Two Poems by Caitriona O'Reilly
The Suicides
They ask: the world gives them a stone,
revolving until the greater part of her is in darkness.
Out among the night-stations the signals falter,
the mechanism of the cell winds down.
We can do nothing now but watch, watch and wait,
leaving them to the winds, the drag of the tides,
who lately were apt to brood upon themselves and hatch
a rope, a hook, a chair, a bell, a solicitude:
rarely a kindness. To themselves they were least kind.
Like us, they were unable to believe
the frequencies of light concerned them:
they followed the logic of the particle down
to the sea floor, literalists who found a solution.
In this silence, in this immeasurable interval
between systole and dawn, we ask:
she gives us the snowdrop’s sidereal pallor.
Commination
Cursed is the politician from whose lips drop
Lies like detonations on the land
Cursed are his white-gloved hands
Cursed is the kernel of his word
Cursed the altered germ of the seed scheduled to die
Cursed are the betrayed fields
Cursed the fine movements of the intricate beasts
Cursed the starlings’ murmurations
Cursed is the rich man in his mechanical solitude
Cursed are his love’s failures
Cursed are his portfolio, his realpolitik
Cursed his pump, his pipeline and his tanker
Cursed the little children playing in his streets
Cursed his lethal smile and cursed his language
Thou requirest truth in inward parts:
and shalt make me to understand wisdom secretly.
Thou shalt purge me with hyssop, and I shall be clean:
thou shalt wash me, and I shall be whiter than snow.
This piece is one of WLT's 2012 Pushcart Prize nominations.