Authors: Matt Mooney
I’m up to my eyes in apples,
Lizard like upon the trunk;
Heavy branches to be shaken,
Fishing for the furthest fruit:
Ripened red and yellow faces
High on top beneath the sun.
I’m in a ball filled bouncer
But I’m careful not to fall-
Just now I ducked my head
From flying fruit going down
To hop like heavy hailstones
In a shower upon the ground.
Sonny O’Dea, our Master’s mate,
Closed the gate and lifted the latch
Of the door painted in national green
After he tied up his jennet outside.
His brown hat had no ribbon band,
It was turned up here and up there.
It sheltered him in the wind and rain
And shaded his face from the sun.
His coat, a corn bag from his barn,
Was fastened with a single horse nail;
His step so slow had a ring of steel
From the tips of his hobnailed boots.
Over the road we could see him come
And Sonny O’Dea didn’t have to knock;
It was just our grammatical grilling time-
That blasted blitz for us at two o’clock!
So with one voice we sang in chorus
‘Tá fear sa halla’ (‘A man in the hall’);
We knew we were in for some fun
As the Master would answer the call.
Sonny spoke out like an Indian chief,
The Master’s voice was always even-
Whatever was said we hadn’t a care
Once they had a long conversation;
That would help at the end of the day
To shorten a little our long education.
‘This is your Captain speaking’
The voice ground out with gravity.
I suddenly sat up straight in my seat
To hear what was the calamity!
Yes, we had ascended successfully,
Levelled off and headed for London-
But somehow we were lacking in thrust
So my feelings were somewhat deflated.
‘We have been told by Shannon control
That a hatch has been left open’-
‘Oh Lord our God’ I said ‘What?’
And he added ‘There’s no safety risk
At all and we are returning to Shannon.’
As he turned around there wasn’t a sound
Nor a sight of our pretty hostesses.
I thought of the news on
Five Seven Live
And cast the bad thought from my mind;
After all of this crisis without any crash
We had our hatch shut up in Shannon.
Beside me sat a young businessman
With a hint of a beard of maturity
Who had been asleep quite oblivious,
But on the second time round
He awoke back on the ground
And I told him of all that had happened.
Needless to say he was taken aback,
Thinking he was landed safely in England;
So we laughed at our lot as airborne we got
While the Captain made up for delaying us!
And all of a sudden the staff reappeared
To serve tea from behind the drawn curtains
And instead of landing in London at five
We were happy we landed at half past, alive!
‘I should have known
He’d want to get up on the wall.
Hold on to him that’s all-
And don’t let him fall!’
The half moon begins its harvest climb;
This night is sure to be as bright as day.
The turf fires kindle and flame into life
In the hillside homes this evening time.
From across the Racecourse and the river
Carnival sounds drift in the still cool air
And rainbow rows of festive lights in town
Send up a crowning glow that spreads
And floods the gently sloping fields afar.
Stopping at Lake Te Anau
Felt like we had stumbled
On some masterpiece of art
Then made a part of it;
To be of no other tableau-
So perfect and untamed.
Breathless at the stillness
Of lake water pastel blue:
Nature’s ancient mirror
For the clearest of a sky
And Keplar snowy crested-
True reflections in Te Anau.
Sliabh Mish in Summer:
Her lows and highs beyond
The fields that lie
Beside Tralee at Boherbee,
Where in the sun
In front of Dunnes
The shoppers
Filter in and out;
While sleepy breezes
Find their way
From Tralee Bay
To fill the afternoon
With sea wine from
The Maharees;
Or to have sweet reveries
Of sharing a siesta
With that mountain,
Guardian of the town,
Beneath its eiderdown
Spun from clouds
In bridal white that lie
On curves and crests
Along a blue horizon
Of a day in time.
Skylight of pine like a picture frame,
Only eye of my sleepless musing;
What strikes me at this hour of dreams
Is the single star that looks at me
From the depths of our lovely universe.
I’d love to know if the builders charged
For your beacon light so gifted;
As I lie on my back my thoughts of black
Slip away with the blind I’ve lifted.
Now I think of today by the River Rhone
And hills so high with slopes of trees
Where hosts of village houses stand;
St. Galmier, its square with cafés there;
A fruit shop of reds and yellows;
A church of stone standing all alone,
Its walls being cleansed by craftsmen.
While alas I lie and look on high
And muse on the higher heavens
I have found it wise to think of time
For the dawn has stolen my star away
And all that’s left to me today
Is a frame with a bright blue canvas.
Thistledown: flight so light,
Floating summertime on river air;
On the bank first kisses.
A woman’s smile can haul her sailor boy ashore;
With just a single kiss she lures him on her line.
Afterwards
Under the eiderdown
We lie inert;
Alert to night winds
That hurry up the hill,
Playing ‘hide and seek’
Among the trees;
Lulling us to sleep,
Sure of ourselves
And the only sounds
Outside.
Aux revoirs à la porte ouverte
Un très beau Dimanche en été;
Dans le ciel un avion brillait;
Chez moi c’est très solitaire.
En ville à l’heure de la messe-
Le secret de la paix à la Place;
Personne ne bougait, ne parlait;
Avec le journal je suis rentré.
Mes chiens m’ont bien reçus;
Au téléphone un appel amical-
Voilà ma fille qui s’est levée!
Encore tout a bien tourné.
Encore une fois je pouvais voir
La beauté de montagnes au loin;
Comme un train d’un tunnel noir,
Je suis rentré dans la lumière.
Goodbyes at the open front door
On a Sunday morning in summer.
An aeroplane shines in the sun;
At home I can learn about solitude.
In the town it’s midday mass time-
A time and a place to be peaceful,
A short truce in the struggle of life;
I purchase the Sunday Press paper.
I’m welcomed in home by the dogs
And a friendly telephone caller;
My daughter awakes at it’s ringing,
Once again my world is revolving.
I am able to admire the day’s beauty-