I’ve been waiting a life-
Time and ten years
On this lonely plat-

Form.




THE END

We can’t escape the truth.
I was never a good liar
Never wanted to be like dad
a lying bastard.  Two things
You need to know, my father
was left on a doorstop
in Belfast.  My mother was
a Keogh from Dublin.

I heard the key pad shuffle
From deep within sleep.
After the usual, ‘good morning
Did you sleep well’?  I woke to
Two careers rolling me back
And forth into a paralyzed day.

I stood on the steady to get
Into my wheelchair way.
One of the girls joked it was
Her anniversary and she was
Was 28 years dead?  It’s strange
How memory sparks memory
From deep in a locked in syndrome.
 
I stood way back then in 1984.
Standing in the room of con-
Tentment.  The sound of my mothers
Knitting needles clacking out the rhythm
Of this unrhyme, a drum-roll drama
And father leafing the newspaper.
Me rabbiting on about my future wedding.
Just when you think all is great, then there
was a policeman’s knock like thunder?

There I was walking the long hall to the shape
In the frosted glass door.  Unsheathed his hat
He said ‘is your dad home’, ‘it’s unofficial said
I, don’t worry’.  We stood in silence listening

‘Your daughters have been searching for years’.
The knitting dropped and that was the end
Of that, a thirty two year wedding and six

Children scattered to four ill winds.



TRUTH IS BEAUTY

A Keatsian philosophy helps me
Through the day.
His negative capability gives to
Me my say.

Coffee, toast and tablets, push
The essential loneliness away.
Giving rise to his art his thought
Shunting suicide a stray.
His art is a warm grasping hand
That reaches out and in, one
Hundred year old poetry
That feeds today.  

The man of the moment I found

your one true way.

CASCADE

Without memory he felt detached.
He remembered people and places
Like his friends and family but with-
Out the bond of memory, he felt re-
Moved like life without the emotion.
He couldn’t even remember his own
Childhood or Christmas’s’ with his
Own children.  He looked out at time
Going by, even the washing machine
Stopped its cycle at that moment.

The world was moving but his world
Spun in slow motion, he pinned all
His hope on his children, his dead
Mother and suicide sister.  Hope
Was the memory he never had?

Memory only lived for a moment
Then his moment was gone.
Life drifts on to the next moment
And memory lives on.  You decide
The pleasure or pain, you hear rain
Cascade through your window pane.


U-GERN-I

I remember a flicker of memory
Outside myself, then forgotten.
I will have to write it down in future
And give myself another name.

A name that suits my former self
In wheelchair shadowed shame.
What do you call someone who
Has no memory and lives day to day.

Nergui means no name in Mongolian.
To comprehend in English, ill create
An anagram of the name, U-gern-i.

U-gern-i looked out the window
and thought like he had for the last
ten years, ‘will I kill myself today’
he asked himself.  His dead sister
and mother was strong in his mind.

As if they’re memory was manipulating
His actions, creating a truth that flowed
Like a well of reality.  He drank from this
Pure well creating clarity in his mind.
The well strengthened him like a shield
Against the dark blows of the past.

There is no right or wrong, he told himself
And his past spilt like his present, creating
A future of truth.  ‘You must give to get’
He told himself, the memory was forgotten

But his meaning was there to carry him
Through another day.

A TINGE OF AUTUMN MEMORY

A tinge of autumn memory
Is on the leaves, on the tree
Outside my window
Branching off into the ethereal sky.
Picking up messages of time
Antenna, Ariel riding waves of sea-son.

Hope rebounds of grey sky
Sending a pulse to its form
Rooting death to truth the living
Man-ipu-late me.  To branch off
Into unknown realms of beauty-
Truth, to be not the man-
Of the moment, to know
Not who I am.

The leaves are tinkling mon-
Soon rain then dying down.



CLONED

I cannot find the rhythm of this
crippled left handed stroke.
I used to take tablets to fly high
Now I take them just to get by:

Aspirin to stop the blood clot in me
Pro-prano-lol to calm me down, Lofe-
pra- mine to pick me up.  Sim vas-stat-
in to regulate, Baclofen to stop the Elvis
from shake rattle and rolling in me.
Nurofen for head-aches-red round the head
Cyclizine for slow motion sickness, Zopiclone
To die a little every-day.

I don’t know what the others do Gaviscon, Lax-
Ido and long sounding names.  16 tablets
A day-8 day and night with tea and toast.
Loose and blister-packed they strewn my break-
Fast table.  I’m cloned into dreaming darkness
in this un-tempo time.  Now-where did I put
that pen to write down what keeps me a-
live and delves much deeper than me.







NEW CLEAR WASTE

I was born into a beat ‘em’ up culture.
‘A kick in the ass does you no harm’!
Paddy, Mick or Richard, Dick
A little English Irish boy.

My father was first in line, the bastard
Said I was a sensitive soul.  I would love
To see him now and shove my books
In his ignorant face and say poets are
Meant to be sensitive
his death has made me write.

A little English boy at an Irish school
in a playground of hard-man banter.
I faced it head on every day, at first I took
the beatings, once I got used their hard man banter
being harder than they’re kicks.  I said fuck this
and kicked back, I kicked them up and down
the pad to waste ground.

I always had in me my mother’s humanitarian
golden rule of to do no one any harm. 
Until this day I have lived by that rule that’s why
I’m still here today.  I think there was a list of boys
who wanted piece of the pie.
I fought at break-time
dinner and home-time teaiI
hadnt time to eat cold toast
on the streets is where
I done my learning.  My mother
also taught me

Always to have respect and never let anyone
Stand in your way.  I would never be a bastard
Like dad.  I didn’t like where it took me at times
Lost in rage I could kill.  One day on the way home
One of the best fighters was out to get me.
Shoving me from behind, I said leave me alone

I don’t want to fight, I said three times to leave me
Then he pulled the hood of my parka coat.
I kicked him up and down that street.

My mum had to save for that coat
my friends had to pull me off him
lost in that rage of kill.

‘They are only boys having a laugh’!
I got a kicking off my dad at home
for ripping a good coat, hypocrite.


A NAMELESS POME

Negative capability gives me empathy
Not to dance with Peggy Suicide.
The world outside is inside, commerce
Drives up and down.  Beyond
The pyramid of hope.

The outside world doesn’t impact me
It only comes through my door to care.
I have no memory anymore, it don’t matter
My world is these six rooms, you see.
I go back and forth, forth and back
Zooming round a pyramid of hope.

This is my roundabout city, I came here in 76’
And I’m still going round my balancing lakes.
New-city is the center of my uni-
Verse, giving me rooms to breathe.
My event horizon, a nameless pome

Dark within dark.

NO MANS LAND

They say the first five years
Are crucial to a child’s survival.
I woke this morning with these
Thoughts, not images, as if
This pome was plucked from
The dreamt darkness, pre 1969.

Before the troubles swept us
All away, my father was a dad
back then.  He walked into a room
as if he owned it, carrying
a Friday night treat for his wife
and young family.

I didn’t see to many magic moments
After that.  Once in no man’s land
When he was going on the run in a white
Vauxhall victor, my heart pumping
Awaiting the license for Jim, Joe, john
Or Sean.  His life was a lie, as we
Crossed the border he reached across
The bench front seat and ran his fingers
through my hair.




 Now I feel like I was just another inanimate
Car-part, a tool that got him over a white line. 
I was just a boy, he was just a gun running man
A bastard child.   Running from the brits and I ran
From my wildness, my mum knew, she
Saved my life, ‘it will be safer at the border
With a boy’, she said.  We hardly spoke
That whole journey, we hardly spoke in life.

A journey spent dreamt in darkness

Locked-in doing his time.



DROP-ZONE
I’m here in the hospital foyer
Beyond the quiet room.
A space for everyone but
No access for my wheelchair.

The grey and black rooks hold
The black and grey skies.
I’m bored out of my skull, here
Among ground down butts
And gum, smoking my empty
Brains out.

The charge on my wheelchair
Is dropping from green, orange,
Red, no go. Memory is hard
To grasp for half a man
Without memory. Memory
is a moment of people?
Coming and going, I steal
From the chatter at the coffee
stand, no access.

Met an ugly cunt in the lift, maybe
It was my reflection, stroke ward
dark, an I.V. machine shoots out
purple and green light pulsing.

Sam is so confused he rambles like
A buzz light-year toy but
I see hope in his dark
Trajectory. Humour goes to
Infinity and beyond the liver-
Pool care path way, ethics.

RESPITE NON-CHALANT SUB-STANCE

He woke under a layer of stippled darkness
projected from behind his eyes like a womb-
Dream gone wrong, the stain of death left
over from the process of sorrow.
Left him feeling like a shell shocked
soldier from world war one.

When he blinked three times
like Dorothy in Oz It disappeared.
Alive, he looked up to see two careers
roll him into place, washed and dressed
in his wheelchair, breakfast by the window. 
No longer looking up from a see-through
coffin at the sprinkling of grief scattered
with a red rose tear.

For over ten years now he had lived this non-
chalant moment, that word fitted so well it comes
from another language seems like another time. 
This locked-in-syndrome moment goes round
and round on a loop of loneliness.

He feels like the character from Hubert Selby’s ‘The room’,
 in his hell cell and the way W.B. Yeats  felt in his later years
depressed and desire less.  Even god don’t live in his real reality
no one or thing was to blame, the stroke was in his genes
his Mother had five strokes. 

He was not bitter enough to stick coat hangers up anyone’s ass
anyway he was not a manipulator or a depressed older poet.

This was life, he woke from the coma/stroke seconds
after they declared him dead, switched off the life support. 
I suppose you’re fed up hearing this and he is fed up saying
But shit happens, that’s his sub-stance. 
He looked into the grey sky and thought
Crying is just like laughing, remembering
respite on the stroke ward with his friend.

There was so much sorrow all they could do was laugh
Like two soldiers in the trenches facing death.
It was so sad it brought tears of joy
the head nurse even thought he was crying.

He thought the Bristol stools chart was a menu.
He smiled and laughed out loud, remembering

Life’s happy/sadness.






THE DOGS HONEST TRUTH

We live in a wobbly, stoned, corrupt world of escapism and disability.
Half the world wants to forget us, get high and shove 
us into a pile of inhumanity.

I was a stoner just like you but now dis is my ability.  
Dis- disabled bungalow and my wheel-
chair are my home now. 

I must accept that I am from a broken society.  Respite for me is a stroke ward
where I can feel the empathy of humane nurses and crew
that need a medal trying to mend a broken down society.

I was getting headaches and my voice was thicker harder to under-
stand so my doctor admitted me on Thursday afternoon.
I didn’t want to be there for the weekend but
 my M.R.I. scan was booked for Monday.

A stroke ward is a sad depressing place, so sad all you can do is find a happy-
sadness that stops you from slashing your wrists.  Waking everyday
to a beds eye view of stroke victims.  Empathy is what is needed, we need
to find the balance between escapism and disability.

Disability is life for millions, don’t tuck us away from the public eye.
Don’t coral us into an enclosure hidden in a fenced in world.
Don’t brush us out of society, we are societies broken needs.
The world needs to know we exist
broken but still part of this world.


We need worth, you can’t escape the fact that we are broken.

STREET DÉCOR

Fishing for memory:
They bombed the paint factory
And the sweet factory. We were 
eating trolley loads of butterscotch sweets
for months, the Saracens came round
one corner military green and the next street
they were red, blue, yellow, pink and black
bet ya even the brits laughed.
Blending in street décor like cartoon Saracen's
gone wrong.
Other days they hijacked bread and Maine
soft drinks lorries and burnt them for barricades.
Not a bit of wonder they fart like thunder
Barney Hughes bread, it sticks to you belly
like lead, so the rhyme goes.
One day on the way to school they bombed
A chemist shop and we looted it like scavengers.
I got bomb damaged lipstick and mascara
and gave it to my form teacher
I had a mad crush on her
miss Ferris.

WAR AND POETRY

War and poetry

Has been my life.

The oppression 


Of words but now

They are free

To live in peace.

MAN-SHELL

I don’t remember my children but
I know they are men now. My ex-
Wife was showing me photographs
From Christmas’s past, It felt like
Someone else. I loved them
And know they loved me.

Sometimes I feel like the missing
Link, in between this and that.
I can feel that you three found
Your feet through me, now its
Your turn to crawl. You walked
All over me.

Now I am un-walking un-talking
The man-shell of a child but
I can hear the sea, it’s free.





NEGATIVE CAPABILITY


A free form in a man-

Shell without memory.

Un-remember war, hurt

No blame game.


PLACEBO-EFFECT


The cold black sea waits for me, me, me’
                                                                       Lou Reed




The bones of life and death are a placebo effect, 

beyond our comprehension, one that we don’t know 


and I don’t want to know, mystery builds another 


pome filled with love and truth for humanity.  It 


woke me from the grip of death, love and truth 


brought me back from the dead, the bond of love for 


my children was so strong.  For ten years I have been 


on a journey through limbo to find myself and I’ve 


found something beyond me, armed with a negative 


capability I broke through the darkness into a 


placebo-effect, a time and a place that doesn’t need 


to be questioned, a place of wonder.  Something else 


is alive out there like a sword of Damocles hanging 


above my head, stroke took away my memory, I 


recall people and places but detail was erased.



When I awoke from the stroke seconds after they 


switched off my life support and declared me dead.  I 


woke like a zom-me, man-shell, and the word 

positive was the only form floating through my mind.  
To this day I have been using that term in the form 

of pomes and art to cut through this awful disabling 

negativity.  Some of my art work has been close to 

the bone but negativity was the only way through 

that’s all I had to go on.


I began writing pomes, based on moment not poetic 

form, I don’t let on to know that they are real poems 

their lost images somewhere between poems and 

songs.  The pomes became ‘SPLINT and KILL HOUSE’ 

two collections published by Lagan and lapwing 

press so a huge thanks goes out to them they gave 

me hope that I could still do this, they were my 

placebo-effect.





I am not coming this essay trying to shove something down your throat. Like you, I have searched and searched for the answer, but even in my hours of
near-death, I found the same answers as you.

I believe I have been given a second chance for a reason but I’m not asking you to believe in something that fundamentally contradicts itself. I believe what I
believe, it’s just that I call mine poetry, you have another name for this mystery, let’s leave it at that-a mystery. Mysteries are named so because they want to be left alone; If we find out what the mystery is then that’s the end. Like poetry, you get something from it, then leave the rest alone for another day, you will receive something else from the same thing don’t bury it and kill the mystery. It’s about you and how you feel today, everything you receive depends on your mood, how positive and negative you are. You have the power to change your life for the better but it’s up to you. The power of positive thought is an amazing determination; tell yourself you can do it.

I’m looking for the answers like everyone else but no self-help book will give me the answers. At the end of the day they are the authors words, it’s the name he or she places on it, it’s his answer but who are you called, what’s your name and most importantly what’s your answer? It’s in you, look at yourself! When I was in the embrace of death there were always questions I needed answering.

I remember waking up one night in a cold sweat from a dream. There was a crowd of doctors around me administering drugs. I thought I had died and this was my hell, but I came to realise that heaven and hell are the same place it’s how we think of them, they both exist in your mind but it’s up to you how you paint them - positive or negative. You can walk away if you want. I remember, many years ago, being kicked to the ground in Lurgan one night withseven guys kicking and thumping me and I had a beer bottle in my hand. I thought of smashing it over the ring-leader’s head but instead I threw it away, I rolled up into a ball and took the beating. If I had smashed that bottle over his head I would be dead, not here now writing this essay. It’s up to you- your life says what lane it takes.

As Robert Frost said, ‘Always take the road less travelled by.’ Life can be affirming. It’s up to you and what you bring to it, so paint your picture with a beautiful sunrise or sunset and you can’t go wrong. Alright I’ll never be 100% the person I was,but I’m alive. I have someone to thank for that, even if it’s me, my friends and family. I believe in them and they believe in me; that’s what I call the power of healing the positive force within . The beauty in this is that there is an alternative, with every other form of religion there is no other way. The beauty is not to ask people to believe in what you believe in. Whatever happened to diversity? Believe in whatever you want to, it’s your right. If he or it paints your day so be it, that’s your positive force.

This past year has been the worst I have ever encountered. The stroke came without warning .I was on the edge of the bed, then I was on the floor shaking. I didnt know what was happening. I crawled into my mother’s room and asked her what was happening ;she told me I was taking a stroke. She phoned the doctor. All I can remember is being rushed to Intensive Care. I had ‘Locked in Syndrome.’ I knew what to say but hadn’t the power to communicate. I was flat on my back and could only move my eyes I was so afraid it was uncanny. I thought everyone was out to get me, without the power to resist. I really did believe I would go out in a wooden box.

I remembered an experience from childhood. I was running along a mossy pier in cushendall when I slipped and fell into the water. I was trying to get out of there. I feared I would die but when I looked around it was beautiful in there, the seaweed was dancing and for a second it was beautiful. An american tourist dived in, pulled me out and the water from my lungs. Since that day I have never met you but thank you for being there at that moment. It felt like I was lost walking around in a field of nothing, then i woke up with friends around me. I don’t let on to know the answers to life, I am just like you,a searcher of the truth and lying there in that hospital bed I realised that there is no great light that I’m drawn towards-just the people who loved me for their own reasons not mine. this wasn’t the time to be selfish but to take people as they were. Someone once said ‘Never judge your enemy it clouds your judgement.’

The power of positive thought is everywhere it’s what they see in you. These are the positive thoughts I have produced. I’m not looking for sympathy or pity-you can keep it. All I ask is that you read this and determine your own answers, not one that’s shoved down your throat. I hope this is your placebo effect. id like to finish with a line by leonard cohen that sums up what I have said, ‘theres a crack a crack in everything thats how the light gets.


PLACEBO EFFECT

We follow a coffin underground
but who says were going down.
This is the day of tomorrow, not
yesterday’s sorrow, were planting
seeds of hope, a wonder placebo. 

I don’t know why I’m still alive
but my helping hand is
my placebo effect.

The power of the mind is a human
Vessel, a magic thing, metaphysical
Wings.  I know this time of negative
Economy, even if that’s an under-
Statement.

I can feel this placebo effect tingling
My right paralyzed side, putting form
Into a formless mind.  All those dark
Lonely days, hope was always in de-
pressing pomes, I knew there was some-
thing in words.  I trusted in Keat’s negative
Capability, hieroglyphic healing metaphysical me.





HYPHEN-ATED NON-SENSE

The tock ticks memory
Killing time but time
Kills me. Locked in

Here in limbo, a real

Reality.
Times rolls by with-
Out memory, despair
In check-mate.
Life has flipped right
Over, a life I can’t see.
Life is not my choice
It’s a constant para-
Lyzed disability.
Life is a pitch and toss.
I can’t even find
A spiritual sub-
Stance.
This is a world
Of broken words
A hyphen-ated non-
Sense. My purpose
a shell is beyond.

placebo effect.




PSEUDO-CRÈME

I woke seconds after death
Half my brain said love, live.
I’m sitting here a broken-man
In a wheelchair alive.  A dry-
Skin, diabetic, junky shell.
Inventing memory from
A forgotten well.  Broken-
Words are all I have
To pick me up. 

Could you wake every morning
suicide blues?  All your emotions
merge one,  miss-de-meanor spins
you don’t know where to get  off.

Darkened stipples on the ceiling
Existing shadow dark, death was
Dressed like Johnny cash he was
The man in black.  This is hurt
But not a duel of god and devil.
light was dark and night was day
both were shadowed evil.

No ones fault, no blame,  its called
Evo-lotion, pseudo-creme.  All you kill 
for god fools can do one, loco-motion.  
Going to a I.S. backward state.

Ill innocently play with broken-
Words like a child without memory.


CLASS-BLOOD

We are living a past tense
Life is about inheritance.
Were in the waiting room
Awaiting our fathers to die
Then we will have money to fly

But were already rich at birth
Are feet are on ground so why
Do we need money to get round.
Can’t we get on love, respect
Humanity or have the humans
Lost all humanity?

Oil and gold they are life's riches
For all, from the earth, not from
Your fathers birth. Turn muck to
Gold for the human race.






It don’t come from a hundred million
Lottery, what do we need all this money for.
Ok, we all need a few bob to get by but
Its like living a Islamic state, are we Christian
Muslims or In-here-I-tense.


ODE TO DRY SKIN
Psyche free, I’m writing this
To poetry, dry skin is all over me.

Sitting here, no memory, flaking-

Away, shedding skin like a snake

Sliding up that tree free of memory

That would kill a hard man.
A membrane hanging on to re-
memberance dear life, tissue afraid to fall.
A glitch in the mind’s eye, hanging
On to my Mother’s sake.
The goddess of hope is within.
I want to sing sweet tunes to you but
These are tears from your own eye.
Imagination is beyond me.
The winged psyche flies by, this is a pome
I didn’t dream, whispering in your ear.
Please save me once more! Pat Keogh.
John Keats I’m using your form not to fall
You should be honored, your poems hold
The key to this kingdom and next, ‘you let
The warm love in’, wheel chaired under
Your smile.



SUB-STANCE

I need this like a whole in the head

Ted Hughes and the blues carry
this low down form.  Imagine
if I had imagination and memory
stroke didn’t take it away.  

‘Am I still a poet’, I ask myself?
Is this just my negative way?

I need this like a whole in the head

Death, this pome hold the answer
But the blues got life.
I’ve been up and down every alley-way-
street, the only way up is down.

Absent memory, I got the blues.
I woke up one morning, declared dead.
The hot stink of fox couldn’t enter my head.

I need this like a whole in the head.


My pomes are made of moments
I wait for this moment to arrive, sub-
Stance, somewhere between
pome and song.

I need this like a whole in the head.
I need this like a whole in the head.

INDEPENDENCE DAY



 A suitcase on a sofa, holding the contents
Of life.  I am reading Gaston Bachelards:
‘The poetics of space’.  In and out five rooms
In a wheelchair.  On Irelands divided shore.

She cleaned the houses of the rich, close to
Grand Canal grime, Dublin, enraptured.
Her mother, a midwife who lost a husband
to civil war, her the helper, a family chore

bringing hope into life.  I am heir to her Holly-
wood throne.  Cinematic, motorized, automatic
from relator to a wheelchair.  My mother had
5 strokes and I two, all this is in my blood.

Sitting beside a hoist, a con- trap-tion that
Cranes me into space.  The case holds her
Writings and paintings since 1933, when
Ireland was growing into a inde-
Pendant free-state.

They got out of dodge, went to London.
Time piece was a spaghetti western
Starring Lee Van Clef, all this for a few
Dollars more.  Three homes later, a flat
And a car.   

Four magpie came over the fence
and bobbed the grass on the otherside.
I sit here in awe watching a little bit of
Poetrys happiness.  I am locked in but

May as well be locked out, I’m on the out-
Side, looking in.  Thinking of a Ray Carver
poem and the poetics of space, home.




DISABLED HUMANITY

‘remember humanity forget the rest’
Bertrand Russell



What ever happened to individualism?


It used to be the 70s golden rule

Then it all shifted arse about face

Now were all party political fools.



I was taught to be number 1

At school, now were all clones

Alone. I sat on the fence awaiting

Humanity to strike, a message boy

On a messenger bike.


Ireland became England

And England became Ireland.

Paddy, Mick built your towns

And cities not forgetting motorways.

They built up an infrastructure but

Forgot the disabled roots.


The government aren’t turning me

Into a sponger, a liar, a cheat.

I won’t fit into your box, I’m a dis-

Abled tool but you won’t tick me.

Sucking revenue from drink, drugs, 

tobacco, gambling.

How can you sleep at night.?


I’ll stay on this middle rate dis-

Abled Avenue, you can’t see respect

My independence.


We’re not just disabled we are broken

In need of repair, humanity.


o

plaPLACEBO EFFECT THE ESSAY



I am not coming this essay trying to shove something down your throat. Like you, I have searched and searched for the answer, but even in my hours of
near-death, I found the same answers as you.

I believe I have been given a second chance for a reason but I’m not asking you to believe in something that fundamentally contradicts itself. I believe what I
believe, it’s just that I call mine poetry, you have another name for this mystery, let’s leave it at that-a mystery. Mysteries are named so because they want to be left alone; If we find out what the mystery is then that’s the end. Like poetry, you get something from it, then leave the rest alone for another day, you will receive something else from the same thing don’t bury it and kill the mystery. It’s about you and how you feel today, everything you receive depends on your mood, how positive and negative you are. You have the power to change your life for the better but it’s up to you. The power of positive thought is an amazing determination; tell yourself you can do it.

I’m looking for the answers like everyone else but no self-help book will give me the answers. At the end of the day they are the authors words, it’s the name he or she places on it, it’s his answer but who are you called, what’s your name and most importantly what’s your answer? It’s in you, look at yourself! When I was in the embrace of death there were always questions I needed answering.

I remember waking up one night in a cold sweat from a dream. There was a crowd of doctors around me administering drugs. I thought I had died and this was my hell, but I came to realise that heaven and hell are the same place it’s how we think of them, they both exist in your mind but it’s up to you how you paint them - positive or negative. You can walk away if you want. I remember, many years ago, being kicked to the ground in Lurgan one night withseven guys kicking and thumping me and I had a beer bottle in my hand. I thought of smashing it over the ring-leader’s head but instead I threw it away, I rolled up into a ball and took the beating. If I had smashed that bottle over his head I would be dead, not here now writing this essay. It’s up to you- your life says what lane it takes.

As Robert Frost said, ‘Always take the road less travelled by.’ Life can be affirming. It’s up to you and what you bring to it, so paint your picture with a beautiful sunrise or sunset and you can’t go wrong. Alright I’ll never be 100% the person I was,but I’m alive. I have someone to thank for that, even if it’s me, my friends and family. I believe in them and they believe in me; that’s what I call the power of healing the positive force within . The beauty in this is that there is an alternative, with every other form of religion there is no other way. The beauty is not to ask people to believe in what you believe in. Whatever happened to diversity? Believe in whatever you want to, it’s your right. If he or it paints your day so be it, that’s your positive force.

This past year has been the worst I have ever encountered. The stroke came without warning .I was on the edge of the bed, then I was on the floor shaking. I didnt know what was happening. I crawled into my mother’s room and asked her what was happening ;she told me I was taking a stroke. She phoned the doctor. All I can remember is being rushed to Intensive Care. I had ‘Locked in Syndrome.’ I knew what to say but hadn’t the power to communicate. I was flat on my back and could only move my eyes I was so afraid it was uncanny. I thought everyone was out to get me, without the power to resist. I really did believe I would go out in a wooden box.

I remembered an experience from childhood. I was running along a mossy pier in cushendall when I slipped and fell into the water. I was trying to get out of there. I feared I would die but when I looked around it was beautiful in there, the seaweed was dancing and for a second it was beautiful. An american tourist dived in, pulled me out and the water from my lungs. Since that day I have never met you but thank you for being there at that moment. It felt like I was lost walking around in a field of nothing, then i woke up with friends around me. I don’t let on to know the answers to life, I am just like you,a searcher of the truth and lying there in that hospital bed I realised that there is no great light that I’m drawn towards-just the people who loved me for their own reasons not mine. this wasn’t the time to be selfish but to take people as they were. Someone once said ‘Never judge your enemy it clouds your judgement.’

The power of positive thought is everywhere it’s what they see in you. These are the positive thoughts I have produced. I’m not looking for sympathy or pity-you can keep it. All I ask is that you read this and determine your own answers, not one that’s shoved down your throat. I hope this is your placebo effect. id like to finish with a line by leonard cohen that sums up what I have said, ‘theres a crack a crack in everything thats how the light gets.


PLACEBO EFFECT

We follow a coffin underground
but who says were going down.
This is the day of tomorrow, not
yesterday’s sorrow, were planting
seeds of hope, a wonder placebo. 

I don’t know why I’m still alive
but my helping hand is
my placebo effect.

The power of the mind is a human
Vessel, a magic thing, metaphysical
Wings.  I know this time of negative
Economy, even if that’s an under-
Statement.

I can feel this placebo effect tingling
My right paralyzed side, putting form
Into a formless mind.  All those dark
Lonely days, hope was always in de-
pressing pomes, I knew there was some-
thing in words.  I trusted in Keat’s negative
Capability, hieroglyphic healing metaphysical me.






MR NOBODY

Mr nobody just killing time
Without a sex drive, hard drive
Memory that isn’t mine.
Celebrating celibate without
Three bottles of wine,
Life on a 24 hour cycle
Writing down space and time.

With a poets essential loneliness
He writes the moments down
Then everything begins to merge
Like a pome needs a rhyme.

He sits in a wheelchair watching a day
Waiting for recovery to come his way.
He can’t do much without memory, time.
He tries walk talk but memory can’t store
Can’t hold the past so memory drifts away.

His sons can take on where he left off, living
Love in summer sun, a girl by his side
Walking strands on golden sands, climbing
Ancient stones.  Mr. nobody has accepted that
 Sings beauty truth and the blues. 

Mr. nobody won’t be held back by memory
And beautiful blue/black.  The clouds drift
like a placebo and this pome
flies into the clear
to rhyme time.







NECK CHOKE

Church bells are a re-

Minder to us to be

Good, god. We didn’t

Abuse the alter

It was you.

You broke the chalice
And you’re telling us
what to do.
Ring your bells and pray
Your prayers but it won’t
make the past go away.
Reach for the rope
Of humanity, un-
Tie the wicked noose.
Only then will we be free
When bells don’t choke
The sky.




BLIND BROW

Calm, get down of this blind brow, John berry

man, John Keats, John Joseph Fox. This un-

caring system is killing you.



Your balancing on a poetic edge, swaying this way and that

Looking down you can see your mother’s boat race. 

Don’t do that! She never had to tell you what to do in life.

The son of a bastards son, don’t even know my name.



Goddess of this dark place, My smile is upside down.

The dire system keeps pulling me back

Black, beautiful black.



HUNG-OVER

There’s six hundred and eighty
Grams of honey beside
The bottle of Bushmills, I’m having
Caffine and whisky for breakfast
To calm my frustrated self.

The care system is going to un-
Care, kill me. This morning
I was literally locked in a locked-
In- syndrome. The carers walked in
And out and snibbed me in.

How can an un-talking un-walking man
Paralyzed talk through a window, stand
Up and sit in a wheelchair. My good leg
Started to shake roll like an Elvis leg, (tremor)?

When I took my stroke it caused so much
Damage, I was a formless form not knowing
The difference between fantasy and reality.

I woke in a cold sweat, seconds after being
Declared dead, like a child reborn in adult shell.
Seems I was lost in a black hole within myself.

Thinking the nurses were going to kill me.
I’ve never been so scared in my life
And I survived, Ardoyne and the horrors of Belfast.

I have woke every morning for ten years
Paralyzed in a wheelchair, seeing the grime
Of death projected through my eyes like
My father’s crude murdering oil embedded
Under his skin, the room is covered in that

Stippled in darkness. Now I think the care
System is out to kill me, forgetting my
Medication, my piss pot, my wheelchair

Uncharged, having to piss in a coffee cup.
A pillow over your head to block the light
Left on like a halo of sentimentality boring
Into your head. Now I’m really locked into
My own home.

A disabled man on the edge, usually hoisted
In and out of bed, trying to stand to get into
A wheelchair to let care in to care, is this a joke
Nightmare I’m in. Why did they keep me alive?

I know we’re all going to die in the end but
I can’t handle no more of this uncaring care.
I want to live in a wheelchair before I die.

I could never handle this sentimental reg-
I mental regime. I’ve always been hungover
By this light, now I’m abandoned in the dark.

Again. This stroke has left me hungover in need
Of a cure, all I’ve got is hair of the dog-god bush-
Mills and honey for a disabled diabetic man.

Fuck it! Was my answer to life, so fuck it!
Blood was pumping through my heart
I almost got a hard on, it was nearly
A good ride, locked in, locked-in.

The coffee with whiskey is black, I can see
The reflected sky, me rippling by.
Now I’ve only got a poets essential loneliness
Of real reality. The Bushmills it seems is
A lifeline that caused my aching soul in
The first place, now I’m repeating and re-

Peating my black hole with the magic hand
Of chance, warm and capable, reaching out
In to you, true, beauty.


REFUGEE

Will I ever regain memory?
Will I ever be the same again?
My memory dreams and image-
Gin-nation all went down the drain.
My words dig-in to find my state
times when  I don’t even recall, de-
tails can’t just come to me like
they come to you, evolve.

I dwell in this dead state, in
A brain-injured state of mind.
Waiting for that dead state
To wake one day be fine, smile.
For ten years now I’ve felt like
This and writ a blog of mind.
Repeating and repeating life
With nothing new to say but
Still living out each day.

My bank balance is getting thin
I’m finding it hard everyday to win.
I want to feel love and see the sun
Without my swelling feet.
I can’t even walk or work, my voice
Is a low mumble, I watch life
Drive up and back.

I was going to write an open letter
But there’s sixty million refugees
Out there and they all want food
And hope.  I hate money and don’t
Want any it’s a pain in the ass but
I feel alone like a refugee, I want
An independent life not half-mast.

I want to live independent in a wheel-
Chair feeling blue.  I need a motability
Grant to pay for an adapted car, I have
worked all my life and I get this salt
rubbed into wounds.  I only want what’s
due to me to travel to sounds, to live life
like a human being travel near and far
Not stuck here in one place on middle
rate D.L.A.  I can’t even go to readings
to hear what poets say.  I feel like one
of sixty million. 

I don’t want special treatment, just life’s prize. 
I’m just an ordinary guy who wants an ordinary life.
 I’m not even allowed a caring care giver wife. 
I can’t afford the train fare, this just isn’t fair. 

There’s sixty million refugees out there. 
This pome is from a broken British citizen, me. 
I’ll have to go to another country where disabled

life is free and I don’t feel like a refugee.




WOULD YOU LIKE A CUP OF PISS, SIR


When will I see a clear blue day?

The shades of green leaves in the sun

Beyond a webbed dirty window, these:



These disabled aids are out to help me

Through life. I have to forget I’m dis-

Abled but my carer can forget:



My medication, piss-pot.

My wheelchair charged.



I had to piss in a coffee cup, sleep with

A pillow over my head to block out

The light, leaving the light on, all night.

These are very simple things to you

Not locked and paralyzed in a bed.



I’ve got to forget that I am craned in

And out of bed and I’m just hanging

Around hoisted up and down pulled

This way and that just to get washed 

and dressed.



I’ve got to forget I am only a person who took

A stroke and can’t remember to forget.

I’ve got to forget and wake positive

To face the hope of day.



There is no disabled infrastructure here

There is no access to life.



What am I to do, to think beyond suicidal?

Thought to stop me killing myself. I’ve got

To forget that the sky is blue, leaves

Blowing in the wind. Locked in I must

Forget I’m alive.



Twenty girls a week keypad in and out

My home, is it my home anymore?

We should have a programme on B.B.C. 4

Like a time shift time called empathy.



Dignity is being dug up, it seems the humans

Have lost all humanity. Rolf Harris and Jimmy

Saville rule ok. When will these civil wrongs

Be right care, maybe tomorrow.


GOD DOESN’T LIVE HERE ANYMORE

God doesn’t live here anymore.
The only savior here is me, alone.
An abstract head, without features.
He is my capable negativity, the magic
Hand of chance, spanning poetic years.

I live in a strange world, strange time
Without within my self.  An exit sign
Is between me and metaphysics.
 
A hospital door ajar to a green
green world.  In the really real
world I didnt know the difference
between fantasy and reality.

An exit sign and a man running away
I keep it in mind, art shows
Me the way.






I SAW WHAT PATRICK KAVANAGH SAW

‘poverty is good for the soul’

Patrick Kavanagh

1.


I saw what Patrick Kavanagh saw, a cold
gun grey metal that was killing time.
Mucker made muck in bastard soil, gun
Running hate across a borderline.

The pen is mightier than the gun, down 
unapproved roads we went on the run.
She got me out of Belfast, a rebel mind
She seen I was lost in a troubled time.

The cottage was a front for the I.R.A. 
No water, electricity, a spade sewer.
My gun was childs play with a car jack
I killed haystacks, brits, b-specials black.

A fourteen year old boy running wild
Urbanised country in a deep wild child.
Kavanagh country ditches and bogs
Freedom winds in him and his dog.

Appearing disappearing bark of trees
Pure well water and poetic breeze.
War was cleansed right out of my soul.
I saw what Patrick Kavanagh saw, cold

Grey monaghan graveyard soil, bruised
And battered by inner strength. Worded
Words make an undercurrent clarity, pure
Clear water from a cairn well stone, stone on


Stone balancing a stone head-stone. One
With the landscape under monaghan soil.


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AN IRISH FAMILY OUTING

Memory dream and imagination
Gone in a stroke. Will this broken
World always be in my face?
I use a line from those poems back
Then when I could remember.


                                                           I dreamt I saw Dectara in a flowing

                                                          Yellow dress. A woman dressed by

                                                          Mythology plucked from within

My soul. 45 years of memory locked-

In locked out of that black hole.



How will I ever reach you, how can 

I embrace the past, how do I switch

On the right side of my brain, remember

Not to forget? I recall snippets of people

and places but not detailed events.



My mind is riddled with troubled times

I don’t want to remember that, love

Pulled me through. I remember your

Eyes in the darkness, I’ll never ever forget.


You were my Dublin pillar you gave me ground.
I raise you up like a headstone, you will never
Ever explode down. Dublin was green in the 70s
Outside the G.P.O. This is my uprising, I re-
Member 1.9.1.6. the light in your mothers eye

Singing a Kevin Barry song, I knew that song
By heart: ‘ just a lad of eighteen summers, yet
No one can deny, as he walked to death that
Morning he proudly held his head up high
Standing like a soldier in that cruel prison yard’.

Memory day dream and imagin-nation
Have conjured up this past, imagination
Is in my mothers mother. Mum held me
Up high to see the parade. I knew her song
Line by line just like this pome knows not to forget.


ELEGY, UNTOUCHABLE TRUTH

1.

Writ in a cul-de-sac of pomes
A lonely sad, sad, sad song.
A shadow shimmering the page
Sentences made up of tears.
Locked in both night and day
A Chinese opera shadow play.

The bars of a jail wall window
The scene of a childhood fairy-
Tale, grim, the big, big bad wolf.
Torturing, interrogating innocence
A shell shock way of life, shadowed
By a past, home.  A stroke of luck

Takes you, without memory, dream
Or imagination but you piece
together words of hope.

2.

Poetry is like a butterfly wing
Fragile, beyond untouchable
Truth.  Why is there a price
To pay for the souls creation?
Poetry is being smashed under
The consumerist hammer.

Beyond paint on canvas or
A ballet shoe, words that fall 
in a monologue play.  It has a tender 
truth its own

To trans form words into hope. Poetry
Is like sunshine it’s free to be.  Don’t sell
It down the river, even these words have
A price to pay, even the free ones aren’t.

Is it too late for me to be me and rest in
Words, my sanctuary of hope?

                                                                             3.

The sun and rain are dripping again
The rain beats of my roof, camo-
Flagging wood grain blending red-
Brick, you feel like you’re fenced in.

Lorries rumble to a capitalist shop-
Front, and we buy the mannequin
Outfit because it looks good on him.
We’re living in a middle class 
song of joy, confusion.  

We are puppets for master-
Money.  I used to think my pomes
were free but words have collateral
damage, they spell out the future for me.

ELEGY

Writ in this cul-de-sac of pomes
By a hung out unused monkey pole.
Hyphenated words of the moment
Like the blues in a cotton field.

I woke up this morning
and I was blue
I woke up this morning
And I saw you

She was my lost and only sweet-
Heart, my dark haired love.
I didn’t have no one but memory
To fill my lost essential blues.
To fill my lonely day.

I aint got no one to love to touch
My very heart and soul but you
Do that for me when alone

Going home.


GOD V ART

Jack sat in his wheelchair watching another grey dismal day un-
Fold, he knew he had to find hope to overcome the grey day.
He knew he had to dig deeper into his poetry and art, kill time
That was killing him and making the thoughts of suicide stronger.
He had to kill the next twenty four, to do as he said in pomes
To jump over obstacles and reach the otherside.

Poetry and art was all that he had and even it was riddled in
Hopelessness, but he knew he had to reach through grey.
In 2005 he took a stroke that almost killed him, he woke
After his life support was switched off and he was de-
Clared dead leaving him paralyzed without memory
Or imagination, he never understood why they saved
Him, he couldn’t see their Christian ethics.

He lived a real reality without anyway of conjuring up
An entity that guided him through this negative world.
A world of holocaust and world wars, iss and gazza
Bombings, stroke, heart attack, cancer and earthquake.
He would have to find some hope in his words.

All he had was the memory that disability left him with
And even the godly two faced world tried to take hope
From him, asking him not to take them down and yet
The only glimmer of hope he had was in his negativity.
He knew that he had to find a way through those
Negative thoughts, he felt so alone in his hell cell.

The god squad and their sentimentalism was killing
Any hope he had.  He lived in a cold sweat, the same cold sweat
He remembered waking to like a chainsaw massacre scene from
A gory horror film, he gripped the sheets and took a white knuckled
Ride of trust and hoped to death that the nurses were not out
To kill him, it felt like handing over the tiny glimmer of life in his
Hands and he done this every day for years, ever since he took that night-

Mare stroke.  Man had progressed to this he thought, to a sorry state
Of self-destruction, through holy crusades and a blood bath of religious
Hatred, a humanitarian military drone war.  Although all his memory
Was erased he still remembered people and places but no detail.
He recalled being a fourteen year old kid skipping up the steps of holy
Cross church, going to meet his best friend god.

He heard gunfire behind him and turned to see a man kill three
Human beings hold his gun in the air and said this is for god
And ulster.  He threw his prayer book away and ran home crying.
He is still crying today from that day we killed humanity.  Is this
How far we’ve come to man killing for a god that is supposed to be good.

The word god comes from the word good but because we created good
We also created a devil, a devil that makes us hate.  No thanks I’m not
Going with a god that is killed for, the answer is not in the gun or the sword
Shaped like a cross, there is no such a thing as a holy war.  My father fought
For this land and he’s buried under six foot of soil, that’s the land he fought for.

I will use the pen and not the gun, ill mark my own negative beauty.  The church
 And state have crippled this land and the goodness torn from within. 
I will find magic in these words if it kills me, they have pillaged
and raped this land through crusades and pedophilia. 
They are making a monster out of god.

GODZILLA

Let’s get back to the words of Albert Camus who said, ’we are all
in this bloody century together and that should be argument
enough to stop the killing’ or Robert Lowell who said imperfection-
 is the language of art, art has helped me kill grey.



METAMORPHING

The theory of everything.
Droplets of sun, rain drip
Sediment from my shed.
As if my image were in-
tombed dead.  Shining light
Flickering inclusion, shimmering
Shadow of life’s illusion.  After
The stroke made me great- again.

Ten years going and coming out to this.
Years living outside domestic bliss.
I was never any good at this that
Now all I see is drip, drip, drip
glistening hope within me falls.
The blues howls, poetry is a meta-

Morphing thing.

I am evolving now to this with-
Out bells ringing church and state
Looking up to godlike it’s not god’s gift.
Life and love is full of pragmatism
Shadow shimmering bar code pleasing

 Like a heliograph signal reflecting
brand new.  Don’t look down from high above
This is low down dirty blues.


A web of silken thread, erupts

Negative beauty.




METAMORPHOSING

The theory of everything.
Droplets of sun, rain drip
Sediment from my shed.
As if my image were in-
Tombed dead.  Shining light
Flickering inclusion, shimmering
Shadow of life’s illusion.  After
The stroke made me great- again.


Ten years going and 
coming out to this.


Living outside domestic bliss.
I was never any good at this that
Now all I see is drip, drip, drip
glistening hope within me falls.
The blues howls, poetry is a meta-
Morphosing thing.


I am evolving now to this with-
Out bells ringing church and state.
realities rhetoric reason resounding
Looking up to godlike, it’s not god’s gift.
Life and love is full of pragmatism
Shadow shimmering bar code pleasing
Like a heliograph signal reflectin new.  
Don’t look down from high above
This is low down dirty blues.


A web of silken thread, erupts
into negative beauty.



DREAMING DISABILITY

What might blossom?
from the muse tree, branch out
and spread its wings of night shade.
This is probably the nearest I’ll ever
get to dream-scape.  Locked-in
this cell of dark worship.

I’m compiling a symmetry of words
Looking from inside out.  My
World is almost surreal, swimming
In the shade of in-between. 
Things are only half seen?  The steady
And the wheelchair are like
Strange fish in this aquarium.

The stand by lights like glow-worms
the shadowed streetlight dancing
on the frosted glass reflects
an orange hue.   Even the monkey pole
and the piss-pot are suspended in formaldehyde

Of shaded current, a waking dream.




A CON CARE -HEAR YE! HEAR YE!

Sitting on the edge of the bed
Eating wheaten bread.
Had to get out and in, stood
Unsteady almost fell down
Tat tie bread. 

This is the reason why I stopped night care
girls rush in out-don’t care.  They forgot my
Medication, left it in the kitchen-again.
I’m using the leg lifter, to lift my dead
Leg back in.  How do you get good care in
2015 when the economy is fucked
And you lot voted the cons back in.

I’ll lay this one out in a twisted mess at 4am
My back is broke and I’m in need, dying
For a smoke.  To be disabled in
This world, you need to be
A millionaire tory and that’s it
End of story.  I’m whinging night
And day like a town crier, maybe
That’s says a lot about the middle
Age were in.

Were you ever so browned off, the profile
Bed didn’t work, the phone went dead
And you lay in a heap unable even to
Finish a pome, the one thing in life
That brings you positivity.

I want to cry but ive cried for ten years
And I don’t think I have tears left.  I’m not
Even browned off, I’m fucked off with
A system that leaves you in a state
Of almost nothing.

I’ve always had a reserve in the tank but
Now I’m left here stranded naked.
The profile bed won’t raise me up
To stand and swivel, fall into the wheelchair.
My good leg is too weak, this really is an awful
Care system to try to live an independent life.

I wish I won the lottery and had a nine carat
Gold splint and a stunning female ass-isstant
and a state of the art wheelchair to ride SoHo. 

I don’t even do the lottery and I hate money.

Let’s get back to filthy reality, I’m going to sentence
All the things wrong over the last ten years
And maybe one day we will get a party that cares
And are worthy of my vote.  I’ve only ever voted once
 when northern Ireland got peace. 

I am going to set down
the civil wrongs in bullet points be-

Cause this is a fucking war of words.





ALMOST NOTHING


Picking blues of a tree 
outside my window.
Almost nothing flowering me.

The branches reach up

Toward the light, twisted

And broken flowering me.



The roots are dug down like 

my mother. Trying to focus

brand new, everything in my 

house screams disability, that 

tree is the only thing that grows.



I’m trying in words to reach

Almost nothing, hanging on 

By the teeth of my skin. New

Growth for the honey bees

And me, by black tarmac on

A cul-de-sac, this road is going

Nowhere but I’ll take from it

Her blossoming pride.




3, 650 DAYS ON EARTH AGAIN
I’ve got to look beyond myself
Out there to green white and blue
Where the wind moves tiny features

And the cloud shifts colors through.

Out to the grey and darkling matter

That gives life to me and you.

I have lost poetry’s natural rhythm
It doesn’t speak in tongue or
Roll off between finger and thumb
Because that’s the only history
I’ve got, son.

I lost memory and imagination
I write and I eat, I eat and I write
About me and my stroke condition.
I know I haven’t the scope or diction
To be another Keats or Carver but

I have found my path, my living hand
And it’s full of beauty and truth.

LONDONS CALLING

We lived for Friday and Saturday nights
A bottle of barbiturates under Piccadilly lights.
Five minutes and you were almost there
Tripping urban craters as if you on the moon
Ireland/England you woke up in doom.
It was all blood-letting, a violent game.
You escaped Ireland’s violence for Eng-
Lands mad-max shame.  The gangs came
from everywhere they were doing the same.
You woke up in a skip, another waste ground.

Living through Irelands hunger strikes
Was the same difference.  Roach and dope
And magic mushrooms all for disappearance.
You were down in the tube station at mid-
Night where ever that was, watching brothers
Fight with iron bars and get your head kicked in.
Punk was a snooker table on the dark side of the moon
You were the alien/predator and prey was time cloned.
You didn’t care about p or c as long as you weren’t P.C.
You were beaten by both a gun put against your head
and told that both of you were dead.

We lived for Friday and Saturday nights beer and barbs
with rent boys under Piccadilly lights.  Ireland was England
fuck the fucking crown.  Hunger strikes and mad-max
everything was jamming, punk was banging and we were off
our heads just walking down the street you were one
Of the creeds, a London high street or
The crumlin road, an Irish English paddy

Mick was one in the same.






DRYAD

John Keats selected poems by Andrew-
Motion is leafed through, dog-eared
tattered and torn, wrote on and sepia-
toned, the pages are falling away
from the binding.

 The way prayer books did years ago. 
it holds the shadows of pure spring like
the dryad of the trees, an ode to keep
me from falling.

This morning I woke to a room of melancholia
projected like a womb dream from within.
The leaves shimmer shadow on my wall.
Harvest home beats a pulsating tempo
dancing a display at 8:30 pm in dusk.

The setting sun reflects of my window
casting a beam of light on my fence like
an explorers searching for the center
of the earth.  Maybe the center is in
the shimmering shadow.

'is this a waking dream'?




SISTER, SISTER RAY
For Lou

Heard her call my name
All two syllables-AD-RAIN.
Temptation inside your heart.
Guess I’m falling in love.

I’m not a young man anymore.
Stephanie says-The gift.
Here she comes now.

Mr. rain-run, run, run- waiting
For the man.  Lady Godiva’s
Operation beginning to see
The light- white light-
White heat.






BEAUTY-TRUTH

On this day of grief you gave me strength.
This is homage to you and the master of poetry.
In the very temple of life and deaths delight
I clasped her human hand now warm and giving
And saw an ounce of magic in her eye.
The innocence of life, of death.

I saw a little girl sparkle, a human untainted by
The outer world, in her loving hand she gave.
A girl who bore six children from the tarnished one
Straight out of the goodness of her heart, even
He could not corrupt her from the way of truth.

That day I held the hand of an angel and that
Angel held the hand of me, I wished her veins
We’re flowing now with blood, I hold my hand

Towards you, truth-beauty.

CADENCE

I’m writing to save my life
It’s as if I’m righting wrongs.
All we can do is write songs

To right our civil wrongs.


Life is the blues, the soul

The tempo, the cadence.

We are all a standing by

A waterside, one day

We will be free.






TRUST TO COME

Love tears me apart again.
I have loved and lost.
That day I woke from the dead
And lived in suicidal thought.

What am I to do, to do right?
Live in the moment, in spring.

Season of blossom, leafing view
My bosom buddy of this time of year
Smiling in sunshine facing fear
These words hold me here
Death is clarity, death is clear.

Life is ripened sweet to the core
A man in a moment knowing more.
Interned within internment, living
A waking dream, a special powers act.

Words can unlock the chains of torture
A blind faith called trust.  The unbalanced
One in crippled time.  Life and death with-
In, which is wrong and right?  We live
And die in trust today, the gun and the pen

Are one, peace rises in the sun?

HAWTHORN BLOSSOM
For Paula

The sullen sad girl watches him drift into blue.
I leaf history to find a swoon as close as these
They are in the trees budding green.
Grey, black and blue.

The faces of nature are watching me swoon.
Watching them watching me.
She is the waves of the ocean, she is
The sound of the sea.

Me, I’m just looking on in awe, the cloud
Drifts by her view, melancholic
Sadness fills the air.  The tree trembles
Her hearts a leaf blowing
In the wind.

She holds back the tears of time, then
The rain clouds come and she’s
Watching dripping wet.
I have never known love like this
Yet I have and don’t remember
The day but it sticks in my mind.

I will always remember her deep
Vermillion red.  She couldn’t
Handle my stroke, she could
Not live in blue.  He died writing

A book of poems, bright star.



NOW AND THEN

Now one day is just like another
And another without memory to
Guide me, back then I sat up through

The early hours listening to Henrik
Goreckis’ symphony Sustenuto 
Tranquillo and the birds of that dawn.

Trying to capture the impossible, trying
To capture a purpose, poetry and art
Is the purpose? I tell myself.
It’s as if they have gathered out there
On the windows ledge, drawn like
The wind above sea and stone.
I can’t identify these birds but I know
They are common, feeding our scraps
Each day, without long names and beautiful
Plumage they sing what’s left of my dreams.
Suddenly the tape clicks off and I’m startled
By silence, I close my eyes and listen hard
Ears cocked awaiting vibration.

If I opened the curtain id be a painter
Or photographer, if I caught the notes
I’d be a musician or composer but as it
Is I’m a poet, capturing words that are free.



THE RED COAT

People and places are there in
Memory but incidents I don’t
Want to know are locked away
Inside.  Why did I burn a good?
Red coat, my sister’s pride and joy.
 The maxi coat that carried
An armalite rifle that killed
A soldier dead.  These are
Memories I know are there
Only tears and shame bring
Them out.  A 45 year old
Beautiful woman took her
life because that coat clung
to her mind like a prayer
for the dead and the wasted lost lives.

 We have to move on in this country
To bring out the truth, our truth.



ODE TO BLUE

The blue beyond the haw-

Thorn blossom is the blue

Of your complexion.



The sun is in your leaf young eye.

Your seasoned look awakes ode

To psyche and ode to melancholy.



You are the man in the tree

Watching over me, your poems

Are my negative capability.


This is my ode to blue, you.

The clouds don’t cloud

Your judgement

They drift


on by.




STROKE DOWN BLUES

I woke up this morning with the stroke down blues
A formless form without a clue
I woke up this morning without life’s inclination
Without memory, dreams or imagination.
Hallucinating a chainsaw man behind my head
Hallucinating death behind a hospital bed
The nurses were out to kill me
And I was next, I was next.
Black snow pelted stippled my walls
Ceiling and floors, my wheelchair
Crashed and unhinged doors.
Lost in a moment made of tears
Lost in a moment that lasted years.
This is shell shock from a previous life
This is the darkness the blackness my wife
Black snow pelts from every angle
Black snow stipples I wear that bangle.
This is my stroke down blues
This is my stroke down blues
I hope I didn’t burst your sentimental bubble
Death is coming and im not in a muddle.
All this for the ethics of medicine
All this to live in-this hell cell.
Fantasy and reality which was which.
The reality of living a heartless bitch.


Before


After


A FRAGILE MOMENT
Any minute now something will happen’
                                           
Ray carver

The butterfly is fluttering my mind.
Forming a magic moment, over
And over again, time stopped still
That day in April 2005.  That day
I rose from the dead in intensive
Care, for over ten years now I’ve
Been writing this pome, without
Memory or imagination, to fill
These pages of time.  Nature
Drifted through that door
And ticked to tock my clock
And with it flowed these words
In rhyme, I will start again tomorrow
And do it all again, until time catches
Up with me and I’ll die right on time.

The seagull flies across the sun its
Shade will comfort me.  I’ll write this
Pome until I die if it’s my last thing.
The magpie shades upon the roof
And rests there like a king.  I’m sorry


I took you down but I had to get
Back up.  Birds are soaring now
Within a family flock. I had to glide
Through darkness to feel sadness in-
Sight.  The shaded life of deliverance
Within darkness there is light!
Things don’t really matter if they’re
Grey or not, the pome goes on
And on, even if I’m not.  Birds they
Soar like people-grey and black
And white, flying personalities
In a sky of blue insight.  In and on
This pome the birds glide overhead.

My friend said happy Easter
And she laughed at what she said
And flew.

CHINESE BURN


I woke in the middle of the night

To a strange secretive sensation.

I thought my heel on my paralyzed leg

Was on fire or I was having a campfire dream.

Caused by the medical suspender stockings

In a warm comfort zone, funny how I can

Remember but can’t recall the friction.


I reached under the bedclothes and felt

A hard blue thing, my leg lifter, still attached

To my foot from raising my leg into bed.

It was not caused by a native dream because

I can’t dream or conjure them up from imagination.

During the stroke I lost that and 45 years of memory.



This was the story of my reality-for over 12 years now

I had been living the dream of disability, you can’t get

Away from that, I was living a campfire dream.

I dragged my leg out of bed

where it was cool on my feet.

Disability is like interrogation 

it won’t even allow me a dream.



I want to drift into an abstract state full of gods’ 

demons and naked ladies in a fantasy of gardens.

All that information is in my syndrome-locked in.

Will it ever again come out? Until then I am in doubt.



A GOOD YEAR


The vertical blinds are like

Bars on my window dis-

torting the seagull, the mag-

Pie flight.  Beyond that there’s

A fence, hemming me in.  Beyond

life goes up and down the road.

I miss the madness, the memory, all

I’ve got now is sadness, my poetry re-

Flects who I was back then.    Words

Take me out to deliver to the bay.



In-land are the shores and lakes of

Lough neagh poetry’s tran-quill home.

There is my hide, the pier, to watch wild-

Life go by, I can soar or ignore.  The runners

The riders and walkers of this race.



This is my derby, Grand National, the stakes

Are high and dry.  The cloud drifts along re-

Vealing blue that only the pome can see.

A simple poetic perspective of my Ariel view.

Unhindered-unmined.  The stones I wheel-

Chair are precious, on cracked pavements

And black paths of this new city, good-year.



Where my father and brother worked.  Back

Then I couldn’t believe the space

The green, I can recall the estates

That were there, drinking


dens now undone.


ABSTRACT REALITY

the main thing was to be living, that was
the main thing.
                         Rilke

The disabled man lay on the profile bed, waiting

below the monkey-pole, beside the table that 

held his piss-pot, leg lifter and crème for dry skin.

Paralyzed unable to walk, he waited for a carer

To care and drag his immobile leg out of bed

Wash him dress him and put him in a wheelchair.

Without memory or imagination, he lay there un-

dreaming lost in the nightmare of disability.



When the streetlights flicker from night to day


and you’re lost in a perpetual moment so blue.


I can’t wait to see my pet dragon, she said to


The other carer, thinking she was a white haired


Goddess from game of thrones.   I can’t wait until


Saturday, said the other, to see, 50 shades of grey.


Fiddling with a key pad for a key.





THANK FUCK

‘Yet why not say what happened’
                                       Robert Lowell

I can’t live in an abstract reality.
Abstractors went out the window
With memory.  Is this it, is this life
As I know it?  Ten years I have lived
This meagre existence, life is a re-
Heated takeaway meal, all those
Years locked in a moment of:
‘any minute now, some-
Thing will happen’.

Is this my lot, words and a re-
Heated takeaway?  I had a life
Before this wheelchair, I was
A published poet in love with
A beautiful woman, with life.

The stroke cut the legs from
Under me, turned my smile
Upside down, almost killed
me, almost-thank fuck!
Mmmm the chicken is good.
I find hope in words.




PRETTY VACANT

Memory erased, with it went
Morals, standards and taboos.
I’m here alone in limbo, lost
In a filthy reality, living a night-
Mare in a locked in syndrome.

The only standard is being in
This home, morals and taboo’s
Were washed down the drain.
I can see the real world drive by on T.V.
Do I really want to belong to:  Life-?
Love, strangled by consumerism.

Art has been my savior, it has saved
Grace from me.  Drinking from a cup
That says:  never mind the bollocks
Here’s the sex pistols, this isn’t just
The rebel in me.  I am feeling through

Pomes and the pomes are being in me.
I’ll always be anti-authoritarian, words
Have become my syndrome writ

In punk poetry.










WANKER IN A WHEELCHAIR

The purpose of life is love.
How can you make love
if your sex is broken?
It’s the yardstick to female
attraction.  Am I just a wanker?
in a wheelchair, do I go on a list?
of sex offenders or hang out
on perverts corner.

When I was young I made up
my own words to tell my father
to go toss off, I said it fast go/toss/off
like one word 3 syllables so he
wouldn't understand. 

Now I’m saying it slow in my broken mind
go toss off.  Those words have come back
to haunt me, how can I stop this being?
a problem in my head

the wrong head?




A PEARL


‘loving everything that increases me’
                                                             
Raymond Carver


A friend lent me a book:  Fires by Raymond Carver.
Two unemployed friends talking of literature
And music he said in a poem I could almost see it.
That night when my family slept in dreams
I flicked open the book and read:  ‘Poem
For Karl Wallenda, aerialist supreme’.

My desk was full of books by T.S. Eliot, Patrick
Lane and Robert Lowell trying to come to grips
With academic poetry, it was going right over
My head, then I read that poem.

I stepped out into the wide blue yonder
That poem held me up, I held my breath.
I was over Magdeburg and Vienna
On the air of a poem, I took the first
Steps into the blue, my hair
Stood on end.  It lit a fire within.

I was from the backstreets of Belfast
And he was from mid-west America
Yakima, the middle of nowhere yet
His voice seemed to be mine.

It held me in the cuffs of my sleeves like
Emperor Haile Selassie and the king of
Belgians, it rolled mangoes along the streets
Of Nairobi.  I walked on clouds like a diver
Diving for pearls, over Puerto Ricco
And the Torrid Zone but I didn’t
Imagine that wire.

The poem blew me away, I stopped
And gasped for air, a poem never
Done this before, I was the breath
Of Carvers language, it made me
Stand up in sky.

SPOONERISM

The spoon sat on
The kitchen bench
Reflecting light
Through a bottle

Of pure sing water.






STROKE OF LUCK

‘The theory of poetry
Is the theory of life’.
Wrote the great
Wallace Stevens.
Life is a big black hole
A big bang theory.

I awoke just seconds
Before I was dead.
I can’t remember playing
With my kids but I re-
Member poems and stories.
Writing is like my stroke
It’s deep in the blood.

I’m going out to come in
Another big bang, a positive
Negative flow.  I’m going in
To come out.  Life is a stroke
Of luck, a big bang theory.

These words are my pre-
Cious stones.  Dug, time-
Lined, displayed from
A big black hole.  Poetry
Like sunshine is free
Not right or wrong, good
Or evil, this is the theory

Of everything.



ARIADNES LAMENT



Who will love me?

One half dead-

Hunted by thought.


The hunter behind cloud

Paralyzed by fear

You unknown god

Stab my heart, stab

My pure heart.

Break this heart

Torment me.


Why torment me?

You spiteful un-

Known god?

Shameless one!

What do you want to steal?

From me!  Humanity.

What do you gain?

By torture.


Proud prisoner

Of ultimate happiness


Executioner god.



DEATH RIGHT

I woke in a room full of ink blots.
A residue of death projected from within
That no one else can see, my death right.

I think I remember reading in Sligo

Long before my stroke. I stood on stage
And a girl was hackling, ‘read you’re happy
Poems’, I stopped and said ‘sorry, these
Are my happy poems’ and read on-
The light on the stones.

Why can’t we see death projected from
Within like a womb dream of life.
Death doesn’t have to be black and bleak
Why can’t it be the light? There doesn’t
Have to be a big bright light, it can turn
Muck to gold.

Life isn’t all huggable sentiment, this is
Truly how we move. We’ve got to take
Smooth with the rough, then your inner
Light will know. It can pull you back from
The dark, it did me and there was no big
Bright light. Be your grace saving not
The other way round.

Look out at the debris that flies in the wind
It can hold it in mid-air like a king-
Fisher hovering prey, me and you
And what we say predicting this
Human race, humanity is winning
Hands up, this is my tiny glimmer
Of light. The theory of every-
Thing, life is a big black hole.


THE EMPEROR


“O for a life of sensation rather than of thought.”
Keats

The shadow of hell cell (bars on the window) is
Cast on my wall like a remnant of dream

Turned into my black-hole nightmare.

Will I ever recover this locked-in thing?


All the world should have a negative

Capability, guarding them against

The forces of dark, teeth to the arming.



We all must face this harsh reality to make

Tomorrow new, I want to turn this muck

To gold and see color behind my eye.

I want to pray this pome, the holiness

The heart knows. This is my theory



Of life/poetry- so the great Wallace-

Stevens said who stepped beyond him-

Self to create the emperor of ice cream.


He was thinking outside the box, I’m thinking

Inside but Keats, Carver and Stevens are

Giving me a leg up over this big black wall.


Like the peace line that stood between us

In the living room (from an early poem)
I’ll get over my origin, the bastard.


HELL CELL
For Helen

Sunshine snow drifts by my window
The world doesn’t seem to know
What to do, I thought I was the only one?
But nature is in two minds, bringing
In a cold spell of past and a present warm spring.


The sun almost blinds me casting a shadow
Of vertical blind, bars on the window
Of a hell cell, that’s my little bit of sky-
My glimmer of light.

This is Ireland!


                                  COHEN AND CO


A secular majesty of sorrow
Wakes me in an aura of mourning.
This is the beginning of a new age.

Music and the songwriting of great

Men lifts me like a Rilke poem

Universally up. Thank you for

Making me see the light. There are

Problems in this world but

None of them are mine.


                                  WAITING AROUND TO DIE

Thirteen tablets a day
For ten years= forty seven
Thousand four hundred

And fifty. Pre-scribed over-

Dose of cramp and hope hangs

By a thread-due-

Ende.



Waiting around to die.

The pome is all that matters.



Death is versed on a moment-us moment.

The living spirit of blackfulness, death will

Kick in any moment now.



HAND IN HAND ( cortege)

I look out the window and see 
past the houses and new city 
streets, with wind in grass 
and trees, a land-scape.

We need to go back 
and celebrate the land 
when life and death
went hand in hand.

A pagan/christian
time of day, when
we had our say, went
our own way.

When death comes in
i dare you not to cry.
Sit down and take
deaths hand and she
will guide you through.

Smile at grief and he
will smile up at you.
Don’t be afraid, this
is the beginning not

the end, walk on.   


BLACK NOISE


'Found death in life, may here find life in death
                                          Samuel Taylor Coleridge

This is the pome I didn't want to write.
Only through sadness do I find joy.
Every night I wear this veil of tears
I don't want to live with happy/sadness
it burst out of me like an over-dose
Of mixed emotion. Please take me
out of this hell-hole, even suicide
wont trip me. I want to think beyond
myself, I must live in
my negative positivity this wheel-
chair is my home of stroke gene cell.
I'm doing my fathers time, living
his inner bastard life, an internment
of the soul, my life is interrogating me
sending down a black noise, I have to
live with, it is my black hole holding
my inner light. Give me the humane
touch not a police escort as if it's nine-
teen fifty, I have the right to die like
you have the right to live, I don't live
your moral code. I don't want to write
these stanzas or live in this district of
sadness within despair but these
are the words that hold my truth like life
within my stare. These words are
my only hope of ever pulling through.





LOCKED-IN-HISTORY

A poet without dreams and imagination
That wakes every morning wall-

Papered into a symmetry of shade.

Locked in by darkness projected

From within.
The nearest to dream are jet streams
Painting a landscape of sky inside
A real reality home miles
And miles away.
He can’t see beyond the walls
You dream, his locked in
Sin-drome is black.
Religion rings and cannons roar
The time of day, are we still in
A middle age, the age of discovery.
Locked in a church and state
Crusade war.






WITH-OUT

Ten years of living a real reality with-
Out the right side of my brain.
A writer writing without imagination
And forty five years down a drain.

The days and nights have been long
And dark but words have kept me sane.
Even words of truth and blame that
I have let you sustain.

Thank you for letting me be blue
There is hope in this left brain.
Here is a prose piece from before
The stroke my downright dirty blues.

I’ve seen only darkness and pain, ill
Be that until the day I die just like
Carver on cathedral and Chekov
On grief this is a brand new day.

So hang on in there you can’t beat

The truth with a big stick.



THE NOTEBOOK


Although it was late morning the sun was still warm over the south side of

Dublin draining yet another cold winter from the earth and from the hearts of the

poor.  One didn’t have to see the sun or feel the heat to know that summer had arrived

In Rathmines, the stench of the Grand Canal lingered with the cities grime.

As the church bells rang out the Angelus little Maggie blessed herself and

continued polishing Mrs Mahon’s side board.

Every Saturday she helped her mother clean the houses of the rich to help boost her

measly widows pension from the Ministry of Defence.

Her father died a few years previous, cut down is his prime of twenty seven by

Tuberculosis leaving a gaping wound in the hearts of a devoted wife and five

children.

Maggie worked alone this day, her mother was away bringing a life into the world she

was the unofficial midwife of the area.

The duster glided across the dark wood and she escaped into her Hollywood dreams

dancing and singing songs by Judy Garland with her friends on the lochs of the canal,

the stench of the filthy river forgotten.

She took a small worn notebook from the pocket in her drab tunic and flicked through

the pages of scribbled signatures and stopped at Judy Garland, a sense of pride filled

her cheeks recalling the crowds of screaming fans she battled through for that

autograph.  That little book held her treasures and was as important as her prayer

book and her legion with Mary.






She turned to the last page autographed by Rita Hayward, she remembered her

friends not believing her when she showed them the book.

‘You done that yourself’ they said sitting on a bench that ran along the canal, Pam

 and Mary  squeezed in trying to make some sense of the scribbled line.

‘I cant make head nor tail of it’, said Pam,  ‘if you gave our jimmy a bleeding pen

you’d make more sense of it’ said Mary how did you get it they asked together?

well said Maggie’,  ‘I was in Woolworth’s getting threads for my mother when this

blond lady with sunglasses came in the queue behind holding a little girls hand’.

‘Caught ya na na na na na said Pam said, Rita Hayward  hasn’t got

blond hair, ‘I know said Maggie but I remember Rinty the bell boy at the Gresham

had told me she was visiting Dublin.  ‘I read that in her next role she would be blond,

so there’.

‘I waited at the front and when she came out’ ‘I said’,‘ Miss Hayward could I have

your autograph’ , ‘what makes you think I’m Miss Hayward, , she said removing her

 sunglasses . I told her that I read about her next role as a blond and I knew she had a

little girl.

 She said for knowing so much I will sign and handed me an orange from her bag and

asked my name and shook my hand.

The two girls looked again at the scrawl of ink and knew it was Rita Hayward’s

and skipped off home along the path.

Finishing her chores she fell into the role of a movie queen strolling the highly

polished hall.  As she neared the wide steep staircase her hands raised like a ballet

dancer pirouetting in a beautiful gown in place of her drab tunic that hung around her

like an apron of poverty.



No longer a buck toothed thirteen year old Dublin girl she was the queen of

Hollywood.

She strode the staircase with the strength of Joan Crawford or  Bette  Davis

as she neared the last flight her step lightened and fell with a thud into reality and

Mrs Mahon standing at the foot of the stairs.

She looked forward to the one shilling wage and the home made cakes and tarts made

from apples and pears picked from her garden and the goodness of her heart.

As she reached the bottom step Mrs Mahon said in her soft upper class polite tone

’would you do me a favour Maggie’, the little girl nodded in response.

Go to Dan Dooley’s and get an ounce of tea, half a sugar and quarter butter and keep

the change, and Mrs Mahon handed her a shilling  and she put in her pocket with the

notebook.

 A small thin man she knew as Mrs Mahon’s brother in law stepped out of the

darkened room behind her.  ‘I'm going your way’, he said,' I'll walk with you’.

Patti wanted to rush there and back and get her wage and get home quickly.

She looked  at the little man with greased back dark hair wearing a suit that hung on

him like a hospital gown.

She looked into his eyes and sensed a sadness and thought it would be alright to walk

with him and the  big door closed behind them.

As they walked out he felt the heat of summer reacting to the searing heat in his chest

distorting his view, she smelt the strong scent of summer and said in a rush of

embarrassed utterance, ‘ I  take a short cut over two walls and across’ and before she

had time to finish,  It’s quicker this way’,  he said and grabbed her arm  and held her

scream.  He hauled her fresh young body across the garden past the big window of the

lonely house and down the side towards the back, while the flashes of red bricked

confusion seared through her young mind. 

His greased back hair fell about his thin face like a demon revealing his horns,  her

eyes leered with tear filled muffled silence to the rusting roof of the shed.

She cleared those two walls as if they weren’t there, that evil man had tore her soul

her life and legion with Mary.

She clambered towards the canal feeling a hurt worse than the grief of her dad, the

soiled blood ran down her soft white legs.

The next thing she never knew she was waist deep in the canal delving between her

legs washing away the filth of the devil.

The notebook and the money fell from her pocket and washed away in the cities

grime,  her dreams of innocence washed away with the filthy river.

The river bed of broken glass and rotting metal took blood from her feet but she was

numb to feel it through here well worn plim-soles.

She ran through the great doors of the chapel and settled under one of the worn down

pews and huddled into a ball doing penance on the stone cold floor of loss,  the lonely

lingering stench of stained immaculate conceptions engulfed her.

‘ Come out of there child, I thought you were a flea bitten dog, what’s wrong girl’,

said the voice of the servant of god.  Shivering she got of her hunkers and looked at

him in disbelief, why doesn’t he know what happened she said to herself.

A gibberish flow about losing Mrs Mahon’s money came flowing like the confusion

of pollution in her mind.

‘Go home to your mother’, said the priest, ‘God bless you girl’.







Mrs Mahon’s brother in law died of cancer some months later and Maggie knelt in the

chapel praying as the priest looked on.




For ten years now I have lived without dreams, within my own harsh reality.
No abstract realism, entity or metaphysical being exists here. 
This is a rough road, the hardest journey of my life. 
I have posted the horrors of my reality every other day on Facebook,
allowing the world to see my harsh causeway.

Please don’t judge my pomes on any poetic form they are moment
Us moments from my harsh causeway not based on any dream
Imagination.  They are moments that matter to me and help me survive
This harsh world in a hell cell buts it’s the only hell cell I have, reality
Rules ok.  For ten years I have been writing the self, living with the moment
That has become a decade of de-ja vu, these blogs have been my life.

From day one I have been living a harsh reality and now since my stroke it has been tenfold.
I am the son of a bastard son and these are my dark dreams of reality, 
my bastard life, the only one i got.





UNDREAMED
I woke to a blotch of alphabet letters

Projected from within. Was this a code?

To the kingdom of death or just a mumbo

Jumbo mess. I tried to find a way through.

It was a scrawl of different fonts as if written

in my other hand the paralyzed one.

All I could make out was w, q and y then

The hologram of letters disappeared.

As plain as day was there upon the wall.

Are my pomes just a mass of letters?

Like graffiti on a back alley wall?

At least that read: foxy rules ok!

Was there method in this madness?

Or was this my misspent youth.

This was like piecing together tears

Blemishes left behind the eye from

Stained life. I switched off the light

And fell back into undreamt dreams.
GOD EAT GOD

I live in a lean limbo time, caught in a catch 22.
In a uneconomic uncaring society
Sandwiched between good and evil.
Everything comes down to the penny
In your pocket, empathy comes
Right down to this.

Empathy for me a disabled poet
Is humanity, its priced way out?
Of my league.  Can this poetry of moment us
Moment make any difference.

We have to begin to care, humanity
Is going too far, caring costs nothing.
We’re living a dog eat dog existence.

Are we taking the good from the bad or bad from good?

Empathy decides.






HIS STORY


Rhyme stops and the rhythm
Of words take over.
Life is renewable if we just let go.

History is not gospel, write your own.
Hold your past that is sacred
and spin a present web.
The world is full of diversity
not the truth, the light and the way.
Words have a way of finding form
If they are seeking truth. 


Show a little tenderness and we
can make it grow-out of this
repetitive reality show.



TRUE EMPATHY

For my sister Stephanie
There was only life or death
But we’ve got to find that balance
In the center. The thin line between
The only way out or in.  My sister
Might have made that choice
Before she fell in a blur- and banged
Her head.  Why have we let life?
Go this far, knowing there’s no way back?


Caught on the thin line that sucks us
Into the pool of right and wrong.
She was just another alcoholic worth-
Less human being that the system
Washed into their moral drain.

Build a safety net so my sister
Can die with dignity moral judge-
Meant is the evil way down.
You let your citizens slip along
This path, it’s a sad state that
Allows us to fall without a thought
For life love the purpose fit to be tied.

Moral judgment has taken her down
Poor Steph.  The same moral judge-
Meant that keeps me alive without
A disabled infrastructure. Humanity
Come and show these righteous people
how it’s done.  Empathy is there to give
Us hope of never finding her thin line
that takes us down.  Black rotten society
is in my heart but I am coming up
for Stephanie.


ESSENTIAL LONELINESS

I was born to be lonely!
I’m the king of loneliness
Ray-mond.  Both syllables
Of your name called me
From another poem.

I am but a tiny speck in
The blackness far beyond.
I put my face into my hands
And sorrow came about like
A painting by Picasso or
Vincent Van Gogh.

We all crave a little love, that’s
the purpose fit to be tied.
I love you until I die!

Melancholy grips me and holds
Me in its stare, intently glaring
Inward on the cusp of suicide.
Bearable essential loneliness.

I had to get over morning now
I have to get over night.  I love
That word vulner-able it holds

My inner sight.




THE PLINTH

Bodies, I’m not an animal
                                     Sex Pistols

It’s hard to be positive when
You wake negative
And the world won’t let
You breathe. 

Disability is a non-entity in a un-
Economical state of disbelief. 
I’ll just sit here in hell cell trying
to reinvent the wheel-
chair.

Life is just going around and round
In this war torn terrain.  Picking up
These vibes like a litter-picker from
The past.

If I close my eyes will you able people
Tell me when the carousel stops
Spinning and the future pre-

Sent the past.




YOU MORALISTIC EVIL BASTARD

For ten years now, I have been
Crying wolf when I’m a fox.
How can one step outside ones
Self when all you see is truth not
Beauty. A poet without speech or
Memory, a pome writ like waves
On ocean. Written so black and bleak
They are hard even for me to re-read.

I feel I’m the darkest deepest depressed
Writer in all the world, even this uni-
Verse wont stanza globally turn. Black
And bleak can’t walk or talk, what was
Their point! The ethics of medicine
Moral me today but when to fuck in
God’s name can I have my say.

Have I been talking to my-
Self! Your just like my
Bastard father.



who am i talking to?


RAW WAR

Raw war
Is over.

Let
Humanity

Begin.



THE STROKE GENE-IE

Words today don’t have true-
conviction to swim in current-
sea, there’s too much weight 
placed on them, they drown in
currency.  Can poetry like sun-
shine be buoyant and free?

Walk and talk, do what I can’t
call at my mother’s home, tell
her I love her not to worry! 
I’m not just here killing time.

Humanity and independence 
came from her and has been 
with me like the stroke gene 
that almost killed me and gave 
my mother mini strokes that 
we both have to live with.  

I sit now in a wheelchair in 
a world of disability trying to 
stay outside an uncaring-
health care system. Living 
a lonely existence but this 
is life, a blemished accept-
ance.  I would like a little 
love in my life but I'm 
a broken man and 
that’s not to be.



I come from a family 
of individuals that stand 
or sit on their own two feet
my feet rest on footplates.  
I don’t come from a world 
of books and poetry but 
they have become my life.  
I come from a world 
of rebellion, rebelling 
against the worlds 
oppression, not for
the cause of a country 
but to feel free within.  



The freedom I feel 
is the humanism 
that is shown, love 
has kept me alive
so it works both ways.  
I’m writing these words 
for my inner peace.
The only words in my house 
were words of war, the secret army
Michael Collins and Hollywood stars.

I devoured them words at a very young age.  
It was never about the subject matter
words were always matter of my moment.
My words don’t have a conclusion
they are an on-going battle 
against the oppression 
I face in me.  



They don't come from a bitter 
loyalist republicanism 
they are words of truth 
and justice that shape 
my peace within.  

I might not be able to walk 
and talk but I have got 
a brain and the right to 
say my dark is light, up- 
is down in me.  Jack-
Kerouac the beat poet
said write as if you’re 
the first person on earth. 
I am the only person here 
so these are words of joy.










NO CHOICE

Hypocrisy is sending
You this pome, life-
Death in a road-
Side bombing.

I dreamt this pome
And planted it
By the side
Of the road.






A LONELY NATION

Poetry is linked to your mobility.
I live in a world of disabled blues
So my pomes have become 
mom-entry.

They are not a language of verse-
if-ication but words of truth from
a lonely nation. 

These are words from 
my black hole.
They are not here for rhyme 
but reason
Trying to find their way 
back home.

This is the verb-all of a 
locked-in-syndrome.
I live inside, outside me
it’s not my style
It’s the darkness
you see.  

It wants to be a poem
that’s all I know.  
This is my poetic
undulating sea.  

I can’t even remember
a detailed past 
so these words can 
only be cast


out!

flowers in a piss pot

flowers in a piss-pot

Crying out tears from a sensitive mind
A man with an open heart.
Crystal clear they fall, the family kind
That goes right back to the start
Loving and living honest and true.

What on earth are we to do?

Why do we strive to be great?
When we are already man-kind.
Look down at ourselves sinking
In the swamp of greed.

The Irish kill the Irish and blame the Irish.
Chairman Mao, America, Afghanistan, Russia
Ukraine man un-kind.  World war one
and two went on and ricocheted our hearts.

Humanity has given us the greatest
gifts of life and death.  Why don’t we
stay here on the ground instead of
climbing the ladders of class, we tramp-
down the dirt of the past and stand on
the skulls of our ancestors. 

There is only one human class!
Start as you mean

To go on, homage.




PAST-TENSE (a song pome)

Like a prisoner on death-row
In a hell cell, I dreamt I was
Waiting around to die.  These
Were my last eight hours now
Alive.  No codeine high, to live
To fly.  These are my last words

Never again will I see this lonely
Hope, just darkness from here
On in, I’ve seen before.  Sunshine
And my little piece of sky has lived
In me but now all the poetry must
Die, all those words of lasting hope

And truth, must go into the dark
Where they came from.  I know
They will find a home in someone’s
Memory of me, my throne.  You are
My friend and I’m your mate to, dark-
Ness enrapture capture me, to live
Again on pages I can’t see.

I want these last words to sting and bite
But at least you are happy writing me.
To be worthy of your memory and what
I can’t see in me. These are words
Of trembling right that I’m trying
To capture in this light, before

It gets dark and out of sight.



HIGHCHAIR, WHEEL-CHAIR, THRONE

A shadow casts within like
A due-end, negative capability.
This is my empathetic view:
Life was good, I played with muck-
Cut up serpents into two, ‘turned
Muck into gold’.  I didn’t want for
Anything, full of love and security.

The first six years held me back from
The dark in childhood misunder-
Standing, today the truth wanted to
Come out to play.  For too long now
We have been held back by a twisted
Regimental church and state fostering
To drill us like little boy soldiers.

In these years of adjusting to living out-
Side in my new world stroke order with-
Out god or a metaphysical being.  Finding
Hope in the Tao te Ch’ing, poetry and art
Darkness within darkness.

Nietzsche said, ‘God is dead’, one hundred
Years ago, he didn’t mean it to be a derogatory-
Term.  He meant we no longer need god as
A moral mentor.  The word god comes from
Good, he was very good fighting off the middle-
Ages but we no longer need the churches
Out dated pedophile corruption.  We need
To be more godlike, not looking up but down
Full of beauty and truth like Keats.

We now know that our shadow casts the light
Of wonder, true humanity.  God came from
Good let him rest there.  Spending the last few
Years alone, as Bukowski said, ‘it makes sense
To be alone’, in the poets essential loneliness.
Alone I found an inner dark that is a magical

Human tool of survival in these harsh times.



EVENT HORIZON




I woke with enriching darkness
Within my heart, knowing
I had shared with you my tears of joy.
Freedom of choice was out there
I could feel it driving by.

I had to cry myself into this sorrow-
Full state to find the essence of true
Poetry without illusion.

Even death has no hope in the majesty
Of life but I bow to the darkness-
The light within my black hole.

Stop distorting the gloom, it holds as
Much truth as light.  It holds the shadow
Of our sight, I have found wrong to be

Right, beyond good and evil.

A POEM FOR NIK WALENDA

In memory of Karl Walenda
and Raymond Carver

AERIALIST SUPREME

Writing a good poem is a tight-
Rope act, your following in your
Grand-father’s footsteps I’m re-
Tracing words of a master
Capturing a little piece of sky.

Trying to catch the breath of life
That held us up on that high wire.
From Vienna to the torrid-zone.


Imagine that wire!




A SCREENPLAY POME



unknown freedom


A woman walks the dark lonely
Cobbled streets of 1930s Belfast.
A basket is placed by a blood red
Door, the door is knocked like
Thunder echoing the lonely dark
With her step running away
To unknown freedom.

A boy sits by a stagnant pond in black
And white, a group of young boys pass
Singing he’s lost his Ma and Da
And doesn’t know where to find them
Leave them alone and they will come
Home dragging the bastard behind them.

The word bastard echoes through the
Air, the scene goes forward back to 1969
The man and the boy are being put out of their
Home an ex-British soldier and a union jack
Son. 

The pavements are torn, there are buses
burning at the end of every street, black
ash falls like snow, on every corner stands
a man guarding crates of Molotov cock-
tails, the smoke of war fills the air. 

A young man is dragged through a hedge back-
wards during a gun battle in 1976, the man that
saves him gets shot in the head.  A woman stands
screaming over the dead body of her son lying
on the ground with his intestines spilling
on the concrete.  Its internment morning and the brit-
ish soldier walks over a pile of 78’s (records)
And arrests the man of the house.

The man wakes in a dungeon cell, white noise shoots
The jail landing outside and he holds his ears as the lone
Bulb swings in the interrogation room.  The father and son
Are in a white car going over ramps around barbed wire
Barricades and nervous young soldiers.  Unspoken on
A lonely motorway.

A fifteen year old son stands at a dock-
Land waiting for a boat to take him away
In black and white.  A sixteen year old son
of a bastard son stands on a railway platform
full of squaddies going on leave in 1977.
He sits in a lonely compartment
Suddenly it fills with squaddies
One shakes his hand and offers
A beer.

The rebel boy and the soldier get on
Like a house on fire, Farringdon gardens
A street of houses goes up like a in-
Ferno.  At a coffee shop at Euston station
A black girl serves him change from an all-
Most white palm.  He gets tossed out of
A paddy wagon being beaten like an Irish-
Man into a cell, he stands there in the dock
Receiving community service.

A lonely old man in tweed cap and overalls
Trying to free a rusted nut from a rusting
Old V.W. beetle, tastes death.  Inside the lonely
House a carburetor rests on the table beside
The innard’s of an old T.V.  His son holding the hand
Of his son follows a funeral cortege.

Haystacks are untied like freedom winds, the flash-
Backs of war flash through their minds, the memory
Of his father thrown from a helicopter just feet off
Of the ground with a sack over his head.  The boys
Wife gives birth to a son.  His father wakes in a wheel-
Chair looking out a window.

Watching his son walk down the street with his son.


DROME

I remember people and places
But I can’t put detail to faces.
These are just moment-us pomes

Pomes created by moments
Without the depth of detail.
Pomes are not spun out tales
They are truths that find my flow.

My pomes arent read they're felt 
This pome wants to rhyme its way
Into memory, it leans into words
To pretend that it’s free.

Real poems are black holes
In a word uni-verse, that hold
An abundance of light.  I want
To reach my syndrome but
Memory is holding me back.

One day I’ll write a moment-us
Pome that reaches beyond blue
Until then this is all I can do.

Give you a glimmer of black light
Blue, this isn’t a song by Shelby-
Lynne these are words that lost
Meat off of the bone.

This pome is very
very thin
It has its eye

in the syn-


UNDONE

Un-mouthed

unmoral, un-able 

to utter a natural rhythm.


Fatherless, god-

less, life

less, sil-

ence.


A poem cant ever be finished by the fact that its a pome.



HIGH WINDS

The high winds of winter are calling to me
The red golden leaves want me to be free.

Being alone is to essentially be, once
More I go round and round into me.
Through the path of leaves, 4 magpies, 2
Crows and 3 seagulls, the wind in my
Face, scavenging for words.

The green white and orange flags are still
Flying in 2014.  I know I’m Irish/English
I lived on the streets or did they live in me?

Words set me free among leaves and live-
Stock, the shores of the lake laps me.
Humanity walks by into the shimmering 
sound of the Belfast to Dublin train 
trembling, main-lined.

The bare naked trees are like a queue of people 
waiting, what more can I say about 
the balancing lakes balancing?




IN-SIGHT

I saw something levitate right 
behind my eye, like a humming-
bird hovering in my center of sky.  
It may be a figment but I don’t 
know it flew right by.  


The black blotches have dwindled 

to a pin-point symmetry-a 70’s wall-
paper of monochrome two-tone.  


Can death inside come back, Can 
my locked-in-syndrome come 
out to play?

I’m not a brain surgeon but 
I think my stroke is going away. 
I can stand a lot longer, ok-
I’ll never walk but I’m less of a crier.  

Before, I hadn’t any hope at all 
maybe this is my humanity in-
side, poetry has been my savior 
of that there is no doubt. 

I’m sending this to a stroke 
specialist to point the right 
way and why?  In the meantime
reading-writing makes the mind 
stronger, hopefully this is just 
a stroke of time.

I hear an ambulance go siren-
by and remember that day 
in April 2005.  I woke when 
my life support was off 
and I was technically 
dead.  Life and love has 
brought me to this other 
shore.  


My mind was like a dish of 
porridge gruel but I woke 
with the word positive 
on my mind.  I looked out 
a window and knew 
I was alive.







I SIT IN ON


This wheelchair looking out
For hope, by this disabled lake.

Never mind the sun outside
Shining, shimmering the golden
Leaves, it’s what it’s doing in-
Side that counts.  Keats shines
in on my kitchen bench, dog-
eared to let love in.

I can’t get to grips with his myth-
Ology but feel the silence in your
Words, your psyche tremble
Whispering into my inner ear. 

I want to write this pome for you
this is my moment-us moment. 
You are my Greek tragedy
beyond suicidal sorrow, beyond
the grave.


These are words writ in water:







THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY SERIES


VAUXHALL VICTOR



Sitting here in a wheelchair, aged fifty

three smoking a pipe watching a clear

blue sky, thinking of me and my dad

in a Vauxhall victor in 1972.



Over ramps past nervous young soldiers

Beside barricades of barbed wire. I did

Not want to be there, I wanted to be like

Him, a freedom fighter but this was my

Mothers will, to get me off the streets.

April ’72 was green and brown camouflage
We hardly spoke.  We were both going on
The run, him away from the Brits and me
Away from the future my mother knew
Would kill me or end up in jail like my father.

At every check-point my heart was in
My mouth.  Down Shankill and up the Fall’s
On the motorway, he said, at least were
Out of Belfast as if talking to someone else.

The road went on and on and on, at the border
He reached across and ran his fingers through
My hair that was one the only time he showed 
me affection.  We were on our way to hack-balls-
cross in the middle of nowhere, down a un-
approved road in bandit country just across
the border.

The cottage with no electricity no water just
A superser gas heater a bed and a spade to
Dig a hole if you wanted to go to the toilet.
I carried water from a well along the Castle-
Blaney road.  The next day’s weeks and months
We were like spirits of the past, floating past-

Each other with paraffin lamps from another
Century but it was heaven to me, running through
Fields like a street urchin from a dickens novel
With my friend Muttley the dog, a one eyed three
Legged dog, beaten by the brits by kicks and rifle butts.

He chased herds of cattle and then chased me
Through fields of cool grass.  I came to call it
My freedom winds, it took away all my hatred
And bitterness, death and war from a no-go area
of killing.  My checkpoint Charlie was over there
over the border and my black hills of memory
Kavanagh country.



DESCENT DEATH

I lived life in the fast lane, so
I must suffer this slow lane.
In this wheelchair I sit out-
Side life but I need love, art
And hope to keep me going.
When love, art slips away
into nothingness again.


Now I hold my grandchildren

In the magic hands of chance

And feel the shadows of hurt

Trembling founds. Inspire life

To tear down the global peace-

Walls us in, me out, humanity

Feels this shiver. Stop this de-



Struction of life, humanitarian

Dehumanism. The greatest human

atrocity in history is causing grief.



There is no descent death, abolish

Words like ‘target killing’ that make

It ok to kill, military humanism. We

Don’t need a virus to destroy human-

Ism, were doing it ourselves. We have




Tipped the scales of life/death into
The red, the danger zone. Ebola will
Wipe up the mess, we are on a head-on
Collision. Slow down, drop into the green-
Sector. I can no longer chase my tail, why
Am I still in this foxhole?

















SIGHT




A shadow cast by street-
light animated by the wind.

Dark is juxtaposed 
by light
to be a drawing of the night.
Dawn arrives and the ghost
is gone but it's 

not a ghost
of fright it's my dark friend
called sight, good day.

Demons are created 
from good
too good, be humane.





THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY SERIES

to be continued and continued


POOR POETRY

Memory woke on that day in 2005
When I woke from a stroke/coma.
45 years of memory were stroked out
This is the first day of the rest of
My life, I reset the clocks from here.
I can remember certain moments
When I done certain things but I cant
Remember details surrounding those
moments so this is a memoir of moments.



THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY SERIES

The poetics of time and space

Part 1.

Is there any point to this?

I’d rather be up than down
You can’t stop natures flow.
This isn’t a moral maze where I can
Get lost, this is my decision.

I say who comes and goes in
a pome.  I predict natures flow
poetry has already made my
up my mind.  I’m writing
the natural flow, the poetics
of my landscape are creating
my picture for you that keeps
me whole.  We create our own

destinies, we paint the words
in our heads, these words feed
my hurt, I am the king of dis-
ability round here.  There’s only
me here and art, lost in the poetics
of time and space assemble a land-
scape of me.

The poetics of space and time
Slept in a poor home, death and
War harbored in dreams of a
free Ireland.  ‘Poverty is good
for the soul’, Wrote a great man
with a great hunger.

All I knew then was Hollywood
And the I.R.A.  A Frankenstein
Monster limped across the T.V.
During a forty eight hour gun-
Battle that seemed to last for
Days years even.

Monsters in uniform kicked in
My door and took my father
And mother away to dungeons
And my sister to juvenile jail
Middle-town, I became a ref-
Ugee boy.

I wanted to live and die for my
Country, when my father was bailed
We went on the run, not before humanity
Saved me and dragged me from a gun-battle
Hauled through a hedge backwards
got me home and was shot in the head.

I fired blanks through the branch of a tree
nurtured on the song Kevin Barry, martyrdom
was just eighteen years old, I was too young
to die and too young to be a freedom fighter
these were my freedom winds, I could see

the world wasn’t at war, Kavanaghs country
changed my mindset moulded by my fathers
hatred.  I didn’t know the words of Kavanagh
yet but poetry was cooling my heels running
through his acreage, a greener fool
with mucker on the horizon.

At school I learnt of Julius Caesar and saw
Him stabbed in the back on the streets.  A girl
Kicked me in the balls, I didn’t think a girl
Could land a fine shot.  I fell in love in a heap

On the floor, mucker was in my heart.



KEATS



Can I stand beyond myself?
and whisper like a breeze
Can I be a golden leaf?
Knowing I must fall
There is no disability
Deep within my heart.
There is no war and famine
In a warped corrupted world.

Poetry arrives like a flower
Opening in spring, that feeds
My senses with every living
Thing.  It’s hard to be independent
Living in a welfare state.

This is a ‘mere matter of the moment’
For a man who found a universal truth.









FLAW

While they raided a house down
The street for guns, I searched my
Mind for these words of light.  Seems
Conflict is passed through gen-
Orations like the error of memory.
‘Do you know we haven’t had one?
Day’s peace on this earth ever:  A fact.

It dawned on me, the strong spring sun
Shot through the flaw of glass reflecting
Colour of the door handle like the words
Of Lou Reed came alive, ‘Different colours
Made of tears’.  A hologram of light,

A mixture of memory in a rainbow of pomes.
The colours of everything I’d ever seen reflected
Of a door handle.  Shot through like a glance
Of every pome I ever wrote shining for me
And for you, if you look?  Grief will always


Catch up with you so let humanity flow.




o.c.

I don’t dream much these days
But writing my memories keeps
Me sane. My Fathers plot of weeds
And wild grass cries out for order.
The fallen wooden cross bears no name

Just like the seed markers he planted
To say which is which, the plot he turned
In an acre and a half of land to plant
Lettuce, cabbage and carrots from
A packet of seeds.

I was left in charge to see them grow.
Forgotten little shoots that nurtured
Into grief, un-weeded neglected was
Your theory of living of the land.  City
Dwellers trying to be country-folk.

Now you lay beneath the land you fought for
without a flag to wrap around your bones. 
We don’t even know where your plot is?
So how can we weed a plot we do not know

from what is what.



UN-POLLUTED JOY

‘Loving them all the way back to the source,
Loving everything that increases me’.
Raymond Carver

The mind creates a form like
Shadow goes into light.
The form becomes a memory
Of what I done yesterday.
A childhood I thought was erased
Almost like an anagram my mind
Is raised to remember yesterday
Today. Words have a healing prop-
Erty if you let them form, only like
They know to flow. Words find
A way to journey through the mind
To feel the tremble of light in un-
Polluted joy, to wake up on another
Shore with Raymond Carvers sight, might.

i was talking to a housing inspector about a dis-
abled door and this came like that.

THE GLAD STREAM

The spittle from my pen leaves
Its mark upon the page, a heart
Pierced by a sword.   My Father used
a gun to find peace, I used a pen.
‘ The glad stream’, metal and plastic power’.

I’m reading Coleridge while the young couple
on the far bank are moving. I’ll miss them
at the backdoor coming out for a smoke even
If they never say hello, it felt like some-
one was there.  The cot and toys are being
shifted into a van, the white door through
the fence has closed a chapter.  The sky

is blue and the river of cars flow by.

BLOOM



The world goes on and on and on
But I’m here and here and here.
A plastic urinal looks up and blooms
Between the wheelchair and the dis-
Abled toilet.  I’ve been reading poets
And poems and poetry but can’t find
A link to my home. Poetry is out there
in the meadows and trees but I’m
Locked-in alone.  I put a search into
Google for poets who took a stroke
Nothing came up.  I turned away
In my wheelchair to see my leg-
Lifter and my grabber catching rays
Of sun on my profile bed so I suppose
The only link is the sun coming in
And this pome going out.  A pome
From a un-romantic, un-academic
Spineless confessional poet, there
I said it that word poet but I’m just
A shadow of my former self living
A stanza in me.




SPRING SHADOWS


Spring shadows, thick and black
They make a tree look like a tree
Within a tree. A lazy lonely mid-
Day as if the shadow was painted
By Edward Hopper. The shadows
Fall in this sun against the cloud-
Less blue like it didn’t need any
More to be today. The shades
Of yesterday are with us, cele-
Brating this glorious sunshine
Falling upon contrasting light,
Being.


A COLD FRONT


I have to dig in deep

to find a purpose

to find a stanza that

translates my soul.


My purpose is to be-

come a silent poet

a screaming din with-

in a noiseless state.


A person that is way be-

yond a person a human that

seeks to find humanity

a searcher of the truth within

the search, a man that has

touched his own black hole.


A POEM INSIDE A POEM


A poem inside a poem

revealed it-self to me

showing a slant of ages

like an image within

an image.


Coming out of dark

a bi focal trick in the eye

of concentration to go

deeper and deeper into

grey matter.



GREY MATTER


I look around this room and realise my muse

has exhausted the theme of light and dark

but the shadows still fornicate.

I’ve used the bed-rail, the wheelchair

And the stand-by beacons to keep me

from drowning in dark.


My piss-pot is angled like a shooting star

Blazing my trail of hope.

My positivity comes from the well

Of treasure, the source that we call god.

Whether it is or isn’t I think the well

Of human spirit is a vessel of magic

That keeps us whole and I always


Make love with my light in the dark.



WHAT WASN’T SAID
for Fiona


Autumn is almost here.
The trees are golden-
 Green and the cars move
like a cortege along the road.

This morning I had three women
And a dead dog hovering around
The wheelchair reading poetry.

One was shadowing, learning
the ropes of my splint. One had lost
her dog, feeling sad I let her read Carver
‘You’re dog dies’, ’Gravy’, and ‘What
the doctor said’.

There is no difference in grief, human
Or pet, they went about their day in
Looser uniforms, caring.  It made me
Recall Mucker, Muttley and me.  Muttley
Was a one eyed three legged dog, beat
By the brits with the butts of rifles and kicked
they called him the O.C. of dogs, he hated uniforms.
Hit by a truck and killed.

Hearing the last yelp of Mucker clubbed to death
By a golf club by a boy at the bottom of our path.
Oppression is felt by a dog to!  Carver brought them
Back from the dead and we all shook his hand.

Carver you created this in
Between the lines of what


Wasn’t said.


GUTTERSNIPE

Down up alley-
Ways and back
Streets of life.
Out on waste-
Ground in
Wasted time.

Through love
I found a second
chance
Not a golden
Path but
A black path
That leads no-
Where, full of
Disability. 

Forty-five years of
Memory washed
Down the drain.

Guttersnipe on
His way to death.
Found his own way
Beyond con-vention
Because my bastard
Father was without con-
vention, diverted traffic.

He found his way
Through the rubble.

Thank you mum
my boys and John
Keats negative
Capability. With-
Out them I’d be
Dead.

This is the first day of
The rest of my life.

Life is like a butter-
Fly in John Keats eye.
Blue, brown
Or black.

A jet stream rises in the sky.







Something happens and you capture it
if only one person reads this, then
my job is done.  It doesn't deserve money
to add to the capitalist strife of the world.
If this falls on the mind-set of freedom
then it will be a majestic fall.


AURA



An aura comes from

every dead and living thing.

Today, I saw a haze

rise from a Bee in

the back garden.



Its almost Autumn.


We rise in an aura

of dust like the Bison

rolls around on the ground

or water for the Elephant.



An aura rises to flow

in a majestic fall.



PEACE

Life is like a butterfly
In John Keats eye, blue
But very beautiful
Flying to death.

I’m looking out at autumn
And it is looking back at you.
The leaves are golden brown
And the sky is summer blue.
I wish that we could be united
Tender and true?

I can see the butterfly within
The layers of tears, I can feel
The touch flitting from you.

Boldly saying though art free.


WANK
for Hank


I’m going out to-
Day to catch and hold
The last days of summer.

I want to feel the adrenaline
Classical flow like Henryk Gorecki
Churning out his symphony of sorrow.

I remember days when I drank
And screwed like Bukowski but
I just can’t recall, it’s all dead wood
Now. i used to love my tales
of ordinary madness.

The mind can’t go to the comfort
Of a quim.

I’ll twig along and catch the last
Rays of summer before the bare
Season.  Everything I say and do re-

Turns to melancholy so ill
Have to turn this around in-
To a holy essential loneliness

And wank on web-cam, I wish.


A TAO INTERPRETATION


Return to the uncarved block, infancy. My words are easy to understand it acts without a name, flowing like water, following your own nature deep, deep, deep to the gateway of subtle illumination.  

Don’t cling to your body’s woes, crippled becomes whole.  Egoless ego cultivates endless energy to rise fall and stand
Beyond dark wonder.

Nature’s way moves on through dark
Vision, what was will be and what will
Be was, opposites attract.  Gold can’t
Be guarded, fulfill within, wars famine
Great victory is a funeral, the bright road
Seems dark in wreathed smiles, clay is
The word and clay is the flesh.

Empty words go back to nothing, magnificent
Scenery remains still, drop drops like stone.
Good words leave no trace in the intangible
Essence, know when to stop, hold your ground.
Empty vessels and blunt weapons fade away.
A violent man does not die a natural death.
Held loss harms nothing, stand by your word
No more sorrow, no self.




My son collected weeds in my garden
For this piece of art.

GOLD LEAF OF TIME


Autumn came through my door 

held up in the delight of my grand-

sons’ autistic spectrum, seen through

a golden-brown leaf.  Can you imagine 

the rainbow of light through that prism 

of nature? it was written on his face.


Like little Jack in Jack and the beanstalk



I gave him an apple for his leaf.  He ran 



through the house switching every light 



on to catch it reflected in glass.  Maybe


Stonehenge and the Pyramids were 



sensory monuments, gold leaf of time.



Wow Riley, this is your balance of light

these words are magic beans that see 

your spectrum.  Just stop stepping into 

my fridge freezer to put on and off

The light because your adjusting 

the flow, time traveler.


I was wondering why my milk was going off.




SEPTEMBER SUN


Sitting in September sun

Watching the Dublin train

Go by without the hinder-

ance of bombs on the line.


You can scent the season

Coming off the trees by

The water’s edge.  A majestic

Swan swims by in clear purity.


The sun ricochets of the lake

Like skimming stones creating

Ripples on the surface as if

Caused by the tremble of the train.


I follow the backbone of cloud


To my destination, blue.


THE WOMB OF TRUTH


A jet stream shoots through
Leaving a cloud that dis-
Appears into the clouds
Of time.

Trying to live a positive way
In a negative world, I came
From the womb of truth.
My father said I was a sensitive
Child who needed too much.

i wanted to fight and die
for ireland, to be like my 
father, to fight for his cause
be one of his clan.


He found his mother in the earth
Of Ireland, buried up there on
Her black hills, where I ran as
A boy.  Now I’m running lines

Across this page, trying to find
My mother’s truth. I tripped on
Seaweed and went head over
Heels into the water and almost

Drowned, coming up and down
Three times but I couldn’t grapple
Thin air.  I fell exhausted through
Paradise, it was beautiful in there
The seaweed danced with the tide.

I was dragged out, a man
Baptized by nature.  Nothing
And no one could touch me
The world gave me its calling

Truth beauty, beauty in truth.


MEMORIAL PREPARATION


We follow a coffin under-
Ground but who said were
Going down. I lost my Father
And my sister to grief and I
Am doing it no more, this is
What death is for, to form?
Death for the living. Even
A question mark makes us
Question what we truly
Believe.

I brush the soiled tears
From your eyes and you
Wake in me swimming
And glistening in mine.
You are my future my
Past my gift wrapped
Present. The clay of
My mind in each
And every day.



We are not going down
You’re coming up to me.
This is not about a man
In a robe, it’s about re-
Spect and remorse.
I love you, I hope you
Take this with you when
You go. Humanity
anoints our soul.

Only you will under-
Stand this is a blessing
From my heart.

THE FOG

We have been lost in a meta-
Physical fog, drank from
The rivers of forgetfulness
sipped the altering wine
To forget our fear, the world
Has become a place of myth
Death, inferno and holocaust.
While we were drifting out
Of our heads.


The only way to repair itself
From this hell, is through
Reality.  Reality rules ok!

Our whole way of life, humanity
Has been lost in classical mythology.
The fog is lifting and reality is seen
all around, we must be more
Godlike looking up not
looking down.



I LOVE THE DARK HOURS


I love the dark hours of my being.

My mind deepens into them.

There i can find, as in old letters,

the days of my life,already lived,

and held like a legend, and understood.


then the knowing comes:  I can open to 

another life wide and timeless.




Rilke

          

      Poetry is like sunshine it's free






                        'It is human to look down 


on things that have fallen'

                          Alden Nowlan

                                          


CREATIVE WRITING (MY WAY)
The theory of poetry is the theory of life’
                                                                      Wallace Stevens

The end of the line
Is the comma, Ruled
Feint or blank page
the last word becomes 
the hinge that take’s
You to the next line.

You can’t semi colon
Emotion, sounding poetic
Is the trick, but as the man
Said, ‘no tricks’.  The con-
Tent of the pome is
Truth, beauty.




THE ZONE
For Kenneth White

The left and right side of the brain
Balance things to be seen by the eye.
‘any minute now something will happen’
Wrote Raymond carver.
The sky will change, a bird will fly, a man
Will walk a street, something from some-
Where will spark a memory from the past
Or future and stream the present.

The sun is up there behind the grey of 1967.
Boys play football in the street, girls swing
Around lamp-posts while ladies scrub the porch
Below sacred heart pictures waiting for god oh
To welcome you in tears of blood. Men think 
of hate and bitterness being kicked into the gutter
I scene it in my own eye.


Broken biscuits are a treat at Mulhollands shop.
Butler street goes all the past Herbert street to
The holy cross church high on the hill looking down.
Banshee howl in the back yard beyond the out-
Side toilet down the alleyway, the streetlights have
Been converted now to electricity. Cars thump along
Cobbled street, we have left the pad behind
And moved on into new Ardoyne

.



BALANCING

Watching night shadows dance
On streetlight reflected on my window.
Remembering yesterday sheltering
Under trees during a sun-shower.
Being hypnotized by sun sparkling
Like water on the black path.

There’s nothing like the wind on your
Back and the sun on your face!  I moved
Out into fading raindrops twinkling like
The stars at night.

Opposites attract now and the night
shadows dance on the stationery
streetlight like a negative image
of day. Dawn arrives and shadow dis-
appears but both images bring
the balancing lakes home.



MAN OF DISTINCTION

Green leaves shoot out
To create an eye, bark
Forms into a nose.
The cloud and sky are
Your complexion, leaves
Form the nape of your neck
And your hair.

You frown north-ward at
Winters term, east-ward
Over water.  Main-land is
Your home but you grow
Safe into shadow.  Dusk
Falls upon your gaze
And you gaze back into dusk.

Time is seen in the blink
Of an eye, the scene is
A land-scape in sky.
A man of distinction, a true
Conviction rooted in time.

HARD MAN

Crying has become the norm
We live in a sad world.  I cry
At least twice a day, tears of
Sadness and joy.  I wonder
Will we ever balance?

The same muscles are used
For both, my father would
Sing to me as a boy, ‘you don’t
Have to be a baby to cry, dry
Your eyes’.   You can’t beat

A good cry, why can’t we
Balance on tears of happy
Sadness.  As Leonard Cohen
Says, 'it’s almost like the blues'.

‘It’s your party you can cry
If you want to’.







A SYMPOETRY OF HAPPY/SADNESS

A double bass sounds a twelve bar blues
The saxophone splashes on the waves
A trumpet sounds the last post, can you
Hear it in your head? The violin comes
A rolling in and the flute lifts it upon
A single note, the drum rolls and bounds
A symphony in my heart.





                       SHORT POMES:





WAKING DREAM



The waves

swim eyes

to shadow-

light.
ZOM-ME


‘ill be your mirror reflect what you are’

                                                                Lou Reed



I eat these words.

I wake to sleep

To eat.


STICK IT IN


You share brain-


Waves by e-mail


Sucking e- cigs


After cyber-sex.




We store lif-e on


e-styx, lif-e is 

e-ver-lasting 

through

a U.S.B. 

port.



HELICOPTER






I hear a helicopter over-



Head, buzzing like a fly



Around death. I hope


There wasn’t any trouble.



It throbs within my mind 



like the noise of child-



hood still reaching 



me now



in peace-



Time.





MY AIR-SPACE 

I woke yesterday and my air-
Space was being invaded

Radio waves of negativity

Shooting through my sky.

I try to live in a positive
Bubble and hide away with-
In my black stroke, trying
To get by on fumes of pos-
Activity but this morning
Was my shot to pieces miss-
Isled morning, left here with-
Out hope. The bombs are
Raining down on medical re-
Searchers and children on a
Beach. I want to believe in
God and leave the skeptic crew
But there isn’t any where left
To go, only into my art and truth.

We can no longer live in fairy-
Tales that offer false hope, you
Can’t blame the Christian crew
Who want a light savior?
Humanity can’t even redeem
A light favor, humanity has gone
Too far. I woke this morning, away
From the world service, I know
I’m shell-shocked and the truth will
Show in art. I need a day off in here.

I’m going deeper and deeper into
My locked in syndrome, the melon-

cholic silence of disability that flies by 

in the solitude of joy, the miss-
Isles of my day.






EMPATHY (the living dream)



Lying here in empty loneliness re-
Membering what it was like to live?
To be in here outside without that sense 
Of dreaded fear. Even watching 
the celebrations of Humanity upset me
because I know I’ll never reach that 
realm of emotion.

I know every-day I’m going to face that
Impenetrable wall, knowing I’ll never
Reach that empathy of love but

I can reach it through my art of love.

Inside outside like an alien in outer-space.

How can I better explain this: living in?

my own leper colony in a moment of

Negativity within constant doom.



You know there is another way but

It’s not marked on your map, you live

Inside your stroke and there’s no way

Out of the black grey and blue. You

Push your mind out of this black hole.

It’s the only time in life I couldn’t find 

A way out, we all come to this point but 

I live the nightmare, Keatsian waking dream

Looking at life beyond that impenetrable wall.



Poetry and art seem to remove me from

The dream and show at least a glimmer

Of light. That’s why I call them pomes

They live outside the rules of life and are

Created by the moment as if the moment

Is the form and is formed by that feeling

of empathy in a glimmer of light.



This pome has taken me out of myself

And into the self, it’s the only place to go.






THE MAN IN THE TREE
The man in the tree
Is breezing to me.
Beauty is in the eye
Of the be-holder.
He is limb-less but
Speaks of truth. Nature
Touches him each day.
Shades of grey and blue
Highlight his mood of green.
Dusk turns him black and
Darker blue, I will remember
Him in winter, he will all-
Ways be with me, twisting
Through that tree.
He feels the wind within his
Hair and the sky within his
Mind. The roots are deep
at his own feet, he is grounded
in earth. Watching sea-
sons turn, living
And dying me.
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