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Buoy the population of the soul
Toward their destination before they drown
~ Robert Pinsky
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Tuesday, 11. July 2006

Two Lorries - Seamus Heaney



It's raining on black coal and warm wet ashes. There are tyre-marks in the yard, Agnew's old lorry Has all its cribs down and Agnew the coalman With his Belfast accent's sweet-talking my mother. Would she ever go to a film in Magherafelt? But it's raining and he still has half the load

To deliver farther on. This time the lode Our coal came from was silk-black, so the ashes Will be the silkiest white. The Magherafelt (Via Toomebridge) bus goes by. The half-stripped lorry With its emptied, folded coal-bags moves my mother: The tasty ways of a leather-aproned coalman!

And films no less! The conceit of a coalman... She goes back in and gets out the black lead And emery paper, this nineteen-forties mother, All business round her stove, half-wiping ashes With a backhand from her cheek as the bolted lorry Gets revved and turned and heads for Magherafelt

And the last delivery. Oh, Magherafelt! Oh, dream of red plush and a city coalman As time fastforwards and a different lorry Groans into shot, up Broad Street, with a payload That will blow the bus station to dust and ashes... After that happened, I'd a vision of my mother,

A revenant on the bench where I would meet her In that cold-floored waiting room in Magherafelt, Her shopping bags full up with shovelled ashes. Death walked out past her like a dust-faced coalman Refolding body-bags, plying his load Empty upon empty, in a flurry

Of motes and engine-revs, but which lorry Was it now? Young Agnew's or that other, Heavier, deadlier one, set to explode In a time beyond her time in Magherafelt... So tally bags and sweet-talk darkness, coalman, Listen to the rain spit in new ashes

As you heft a load of dust that was Magherafelt, Then reappear from your lorry as my mother's Dreamboat coalman filmed in silk-white ashes

Notes: I was also listening to Seamus Heaney recite (this poem begins at 21.15 minutes) this sesitina earlier this morning. Appropriate I think, to add it to the Big Book on a day when many others are "filmed in silk-white ashes".




Big Book Of Poetry

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Sleep Photograph



The trundle of trains across Old river barrages is the sound You wake to as rain lashes Windowpanes, and thunder Briefly transmutes crape myrtles Into the sentinel gulmohars, Which stood outside your Window in that far country Of trains and river trestles.

Note: It is somewhat ironic that roughly around the time I was writing these lines this morning, to capture that distant sound of trains, halfway across the world, in a different time zone, people were crawling out of a massacare in Bombay's train system. I can only send peace out to the dead, the maimed, and the living.




My Poems

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Some News From The World



In a New York highrise A man is arrested for Keeping a pet Bengal tiger

I see the coal eyes of the tiger Eyeing the cops, his low growls Over the blaring sirens

The invisible metaphor Is full realized here, One man’s dente with The beast in cramped quarters

Rustle of fiery fur, and underneath, Tight muscular sinews snug Against his body as the tiger Feeds from the same table

Meat from the man’s hand, Running his coarse tongue against The palm itself: the meniscus

Of trust and control before the cops Burst in, and handcuff his wrists To sever him from the jaws’ invisible grip




My Poems

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