B LEEDING
Sliabh Aughty, my own mountain mine,
Rhododendroned ridge ever there for me;
Fields ascending higher as I go
From Ballylee to Loughrea’s lake:
To look beyond at County Clare
Or to gaze at Galway Bay.
Beyond the vision of the valley
Is a village hard to find,
But now it’s known the world over
Since the bog has moved in Derrybrien.
Forests, farms, furze and heather-
Colour palette in the sun:
Who’ll protect them from the landslide
Slipping down the river run?
Noble men of Tobar Pheadair,
Castleboy and old Kilchreest
Won’t you worry for your brothers
Who are threatened by the beast
Now let loose on this landscape
Far beyond the mountain top?
Have you seen Abhainn dá Loilioch?
Floating Christmas trees and peat
Slowly slithering towards Lough Cutra,
Killing brown trout in the squeeze,
Ruining roadways and the bridge.
Up in the pub that’s warm and snug
There’s talk and tension in the air:
They’re telling tales of a fearsome gorge-
Up a thousand feet from there.
All the experts are left thinking
For they’ve failed to fight the flow:
All their barriers were upended
With a muffled mountain roar.
In Derrybrien they’re not fearing
What’s gone down but what’s to come -
Maybe further bigger landslides!
For God’s sake what’s to be done?
Bring them help,
We fought for freedom-
’Tis their land, their place, their lives!
It’s not just a piece of mountain -
Don’t be fooled, it’s far more grand;
Those who are up there isolated
Are the very salt of our native land.
When Pádraig Pearse was writing poetry
’Twas not of Golden Vales he wrote
But of the little towns of Connacht,
Of mountain fields that men have sown.
At the weekend Fleadh of Cooley-Collins
I watched a lively woman dance
In sean nós style and quiet abandon
On an afternoon in Peterswell;
While at the bar there played a fiddler,
With hat of tweed and stoic face,
His bowing was so soft and gentle
In deep respect to this great place.
Just one word about the mountain
That I grew beside secure,
Thinking mountains were forever-
They were there aloft alone;
But having been to Costa Blanca,
In a town called Guardamar,
There I saw the bulls tormented
In the ring to loud acclaim;
Such noble, haughty, well built creatures
Sent to death by lance and spear;
There they lost their way so blindly
And the blood flowed down their shanks.
Now it’s nature’s turn to suffer
As the bog slides o’er its floor-
Like the toros proud it’s blameless,
All the shame is ours alone.
Let Spanish bulls on prados prance,
Far away from the mob’s olés,
To be there to see in all their beauty
Like the backdrop of these hills.
’Twas not a bull but the Celtic Tiger
Changed your serene mountain stance:
What you’ll see is masts and turbines
Every time you upwards glance.
Throw up your head and horns on high,
You wild and fearsome toro,
While the river of mud, the mountain’s blood,
Flows from the land of Lough Atorick.
B ONO AND B OB
Bono and Bob in Live Eight in Hyde Park:
Our boys are doing the business;
Heroes of rock and heralds of hope
Across the broad bands of the media.
African famine could soon be just history
For the Global Eight are dropping their debt
In the hope of an end to all the corruption.
In the far fields of Africa drums will beat
At the news from our Bob and our Bono;
They’ll walk with a happier step in the heat
While their war is won simply with music.
C ANNED
You can-
I’ll be damned
But
Tonight
I need
To hold
One of you
In my hand.
You can-
You are
My only man.
You can-
You w on’t
And I can’t
Be on our own.
I’ll have another
And you there
Don’t tell
My mother!
You can-
Now I can’t
Stand.
Too many
Cans-
Going to land!
My fellowman
I’m canned.
I’ll soon be
Ignominiously
Banned.
D EADLINES
The piano man plays on
And the tenors thrill
On the screen this Christmas;
Soon at dawn, it’s said,
Saddam