* a. TRUTH I show you nature through my eyes but you must see my truths as lies, unless your own experience should drift with mine as grappled boats, lost in the ghostly fog which scientists call truth.
You must reach and trap the fog in baby's hands. Call it your truth. But, if you dare to chink your hands, be quick to look! Some truths can last no longer than the dew at noon nor than the lightning bolt that streaks to earth in June.
The thought of truth as absolute provokes me to irate invective! The nearest thing to objective truth is the death of the unconceived. The fool who knows she is a fool is not. The sage who thinks he is a sage is not.
* b. BEWARE Like digging moles, your eager minds probed for slugs of knowledge hidden in the humus of half-truths. Your search is tonic to our jaded souls.
You drank my rehashed notes as if your thirst could not be slaked and bolted my cliched words, then licked with relish from my fingertips
small crumbs of my truths. You stomached them in your spring-bound books, to ruminate on, quietly pelleting your truth.
I loved you then for I'm a student too! Beware!
* 2. WINDOW
In my chaotic study is a kind of order. I can move at night by memory or touch to familiar corners: waste basket, chair, table, reading lamp, ream of blank paper, biro bored with inactivity.
But beyond the window, the closed door, what? I lack the courage to run through the doorway, or jump through the window to the waiting world.
* 3. POETRY FOR THE PEOPLE
I envy poets who can pen great literary flights - allusion to the ancient lore in pithy wordplay, earthy wit - who know their craft so well that they can stitch their tapestry of words in godly forms.
If poets write for people, not for intellectual elite, their language must be clearly understood or may as well be scratched in Ogham strokes. I need to free the self, to touch in ink others stuck like me in the rut of life.
If my poetry can reach to mortgaged people or brings identity to questing minds or jerks a smile from one whose joy is lost, I am well pleased.
In spite of rough-hewn images, I hope to touch the quick of human mood. That will be my gift to you - mind-food.
* 4. AFFIRMATION
Harsh words, sarcasm and spite drive out the elfin, childlike sprite. Frowns and shaking heads can turn us into quaking clowns.
It is so easy to destroy the child in each of us. But not so easy to create a quiet, conscious sense of worth, so vital for the growth of human joy and lifelong peace - the vital element to let us interact with love with one another and the world.
Each of us has talents, juice which can ferment to vintage wine or sour and reduce to slime. The yeast to rule the ferment is the human eye and voice, the body-talk of love, support or hate and disapproval.
We can choose the happy or the gloomy path in our transit through this life.
* 5. I AM
I am a writer whom nobody reads, a singer of songs, a thinker whom nobody heeds, a righter of wrongs, a pale face in the throng, a desolate face, a screaming mouth, a scratcher, an eater, a hearty laugh and a weeping eye.
I am a dreamer whom nobody wakes, an insomniac in a world of sleepers, a lover seeking a beloved in a brothel open to Access, a creator with vision covered in the dust and grime of real-time.
But I blow away the dust and grime, create my little gems of clay in the cold light of the nuclear day and watch them decay in a half-life of 8.5 seconds. I am yerman next door and a terrible hoor. But I am.
* 6. TOTEM
i am alone in this hotel room alone with my thoughts and no-one to fight with not one with whom to share my heartfelt dreams. Is that the ventilator humming in the jacks, or but my thoughts racing? Can I verify my existence or do I merely think that I am. Sleep. Sleep.
Then a new dawn, re-incarnation, resurrection, call it what you will but I am alive today and will try to find some joy and meaning in giving and taking the yin-yang of life, writing it down, aching, mindful of you, and wife.
* 7. MAYBE
What am I but a pinch of salt, sunbaked grains of earth and ashy quicklime slaked by an asperges of moondrenched water, a moistened lump of potter's clay spinning through space on a wobbly wheel, raised by the creator's hand, brought to life by his son's death, quickened by his spirit fire.
Dust and spit am I, destined to return to slime, then dust. But the Buddha-Christ traced in dust eternal words of hope.
Knowing all that, I sat alone one autumn day, a child of forty eight, peering through rain-spattered glass, hearing the howl of wind outside, seeing the brooding rain-clouds, craving the touch of the Father's hand to pat my head.
God! Please just lay your hand and murmur: "It's all right!". I waited with screwed-up eyes but no hand came. The bald patch on my crown just grew balder. Through empty eyes I saw scudding clouds over-sail parched earth, saw teeming life struggle from the rain, saw whirling wind soar fragile wings to heaven.
And the Gloria in Excelsis poured from the syrinx of a lark. And I knew peace, oneness with the rain and wind, oneness with the lark and hawk, and I surrendered to the universal hymn. And, goddamit, I swear, something patted my head, right on the bald spot!
* 8. THE SEARCHER
In the minds of brilliant men God and the Devil fought. Both died, they said. And in their places reigned blind creation and seeing chaos, wilful minds, meaningless and doomed.
But a simple poet searched for God and did not find Her dead at all. He did not have to seek the Devil - She found him instead, appalled!
* 9. EVERYTHING AND NOTHING
Tinker, my place is where my head and heart lie down. I pitch camp with those who fail but try.
Tailor, I sew my coat of many hues with black thread. It keeps out cold graveyard blues.
Soldier, my arms rust, threaten to burst in my face. I abandon blood lust for simple peace.
Sailor, I tack winds of fable and my bow waves are imperceptible minutes later.
Rich man in friends and kin, my bank manager invites me to call and see him but not for tea.
Poor man, I must die. How they bury my body costs me not one sigh for now I breathe.
Beggarman, too proud to beg love, night and day I starve in comfort, gut full, heart bare.
Thief, afraid to steal white wine pledged to me, I drink the red from Eve's lips, while Adam sleeps.
* 10. SYMBOLS ON A WINTER SUNDAY
Hit the keyboard, log-on. See the words talk back in white, luminous on the black screen. A red light flickers and clicks to the hum of the whirring disc- no other sounds for comfort.
Outside, parked beside the padlocked gates, lovers seek illicit solace from the cold and dark. Their log-offs will litter the tarmac in the morning.
Words, words, thousands of words. One program sorts, another separates them: ape, apple, application, approach to the noun file; apply, appoint, appropriate to the also file.
Later, mate the nouns with esses and eds and ings, doctoring them into plurals and adjectives. The also words become verbs, participles, adverbs and other memorabilia and in the weeks ahead the lot will be constructed into a massive lexicon, symbols of communication, my part of the human cry for oneness, my cry. Symbols my eye! Symbols of communication with whom?
I drive home, hypnotised by the swish of rubber blades wiping tears from the windscreen, the hiss of tyres riding on the rain. Yes, love-rubber covers a multitude.
I eat in silence, brooding. Busy day at the office dear? Grunt. Boars grunt at the sight of gilts. I must learn to speak before the raven spears my tongue, beaks my vacant eyes.
But then, I vouch, there's much too much idle discourse in this life, too much fiction; too little useful action, too little loving touch. And my truths told may lead to friction.
* 11. ROCKS RATTLING IN AN EMPTY SKULL
In their safe cave, the thinkers huddle, mull over the seminar. One, known as Nail-biter, farts loudly, shamelessly.
Staring through eyes like two fused bulbs, she grunts that "Cogito ergo sum" has severe limitations, is the madness of the hairless ones to come. She flint-scratches on the wall: TO BE IS TO BE PERCEIVED... BY WHOM?
When she dismissed philosophies as yet unborn, was she conscious of electric charges flickering across her brain synapses, like tension spark-forking a thunder sky or could she predict the landslide which blocked the cave-mouth, suffocating the wise ones in each others' arms? In the lee of a limestone rock, an alpine flower feathers in thin soil. It clings to a day of vivid life, its perceivers the Burren wind, a bee, the Watcher of dead stars and my dream. Do you perceive it?
Bedded under kilotonnes of rock, does diamond need observers to prove that it exists, or does it have an aura in tune with a cosmic sense of being and need no proofs? In a crevice on Ayres' Rock, an Abo stone, shaped like a rampant male gizmo, (a butty club and purse), expands and contracts shyly and unseen in its courtly circling 'round the sun.
Years after our final atomic Holocaust, a lucky extraterrestrial tourist, found the now-glazed crystal artefact. He mused that only a very primitive class of beings could make such a cock-up and balls of a potential paradise.
Forsaking the deathly earthly silence, he stuffed the useful gizmo in his pocket, bore the silk-smooth dildo home to his mate as he was (and would be) away a lot of late.
* 12. BASKET CASE
As I lay abed, hungover, eyes gummed together, I felt as if little green men with picks and shovels were building tunnels in my head. I tried to imagine existence with all my senses lost.
I became a hopeless basket-case, blind, deaf, paralysed, anaesthetised completely, yet conscious, in a dark, terrible silence, or worse, permanent flaring, flashing lights in my eyes, endless screaming, whining, whirring, clanging in my ears, hallucinating ulcers, fire tearing at my skin, vomit in my mouth, stench of burning gangrenous flesh in my nose and inner certainty that this was all there was for me to know. Jets of air turned me gently in a soft cocoon. Tubing fed my veins and other tubes removed the waste. My life support a hissing iron lung. All the staff had run away, leaving me switched on. I could not reach out to pull the plug.
My eyes sprang open and I sobered instantly, washed, shaved, ate and went to work whistling, feeling very much alive.
* 13. FIVE-ORGAN RECITAL
Red heart, you will betray my love. Yellow spleen, you kill with sighs. Pale lung, you will be my groaning. Dark kidney you will drain my fear. Green liver, your wild anger kills.
Yet the ragged harmony continues, point and counterpoint, somehow batoned together, the Maestro mouthing wildly: "Play, you bastards, play".
* 14. SUN AND SHADE
* a. SUN There are useless things in life - the eternity ring, dusty in a hock-shop window, the locket photo of an unknown soldier and his proud bride, the never-never splashdown of chimney-breast ducks, the leaky leather and warped wood of the bellows near the blocked-up grate, the Mickey Mouse watch which never worked on the wrist of a happy four-year old, the intensity of academic arguments gushing from glasses of port. But they warm the mind in the search for why and for identity.
* b. SHADE Full of life and confidence, the sun on my face, I hand-hop the waist-high gate. Far from the roars of car-bombs, out of sight of snipers, secure in my familiar haunt my heart stopped before I landed on the other side and my eyes stared wide at the sky that I could not see.
* 15. BRUSH STROKES ON A CANVAS
Jagged crag, what is your need? To lose my stoneness in beauty, avalanche, granite-chipped, myriad shaped, mica glistened, marble streaked,
thunder down into the shrouded valley. Empty valley, what is your need? To be seeded with sound, colour, form, swell the senses, mind to consciousness,
flood my fullness up my fertile slopes, overflow to other empty craters. Crag and valley fuse, explode, disintegrate, reform to emptiness and stone again.
The canvas satisfies the painter's eye and palette, brushes, paint sleep the easel sleep of waiting.
* 16. TWO WAYS TO THE GRAVE
* a. ONE WAY At this moment, around the world, empty-eyed men are sodomising children, rapists are ejaculating their fear and hatred of Eve, gallons of loveless seed are spurting uselessly, inseminating nothing but pain and loneliness.
At this moment, around the world, murderers are murdering, thieves are thieving, soldiers soldiering, whores are whoring, frauds defrauding, capitalists exploiting. Priests are priesting from obsolete books, the listeners' ears stone deaf.
At this moment, around the world, fathers are sweeting up women beyond their pale, mothers are jumping from tower flats, foetuses are purpling on stainless steel, pushers are pushing, junkies junking, poachers poaching, coaches coaching young offenders in ways of indulgence and vice.
And I wonder where I'm at as I wear the poet's hat, observe the rumpled love bed, unslept in since the silence exploded in my head, daub the gay paint of a clown to mask my cheerless frown, write down the lot of us who know no God but self.
* b. ANOTHER WAY At this moment, around the world, clear-eyed men are enheartening children, suitors are ejaculating their joy and love of Eve, gallons of love-full seed are spurting usefully, inseminating life, or bonding happiness and hope.
At this moment, around the world, lifesavers are saving life, protectors are protecting, nurses are nursing, virgins wait patiently, sound people pay their share, and socialists play fair. Priests are priesting from one short text - love God through the world - and the listeners hear.
At this moment, around the world, fathers are sweating for their families, mothers are jumping to their childrens' needs, foetuses are pinkly heeling mothers' bellies, healers healing, patients recovering, bailiffs conserving, coaches coaching young offenders to see the proper way.
And I wonder where I'm at as I wear the dunce's hat, observe the marriage bed, which I will warm tonight fantasies stilled in my head, daub the sad paint of a clown to mask the laughter I own, write down the lot of us who know no self without God in another.
* 17. CRIES AND WHISTLES FROM THE MIND
"Listen man", the starving curlew cried, "I will open windows to your soul".
Piping high over oil-slicked slobs, kept aloft by the Atlantic wind, he admonished me: "You panic when the postman knocks: it might be bills, a summons, the bank manager stroppy, but it might be also the first hello from a dropped out son: no contact for years, or from a friend who went aground on dark rocks of mind". "Answer the door to life", the curlew cried in a trilling west Clare slide "and dip into its tide".
"Yesssss", whistled otter, cruising the far green bank, one eye on the trout beneath, one on me. He dives to survive, surfaces and whistles: "Live man, live; the stars are dead! You breathe! Know your pain, hear the whimpering pup, bind up wounds which cause the world to groan. Listen to the cries for help. It is the pain of Godlessness! Heal it and you will sing."
I light my pipe and smile. "Thank you, curlew, otter, you have more sense than I. I want to fry, walk, fly, swim, sway in my Elements. For life and love, I must. Oh, I can choose the other way but I will pay the price. For I was sent by One who sends what must be sent. And the Sender traced an arrow on the road to where my life might go. And who am I to argue it's not so". The otter swam, the curlew piped: "Amen".
* 18. TO CONOR, FIVE DAYS AFTER INDEPENDENCE DAY 1995
I am the wand'ring soul, wanting things to be the way they were twenty years ago.
I see the priests of "Hey man, Yo!" demanding efficiency from all their flock, though they themselves have never felt the balm of heaven, or the welt on backs, on souls of sense of Celtic loss. I am afraid that trade, of land, soul, me must rule OK, that in the money-fray my sense of play, of here and now must be denied.
I cry inside. I ply the ways to see meaning in the way we are today. I pale and quail in the failed equation that we, a nation of great wealth are conned by stealth of money grabbers, soul robbers.
But my pride in roots in Ceide fields, Newgrange whorls, girls with steady eyes, firm thighs whispered "Hold your whist, you are not the first to bay at moons which tell the runes of change". Am I deranged?
No, I think therefore I am merely the jam in the sandwich that bewitches, the haze that shimmers in the void between changelessness and change.
I am an ageing clown. I will fall down lose my smile someday, but not today, dear Jesus, not today.
Develop this theme [on consciousness / aware of being aware] There are days when the light shines laser pure and the light in my head shines through
Phil Rogers MRCVS, Lucan, Dublin, Ireland Fax: 353-46-26154 Tel: 353-46-26740 (Lab) [email protected] | [email protected] THE NYCAVMA IS HONORED TO HOST & MANAGE THE PHIL ROGERS ARCHIVE