[identity profile] duathir.livejournal.com
Truce

It begins with one or two soldiers
And one or two following
With hampers over their shoulders.
They might be off wildfowling

As they would another Christmas Day,
So gingerly they pick their steps.
No one seems sure of what to do.
All stop when one stops.

A fire gets lit. Some spread
Their greatcoats on the frozen ground.
Polish vodka, fruit and bread
Are broken out and passed round.

The air of an old German song,
The rules of Patience, are the secrets
They'll share before long.
They draw on their last cigarettes

As Friday-night lovers, when it's over,
Might get up from their mattresses
To congratulate each other
And exchange names and addresses.

by Paul Muldoon
[identity profile] mixedupfiles.livejournal.com
When the master was calling the roll
At the primary school in Collegelands,
You were meant to call back Anseo
And raise your hand
As your name occurred.
Anseo, meaning here, here and now,
All present and correct,
Was the first word of Irish I spoke.
The last name on the ledger
Belonged to Joseph Mary Plunkett Ward
And was followed, as often as not,
By silence, knowing looks,
A nod and a wink, the master's droll
'And where's our little Ward-of-court?'

I remember the first time he came back
The master had sent him out
Along the hedges
To weigh up for himself and cut
A stick with which he would be beaten.
After a while, nothing was spoken;
He would arrive as a matter of course
With an ash-plant, a salley-rod.
Or, finally, the hazel-wand
He had whittled down to a whip-lash,
Its twist of red and yellow lacquers
Sanded and polished,
And altogether so delicately wrought
That he had engraved his initials on it.

I last met Joseph Mary Plunkett Ward
In a pub just over the Irish border.
He was living in the open,
in a secret camp
On the other side of the mountain.
He was fighting for Ireland,
Making things happen.
And he told me, Joe Ward,
Of how he had risen through the ranks
To Quartermaster, Commandant:
How every morning at parade
His volunteers would call back Anseo
And raise their hands
As their names occurred.

And a query... )
[identity profile] eclectichick.livejournal.com
When Ulysses braved the wine-dark sea

He left his bow with Penelope,



Who would bend for no one but himself.

I edge along the book-shelf,



Past bad Lord Byron, Raymond Chandler,

Howard Hughes; The Hidden Years,



Past Blaise Pascal, who, bound in hide,

Divined the void to his left side:



Such books as one may think one owns

Unloose themselves like stones



And clatter down into this wider gulf

Between myself and my good wife;



A primus stove, a sleeping bag,

The bow I bought through a catalogue



When I was thirteen or fourteen

That would bend, and break, for anyone,



Its boyish length of maple upon maple

Unseasoned and unsupple.



Were I embarking on that wine-dark sea

I would bring my bow along with me.
[identity profile] side-a.livejournal.com
"The Sightseers"

My father and mother, my brother and sister
and I, with uncle Pat, our dour best-loved uncle,
had set out that Sunday afternoon in July
in his broken-down Ford

not to visit some graveyard -- one died of shingles,
one of fever, another's knees turned to jelly --
but the brand-new roundabout at Ballygawley,
the first in mid-Ulster.

Uncle Pat was telling us how the B-Specials
had stopped him one night somewhere near Ballygawley
and smashed his bicycle

and made him sing the Sash and curse the Pope of Rome.
They held a pistol so hard against his forehead
there was still the mark of an O when he got home.


-Paul Muldoon

(who is speaking this weekend at the University of Florida, if you are near enough to attend)

March 2025

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