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Damian: posts feature the pen and the pixel

@ukdamo / ukdamo.tumblr.com

Gay guy in England's north west. Retired Forensic Learning Disability nurse. Travel: Photography: Music: Literature
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[ t h e ] n o r t h [ e r n ] [ o f ] i r e l a n d

Padraig Ó Tuama

It is both a dignity and

a difficulty

to live between these

names,

perceiving politics

in the syntax of

the state.

And at the end of the day,

the reality is

that whether we

change

or whether we stay

the same

these questions will

remain.

Who are we

to be

with one

another?

and

How are we

to be

with one

another?

and

What to do

with all those memories

of all those funerals?

and

What about those present

whose past was blasted

far beyond their

future?

I wake.

You wake.

She wakes.

He wakes.

They wake.

We Wake

and take

this troubled beauty forward.

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Giant’s Causeway

Richard Burke

T'was a boastful warrior's roar, From Ireland's coast to Scotland's shore; In Antrim you'll ney longer plunder, Vowed Finn McCool to Benandonner.

With that McCool piled stone on stone, And made a causeway of his own; The Sea of Moyle, forty fathoms deep, He now could cross by jump and leap.

But Finn could not believe his eyes, When first he saw Benandonner's size; Wide as a barn, six metres tall, He'd best McCool in any brawl.

Finn was quick to regret his boast, And turned his back to Scotland's coast; But Benandonner McCool had spied, And chased him now with ten-foot stride.

Finn just barely made his house, And yelled for Ooneh, his clever spouse; I bit off more than I can chew, Where can I hide, what can I do?

Ooneh then threw him in a bed, And covered him from toe to head; Trust me Finn, don't make a sound, I'll deal with Benandonner if he comes round.

She had not very long to wait, Benandonner easily jumped their gate, And pounded on Ooneh's cottage door, "With Finn McCool, I'll mop your floor! "

Be calm my friend, McCool's not here, He's gone to Kerry to hunt for deer, But he'll be back fore day is out; Come in and tell me - what's this about?

Benandonner came in and looked around, Curious about the things he found: What tree sized pole is lying here? Said Ooneh, that's just my husband's spear.

And that block of oak, wide as a wheel, And longer than a sailboat's keel? Oh that, it's just the fighting shield, Finn uses on the battlefield.

Your garden has boulders scattered round, Each one must weigh a thousand pounds. Oh, Finn tosses those for hours on end, Just playing catch with his best friend.

It looks like Finn is running late, Will you try a biscuit while you wait? The biscuit's crust hid iron beneath, On his first bite he broke three teeth.

Who is that lying in that bed, That looks eight feet from toe to head? Why that's only Finn's and my new bairn, In baby clothes all McCools have worn.

One peek below the blanket's fold, And the giant's blood ran icy cold; The Giant was quick to understand, If this be the babe, how big the man!

Benandonner then rethought his plight, No longer sure he'd win the fight; Said he, the tide's now running low, To make the crossing, I'll have to go.

With that he bolted through the door; Ran like lightning to reach the shore; Dashed across the stones once more; And swore he'd be back nevermore!

McCool then leapt up from his bed, And followed the Giant while he fled; But when he reached the Antrim coast, He dared not repeat his foolish boast.

Instead, he gathered each stone he'd thrown, And stacked them in columns, why is not known, But remnants remain to this very day, Known to all as the Giant's Causeway!

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Dresden

Ciaran Carson

Horse Boyle was called Horse Boyle because of his brother Mule; Though why Mule was called Mule is anybody's guess. I stayed there once, Or rather, I nearly stayed there once. But that's another story. At any rate they lived in this decrepit caravan, not two miles out of Carrick, Encroached upon by baroque pyramids of empty baked bean tins, rusts And ochres, hints of autumn merging into twilight. Horse believed They were as good as a watchdog, and to tell you the truth You couldn't go near the place without something falling over: A minor avalanche would ensue – more like a shop bell, really, The old-fashioned ones on a string, connected to the latch, I think, And as you entered in, the bell would tinkle in the empty shop, a musk Of soap and turf and sweets would hit you from the gloom. Tobacco. Baling wire. Twine. And, of course, shelves and pyramids of tins. An old woman would appear from the back – there was a sizzling pan in there, Somewhere, a whiff of eggs and bacon – and ask you what you wanted; Or rather, she wouldn't ask; she would talk about the weather. It had rained That day, but it was looking better. They had just put in the spuds. I had only come to pass the time of day, so I bought a token packet of Gold Leaf. All this time the fry was frying away. Maybe she'd a daughter in there Somewhere, though I hadn't heard the neighbours talk of it; if anybody knew, It would be Horse. Horse kept his ears to the ground. And he was a great man for current affairs; he owned the only TV in the place. Come dusk he'd set off on his rounds, to tell the whole townland the latest Situation in the Middle East, a mortar bomb attack in Mullaghbawn – The damn things never worked, of course – and so he'd tell the story How in his young day it was very different. Take young Flynn, for instance, Who was ordered to take this bus and smuggle some sticks of gelignite Across the border, into Derry, when the RUC – or was it the RIC? – Got wind of it. The bus was stopped, the peeler stepped on. Young Flynn Took it like a man, of course: he owned up right away. He opened the bag And produced the bomb, his rank and serial number. For all the world Like a pound of sausages. Of course, the thing was, the peeler's bike Had got a puncture, and he didn't know young Flynn from Adam. All he wanted Was to get home for his tea. Flynn was in for seven years and learned to speak The best of Irish. He had thirteen words for a cow in heat; A word for the third thwart in a boat, the wake of a boat on the ebb tide. He knew the extinct names of insects, flowers, why this place was called Whatever: Carrick, for example, was a rock. He was damn right there – As the man said, When you buy meat you buy bones, when you buy land you buy stones. You'd be hard put to find a square foot in the whole bloody parish That wasn't thick with flints and pebbles. To this day he could hear the grate And scrape as the spade struck home, for it reminded him of broken bones: Digging a graveyard, maybe – or, better still, trying to dig a reclaimed tip Of broken delph and crockery ware – you know that sound that sets your teeth on edge When the chalk squeaks on the blackboard, or you shovel ashes from the stove? Master McGinty – he'd be on about McGinty then, and discipline, the capitals Of South America, Moore's Melodies, the Battle of Clontarf, and Tell me this, an educated man like you: What goes on four legs when it's young, Two legs when it's grown up, and three legs when it's old? I'd pretend I didn't know. McGinty's leather strap would come up then, stuffed With threepenny bits to give it weight and sting. Of course, it never did him Any harm: You could take a horse to water but you couldn't make him drink. He himself was nearly going on to be a priest. And many's the young cub left the school, as wise as when he came. Carrowkeel was where McGinty came from – Narrow Quarter, Flynn explained – Back before the Troubles, a place that was so mean and crabbed, Horse would have it, men were known to eat their dinner from a drawer. Which they'd slide shut the minute

you'd walk in. He'd demonstrate this at the kitchen table, hunched and furtive, squinting Out the window – past the teetering minarets of rust, down the hedge-dark aisle – To where a stranger might appear, a passer-by, or what was maybe worse, Someone he knew. Someone who wanted something. Someone who was hungry. Of course who should come tottering up the lane that instant but his brother Mule. I forgot to mention they were twins. They were as like as two – No, not peas in a pod, for this is not the time nor the place to go into Comparisons, and this is really Horse's story, Horse who – now I'm getting Round to it – flew over Dresden in the war. He'd emigrated first, to Manchester. Something to do with scrap – redundant mill machinery, Giant flywheels, broken looms that would, eventually, be ships, or aeroplanes. He said he wore his fingers to the bone. And so, on impulse, he had joined the RAF. He became a rear gunner. Of all the missions, Dresden broke his heart. It reminded him of china. As he remembered it, long afterwards, he could hear, or almost hear Between the rapid desultory thunderclaps, a thousand tinkling echoes – All across the map of Dresden, store-rooms full of china shivered, teetered And collapsed, an avalanche of porcelain, slushing and cascading: cherubs, Shepherdesses, figurines of Hope and Peace and Victory, delicate bone fragments. He recalled in particular a figure from his childhood, a milkmaid Standing on the mantelpiece. Each night as they knelt down for the rosary, His eyes wold wander up to where she seemed to beckon to him, smiling, Offering him, eternally, her pitcher of milk, her mouth of rose and cream. One day, reaching up to hold her yet again, his fingers stumbled, and she fell. He lifted down a biscuit tin, and opened it. It breathed an antique incense: things like pencils, snuff, tobacco. His war medals. A broken rosary. And there, the milkmaid's creamy hand, the outstretched Pitcher of milk, all that survived. Outside, there was a scraping And a tittering; I knew Mule's step by now, his careful drunken weaving Through the tin-stacks. I might have stayed the night, but there's no time To go back to that now; I could hardly, at any rate, pick up the thread. I wandered out through the steeples of rust, the gate that was a broken bed.

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Casualty

Seamus Heaney

I

He would drink by himself And raise a weathered thumb Towards the high shelf, Calling another rum And blackcurrant, without Having to raise his voice, Or order a quick stout By a lifting of the eyes And a discreet dumb-show Of pulling off the top; At closing time would go In waders and peaked cap Into the showery dark, A dole-kept breadwinner But a natural for work. I loved his whole manner, Sure-footed but too sly, His deadpan sidling tact, His fisherman's quick eye And turned observant back.

Incomprehensible To him, my other life. Sometimes on the high stool, Too busy with his knife At a tobacco plug And not meeting my eye, In the pause after a slug He mentioned poetry. We would be on our own And, always politic And shy of condescension, I would manage by some trick To switch the talk to eels Or lore of the horse and cart Or the Provisionals.

But my tentative art His turned back watches too: He was blown to bits Out drinking in a curfew Others obeyed, three nights After they shot dead The thirteen men in Derry. PARAS THIRTEEN, the walls said, BOGSIDE NIL. That Wednesday Everyone held His breath and trembled.

II

It was a day of cold Raw silence, wind-blown Surplice and soutane: Rained-on, flower-laden Coffin after coffin Seemed to float from the door Of the packed cathedral Like blossoms on slow water. The common funeral Unrolled its swaddling band, Lapping, tightening Till we were braced and bound Like brothers in a ring.

But he would not be held At home by his own crowd Whatever threats were phoned, Whatever black flags waved. I see him as he turned In that bombed offending place, Remorse fused with terror In his still knowable face, His cornered outfaced stare Blinding in the flash.

He had gone miles away For he drank like a fish Nightly, naturally Swimming towards the lure Of warm lit-up places, The blurred mesh and murmur Drifting among glasses In the gregarious smoke. How culpable was he That last night when he broke Our tribe's complicity? 'Now, you're supposed to be An educated man,' I hear him say. 'Puzzle me The right answer to that one.'

III

I missed his funeral, Those quiet walkers And sideways talkers Shoaling out of his lane To the respectable Purring of the hearse... They move in equal pace With the habitual Slow consolation Of a dawdling engine, The line lifted, hand Over fist, cold sunshine On the water, the land Banked under fog: that morning I was taken in his boat, The screw purling, turning Indolent fathoms white, I tasted freedom with him. To get out early, haul Steadily off the bottom, Dispraise the catch, and smile As you find a rhythm Working you, slow mile by mile, Into your proper haunt Somewhere, well out, beyond...

Dawn-sniffing revenant, Plodder through midnight rain, Question me again.

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