Olive Broderick: New Wave Canute & Hunting Unicorns

1.

New Wave Canute

He says that money is no object

and all the breached defences

can be rebuilt immediately.

 

He is not on the seashore

running into a monstrous wind

with laughing children who

 

are pushed back by a gale

that causes grown-ups to doubt

their ability to stay upright.

 

He is not taking tea in the kitchen

with a woman who is glad

she still has electricity.

 

But it’s hardly ideal’ she says

as the toxic water laps at the ankles

of her wellington boots.

 

He is speaking from a dry location.

Not a hair out of place, and nothing,

thus far, has shaken his belief

 

in this force called money

that he can wield in the face

of weather systems:

 

that can hold at bay

every destructive thing,

should he so wish.

2.

Hunting Unicorns

Hear the song of the arctic flood.

Look for them, a pod of narwhals

tusks raised in the open water,

before they submerge again

to places least known in the universe.

 

Mostly imaginary creatures

these sea unicorns, whose

appearance is a gift, whose

lives are a mystery – who

surely have magical properties.

An unfathomable defence against death

– is that what magic is?

 

You may see them

in your mind’s eye, in stories,

in photographs by determined

explorers who always speak

about the wonder of the experience,

the sense that all is well –

or even better than expected.

 

All of that is held in those rare sightings;

nothing more. They move on.

 

Their tusks, in reality, are teeth

and hollow as horns that

may, in fact, serve to amplify

the music they bring to their cold oceans.

But coming to a point – slender as a bayonet –

sharp like every archetypal spear,

they speak of enemy.

The world is a dangerous place

if you carry a gun.

*

Biography

Originally from Youghal, Co. Cork, Olive Broderick travelled to Northern Ireland to undertake the Creative Writing MA at Queen’s University Belfast, setting in Downpatrick in 2003. In 2009, she was one of the Poetry Introduction series readers and won a Henessy X.O. Literary Award, Emerging Poetry Category for the same year. Her first publication – pamphlet ‘Darkhaired’ (Templar Poetry, 2010) was shortlisted for the Michael Marks Award for Poetry Pamphlets. She acknowledges the support of the Arts Council of Northern Ireland 2010/2011. More recently, her work has appeared in the FourXFour Poetry Journal and HU.
She has also been involved in a number of verbal/visual projects including ‘Crash’ postcard series by Abridged, ‘Products of Perception’ exhibition, part of the Belfast Book Festival and a range of collaborations as part of Castle Ward Arts and Crafts collective. She hosts a monthly writer’s group at the National Trust Castle Ward property, Co. Down.

Luka McDonagh Valentine: Verseshape Neomythica

Verseshape Neomythica

Etain Dinschencha, Loring of Places

The beginning was primordial ooze

Until where land met sea emerged a hero,

A warrior who sharpened her verse

To a point edge-graceful enough to graph

Stars and friendships, hilling up land,

Careening greens into the versescape.

Historicising spacetime with each

Demarcating swing, mythographing

Relevance into the verdant cosmic

Strings. Breaking supersymmetry,

Unleashing four million perturbations

Of individuality, then deterministically

Shifting back to harmony.

 

Setanta Forosnai, Warp Spasm Insight

He knew each portion as a mistranslation,

That the verses which poetried his form had

Miscalculated, sheared off what should be there,

Moulded what should not. Lyrical lesions

Filling mirrors with lies. Storming lies into

Others’ eyes. The Truth came in hazelnut

Knowings, freestreaming from Connla’s Well.

And this was a time where metaphor and material

Had not so deeply untwined, so he sharpened

A sword of light with limerick and rhyme

And it was enough just to try, the world met

Him in stride, and the topography of his self

Unfurled, untied. It was always there, as present

As air.

*

Biography

Luka McDonagh Valentine is an Irish-Romani poet, born in Galway, based in Dublin.

Patrick Deeley – Petrosmatoglyphs & Werewolf

1.

Petrosmatoglyphs 

This footprint marks the landing of an incredible hulk

of a saint who bounded, centuries ago, clear

across the bay.  Or there’s the devil’s hoof stamped

on granite, the sandal of a warrior king’s horse,

the hollow left by a hermit’s hand, the divot of kneecap

or elbow plunging him into the gear of his prayer.

Life, we agree, must have felt larger then, the wilderness

greening a path to every door, the cave or mountain

conceivable as the first child, the oldest mother.

But tonight, with hay and tar smells pricking the air,

and moon making for the only clock, we find ourselves

yielding to traceries – lip, ear, breast, buttock –

left by two long-lost, runaway lovers on a bed of rock.

2.

Werewolf 

This thin pale man, this poor gom who could pass

for one of us, sees through his window

the full moon sail in an optical illusion above clouds

 

and river and half-built hotel accommodating

only a stumped crane.  The moon’s eyeful

works on him, building and bundling his ailment

 

into a dream of a super animal.  He exits

to the street, craving delectation beyond the sensation

of the news ‘as it happens’ on-screen, the ravages

 

of flood, fireball, earthquake contending

in slow motion.  He inhales the dregs of living in all

its shallow burials.  The wind gusting seeds

 

and freshness tickles his face with a promise

to overcome everything – traffic smoke, oil-slick, even

the river’s chlorinated conscience.  His fingers

 

send up a manhole cover for the moon’s laugh.

He teeters on the edge of astonishment,

of scaring himself, whose pelt – if we could touch it –

 

seems flecks, seems shivers, seems gentleness.

A thunderstorm starts him zig-zagging.

His odoriferous delights scatter; his limbs slobber

 

and steam.  The moon abandons him.  Long-horned

lorry lights close.  Knocked clear, he stiffens,

curled naked in the ditch where he will be found

 

in time to make the early edition.  Snapped, captioned

‘The man who thought he was a werewolf’,

with just a few specks of blood freckling his nose.

*

Biography

Patrick Deeley is a poet and children’s writer born in Loughrea, County Galway.  Groundswell: New and Selected Poems, is the latest of his six collections with Dedalus Press.  His memoir, The Hurley Maker’s Son, is published by Transworld/Doubleday in April 2016.