what the thunder says
By Coolhermit
- 670 reads
what the thunder says
weary of wine and cheese
and washing sherry,
I quit my job and headed west
and further west
till settling in Dunquin,
on the coast of Kerry,
to live out my days
in Trappist obscurity
I have no Gaelic
I decline to speak English -
some say I’m a Latvian - on the run -
I’m inclined to let them
when thunder roars in from the Blaskets
the villagers cluster Kruger’s Bar,
get drunk on ‘black’ with Paddy chasers
fiddle jigs and sing soft songs
I barrow my wicker
chair to the strand
and sit cupping my ears
to catch the keening
of the ‘Sisters of Precipitation’
in their timeless celebration
the rain spins breathless yarns
of lands beyond Antarctica
the warm seas of Micronesia
babies drowned off Ithaca
stopping play at Ashes matches
soaking a watercolour painter
drenching lovers on CarburrowTor
kissing the ground of a rubble slum
for a daisy to grow where nobody goes
trickling Betjeman’s nose,
caught by his tongue, tumbling his gullet
discreetly expelled via fumbled zipper -
an amber stain on the wall
of British Rail, Slough
I love the raindrops’ carefree
dives headlong into see-saw water
how they swoon into the sea
to become the sea
when sunshine returns
I take my dripping wicker home
to my tumbledown cottage
on the edge of the village
a stocious neighbour,
stops, salutes me,
“Tá sé in aghaidh an lae mhór anois tá sé ag cur báistí stop” *
I nod – a nod’s enough
as my chair dries on the step
I listen hard for casual gossip
alas the drips are quietted
I wonder what slanders
the raindrops conjure
when my back is turned.
*turned out nice again
- Log in to post comments
Comments
Sounds idyllic - if somewhat
Sounds idyllic - if somewhat damp.
- Log in to post comments
Great images! I enjoyed
Great images! I enjoyed reading it!
- Log in to post comments