Westmeath Poems
Three Westmeath poems taken from The Geography of Feeling by Jimmy O’Connell, available in Just Books, Mullingar.
Daddy and Daughter Cycling
(Written during ‘lockdown’, celebrating the special bond between father and daughter.)
There are no cars parked outside Nanny Quinn’s,
the barges lie silent in the cooling summer,
as Royal Canal water, seeped in the clays of peat
and prickly gorse, glides iridescent in cloud-
tufted sunshine. Our lone heron stately sentinels
among companionable moorhen and the swift
swerve of blue gloss-tinted swallows.
The Waterway’s towpath has been re-laid,
and where once horses dragged barges through
Abbeyshrule and returned commercially laden
to the Dublin docks, now in the new logistics
and imposed contingencies of lockdown
and social distancing, I take my routine canal walk.
Old dusted down Raleigh bikes and children
wearing safety helmets gather; a father cycles by
in shorts and summer shirt, his daughter on the
carrier seat, familiar now to his tack and turn, sitting
in the safe swerve and glide of her pre-bridal dance.
A Café in Mullingar
(A meditation on the link between art and life. In Rembrandt’s painting, 'Christ on a Cross', the image of Christ is said to be a self-portrait of Rembrandt himself. The Café is Esquires, Harbour Place, Mullingar)
Howard Jones’ ‘No one is to blame’
pipes through a café in Mullingar
in the beat and thrust of electronified
syncopation. Am I the only one here
stopping for coffee and a blueberry muffin,
reflecting on Rembrandt’s painting
of a sun-deprived, grey-jaundiced
Jesus nailed to a pitch-singed cross
of cheap carpentered wood? Where within
the frame of shrouded silence he realises
his own abandonment, his fear-paralysed
eyes and gnarled screaming mouth tasting
the anguish of hope lost; this same cry
unheard in the agonised etching in an earlier
self-portrait wherein we too become
the Dutchman who has surely painted
the symbol of man as artist forsaken
between speech and dumbness, between
a God absent and the brittle belief in a
rolled-back stone and an empty tomb.
His Christ hangs bereft at our casual forgetfulness,
our walled-out emptiness now brimmed
with desires unfulfilled, and spent treasure
wasting. Is he with us now watching out
for Summer Sales and supermarket trolleys,
this café filling with shoppers and wandered-souls,
heedless of piped music in relentless loop?
Church Island
(Imagines a pre-Christian time when the first people came to settle around Lough Owel)
As the ice receded leaving fresh water
to fill the fissures of earth, it was maybe
in the time of the Fir Bolg or the Tuatha
De Danann, they came upon the lake
and felt the island as that sacred place
to which their god had led them.
And their priest and chief stood by its shore
and watched as the sun set in its silent-lit
prayer to the goddess that dwelt there,
she who had waited for them
as bride to their wandering god.
And, on a lunar appointed moment,
the priest crossed and carried with him
the lit torch of an oak branch and planted it
into the menstrual soil and out of it
were born the oracles and laws of the tribe,
and her fresh waters bore trout and fed the land,
fructifying its people. And there then came
a time when belief in local gods
was ridiculed and they recluded
to pre-Cambrian silence, but they hover
still above the lake and the stilled
sleeping goddess awaits those who know
that lake gods are of the one God
that hovered above the waters
where Genesis begins.
Jimmy O’Connell is a member of Inklings Writing Group, who meet on Tuesdays at 10.50am in the Annebrook House Hotel.