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Poetry

Tom Sheehan - 2 Poems

 

Departure

From a Greyhound Bus
in Lansdale, Pennsylvania
I saw a guy I saw
dying in Korea.

Is that you,
Pete Merenda,
still moving down
the trail,

open gut baking
in the sunlight,
dream rock-hard
and deeper,

pulse beating
against the hot fragments
such idiots throw
at each other,

eyes washing
over you as though
you had not been
part of us?

I will tell
someone sometime
and he will not remember
disowning you.

 

Second Revisions

(for Seamus Heaney)

I name myself
walking through the house
before I get there.

On birch floors my shoes
sound dull as wood pulses
an ancient drummer

marked time with.
These dead trees are full
of sassy talk.

A strata of air,
corporeally chilled, moves
a cubit wide in the kitchen,

a polar exercise
taking place.
I have been

other places before,
before I got there:
banging a curragh

against the Atlantic
the long watch
of a day,

wind full of slam
and salt and voice
of the seal;

blackening spuds
in a field fire,
chatting rain alive

on slow coals of sticks
like hiccups, hawthorns
for roofing and stone

markers for walls;
pressed foul as fish
in subterranean passage

with the metallic Atlantic
telling me all its
old stories,

icebergs and whales
and the loan sharks
waiting in the new land;

scavenging a city dump
for furniture, books,
and bedding,

waging private wars
against prejudice, hunger,
Roscommon calling me home;

this kitchen, now,
dark-cornered, remote, out
of which I walk toward myself.