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5 Poems by D S Maolalai


DS Maolalai recently returned to Ireland after four years away, now spending his days working maintenance dispatch for a bank and his nights looking out the window and wishing he had a view. His first collection, Love is Breaking Plates in the Garden, was published in 2016 by the Encircle Press. He has twice been nominated for the Pushcart Prize.

Squatters rights.

they all stand up

when I come.

very respectful

like butlers

caught smoking

in untucked shirtsleeves.

then

when they see

I'm not here to kill

or take out any trash

they settle again,

flecking down

like black confetti

on every white surface

and I'm sure

on all the other ones.

I am the queen

to their colony,

the lioness

bringing the bread. I am

their source

for bacon rind

and the stems of cauliflowers,

orangeskins

on a good day

and on a great one

wine.

I'm sure

they dont resent me

my evenings spent stalking the walls

and striking

with a black thumb from their guts

and their wings.

after all

I'm the one washing it

and they're set

up.

they don't even split the rent we owe

or help out

with any utilities.

Life in an open cave.

we wrote home of nothing -

come to somewhere new

where everything

was promised

and nothing

needed at all.

why then

would we want

family following?

we rented a place

near a bend in the road,

trout fishing

close by

and a tv

that picked up

3 stations

and shopping

after 11pm.

the radio cable

reached

from the kitchen

to the porch

and two miles down

there was a man

who sold beer

cheap

from a cooler

and newspapers

3 days out of tune.

the world

closed

like a flower at night

and our lives

opened

like a flower in the morning -

we had what we needed

and asked for nothing else

and we were given it too,

with a complementary side of bacon,

birdsong

and some butter

to go on our toast.

Checkers.

there's nothing much like it;

sleeping together

after you've got used

to each others bodies,

after

your legs

no longer play against one another

like hockey sticks

chasing the puck.

there's something

restful,

like sinking

into a heated swimming pool

or feeling arms reach out

quietly in bed.

such a fine chess-game,

knowing the moves,

the click of pieces,

simple as checkers.

we both play,

respectful,

knowing

where the game is going

and early on,

how it's going to end;

neither of us

coming here to castle;

king me

and do it now.

Symphony.

the piano

goes spooky

and the violins

play

like someone

is killing a dog.

this

is symphony.

this is the world

revealed.

wine

stings my lips,

dry

as the string section.

my glass,

wet as the trombone player's

feet.

the radio

is tilted - there's a biro

under one end

and it buzzes the table

whenever the bass drum hits.

it all adds

to the sound. the table

is just another instrument

and outside

the rain hitting the window

comes like percussion

and the buses

driving people home.

sometimes

static

shakes

and changes the tenor to rage.

I drink

and listen

like a jazz-band spectator - all this

improvisation;

good music

can stand

any amount

of interference.

Diagnosis.

quiet as a cat in handbag

bad health comes in

creeping,

sitting behind the wheelie-bins

and standing behind you,

sleepy

in a crowded pub.

you're feeling fine,

you could walk

the steps of Rio

or go 3 to 1

fighting hercules

and then suddenly

it's 90 for a check-up

and 600 for a full

scan,

80

with the crown for

another 100,

a full grand for a biopsy

while worrying

comes along free.

age

is a place

where the rich go

to retire

and set alarm clocks

while we walk around

with a pain in our side

we don't talk about

and a sensation

that only comes sometimes

when we piss,

we smoke

because

if it's a rib out of joint

then we're healthy

so fuck

and if it's something else

then it's too late

to start

stopping it

now.


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