WHEN, first times.

I don’t recall my first birth!

I was born again, to Jesus, 18 years later, or

For that matter, my first steps or words.

Imagine your first memory; is being thrust

From your mother’s womb; Dear god!

Some say they do, I’m not so sure,

how Freudian is that.

 

Nor do I recall my first flu, a few weeks later

Or the penicillin which nearly achieved,

what the flu could not,

How many times since,

have I filled in that ‘allergies’ box?

 

My first memory of Mum, aged three..that’s me,

was in hospital with my new born sister

Taken there by my gran of whom,

my first abiding memory is in the house,

where she,and her mother and mothers mother,

had been born bred and buttered.

 

With a cigarette in her bony hand and

long finger of ash on it like a twig

of a silver birch tree, ready to fall into,

the pan where she had just thrown

the still wriggling fresh skinned eel

my grandfather caught only an hour before.

 

Another cigarette smouldering,

on a wee dish, beside the stove,

and another by her favourite chair.

And yes she died of cancer way before her time

but looking so much older.

 

 

My first day at pre-school aged 3 ¾,

Miss Churchill’s school of elocution.

Somewhere in the suburbs (of course)

of Manchester,  where on my first day

I had to stand on the table because my accent was;

too pikey I suppose for her erudite ears.

 

And my first day in a catholic primary,

in Ballymena hey,(we hail from there)

where there too I had to stand on the desk.

I didn’t even know what a Hail Mary was,

never mind able to recite out loud,

to the rest of the class. The  utter shame of it!

 

The first realization I had,

of sectarian hatred,

was in my granny’s kitchen

some man, Paisley all rant & rave & rage

(fulminating, just because I like the word)

on the radio, and i saw the hurt in her face.

 

The cheeks of my arse long recall,

The first time my father hurt me,

life’s pubescent  theme until,

the day I absconded for the last time.

He squared up to me… I realized then,

how small, old and grey a man he had become.

 

My first fantasy at school, a PE teacher,

looking younger than his years,

First love at Uni, a Butler from Mullingar,

both unrequited and unknown, un-noticed of course.

1st person I confessed my shame to,

And my very first (in)-/ nay  glorious kiss with him.

 

My baptism (a ritual initiation) at 18 by immersion,

not in the sea as I wished, and

the disappointment when I told my gran,

and she said…sure don’t they kick with the wrong foot.

That moment I thought god spoke to me,

Directly and utterly to me,

And when I finally got the cosmic joke.

 

When my father told me, aged 21,

of his resolve at my birth,

to each and every day ensure

I feared him, and he did.

That moment I held my son,

as his mother’s womb was being sewn closed,

and how effortlessly I offered oaths,

and promises of a different kind,

to any gods old or new that would listen.

He grasped my fore finger, sneezed,

bartering water for air as is a new-born’s way,

and we shook on it.

 

1st sex with my son’s mother,

after we married,

and the fact that she cried.

Years later, with a man,

and the fact that he laughed,

never having seen ginger hair, down there!

 

1st time I told David,

my love and life now for 11 years,

that I was in love with him;

….and that he couldn’t,

say the same back to me at that moment

but, he did when the time was right.

 

In hospital again, where nurses pleaded,

with grandpa Davey to hang in and stay with them;

I lost my first relative within sight and sound

as his alcohol addled aorta ruptured

and emptied the cavity of his heart,

into the void of his chest.

 

The night I knelt beside a fallen colleague,

and friend; in the Parliament Bar

as his hearts blood spread out and around him.

The night I knelt beside a young soldier,

called Cyril Smith, how we ribbed him;

even then,

torn apart, stripped to his union jack boxers

and I perhaps said my first and last truly heartfelt prayer.

 

The very first time as a grown man,

I feared I would die

& the time I wanted to die,

and the first time I very nearly did die

…. So now I want to live.

 

That..moment…

I pulled and pointed a gun on someone,

and saw their fear,

but wondered where mine was.

 

The first bewildering moments,

after wakening up having been;

’blown up’…. And the joy,

at feeling limbs and fingers and,

my torn bloody head were all still connected

 

That dreadful evening,

I told my son’s mother I was gay,

and to this day am still shocked,

that she didn’t know, and that I could have been so so wrong….

and  yet my mother and in her 70’s seemed so,

agreeably unsurprised etc

 

The second time in my life,

I said’ I do’… and knowing I would.

 

The reality of my 50th birthday,

and my son laughingly telling me,

to ‘behave old man….. old man!’,

and not for the first time.

 

Finally, the first time I heard my son,

and his love tell me they were ‘pregnant’.

I doubt it will be the last….

and that makes me happy.

despite knowing that the first times in life

now, are more often than not,

mostly  in my life,also the last times….

Still part the journey, a going on.

arte

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Fate and Innocence

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Was he really so young, innocent and sweet,

or merely naive, wounded….. incomplete?

If only we had known what was in his head,

 Or often that he was in anothers bed.

It may never be known, how deep the pain,

Of loosing his brother, if that left him sane.

He couldn’t talk about that, much else too,

He had many secrets, lives that weren’t true.

People had cared; he had tried to be open,

The police wasn’t a place he found any hope in.

In the end a friend’s betrayal cost him dearly

His vulnerability meant he could cope…nearly.

Did he believe in fate or just simply surrender

Can that explain why he chose to go there?

What did he think or recall as they chased him

Or as he lay in a pool of his hearts blood, grim.

Another young life taken at the point of a gun.

Lives changed, but there was more pain to come.

There is remembrance, choices have been made

His memorial is that others will be less afraid.

For me there is guilt, waking dreams at night,

What could have been done to make it right?

My life has been changed out of all recognition

His life fostered within me a different ambition.

Like Sheppard before him and so many since,

Lives lost in circumstances that make us wince.

We need to remember, be there and listen.

Stand up, be counted, make this your mission.

©  Vincent Creelan  2009

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Living with Dinosaurs

 

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Two, chambered mausoleums;

With corridors of power,

and corridors of history.

For muses and wise men?

The past and present,

To protect and preserve,

Of life and death.

Old bones and decayed flesh,

In vacuum sealed glass cases.

Jawbones and flawed flesh, in

Vacuous hot air filled glass houses.

 

We a wishbone grasp,

Hoping for some backbone at last

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Susquehanna, When Homeward Bound.

My First Poem

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A first night’s welcoming fanfare, fireworks and music under the stars, aboard Brian’s pontoon.

Moon light, camp fires and intuition to take us home after the brightness of rockets in the warm night air.

Wind chimes both steel and wood echo, on the evening breeze and along the deserted river bank where cabins sit empty. 

Party music seeps across from the far shore, heavy metal, singing and shouting, drink and who knows what else, into the early hours.

Earlier, a shooting star across the bow, so close and bright, it’s a bird on fire he said, we laughed and won’t forget,

And clove tobacco smoke drifts, sweetness in the mouth and in the air.

 

 A fresh white, newly hung hammock sways just barely, with my fella asleep in it, a book on his chest.

Leaves spiral to the ground, some float away on the river, or litter the chairs and table.

Grass hoppers, or are they locusts, high in the trees above, rasp and rattle in the growing heat.

A Grey Catbird hops beneath the hammock foraging I guess, whilst the Grackle noisily dodges through the undergrowth.

Two Jet Ski’s pass by zigzagging, with laughing riders, a cute guy clings on,

And clove tobacco smoke drifts, sweetness in the mouth and in the air.

 

 On the still, far bank, about mid afternoon, motionless trees, look like a painting by Gainsborough or Constable perhaps,

And thunder from the bbq, like a dragons bellowing cough or great fart, was, just too much gas!

David snores gently as he sways and rocks in the hammock after a beer or two.

The spin of a reel, fishing from jetty, and the tuts and sighs as the bait hits the water.

No spud gun this year, or lightening to spoil the day on the river, just sun and fun,

And clove tobacco smoke drifts, sweetness in the mouth and in the air.

 

 Is it a creek, river, or estuary? So big like the Thames in London or the Bann at home.

Conor fishing patiently and quietly casts again, with anticipation of another fish, unlike those at home, and maybe a big one this time.

Fallen trees from last years flood or the storm just past lie broken on the banks.

A Great blue heron rises and glides beyond our sight, as we strain to see Turkey Vultures, but hope for more… maybe an eagle or osprey.

Marble Island, a mystery solved and a story laughingly, lovingly retold, a safe place for young and old,

And clove tobacco smoke drifts, sweetness in the mouth and in the air.

 

 A chilled haze covers the hills and water, like something from a horror film, the fog perhaps, it closes in.

Fireflies display near and on the shore, like some weird alien presence, with messages only they can read.

An inferno at the camp fire, a tale is told and then relived, grown men run, shout and laugh like the kids they are at heart.

Gentleman Bob reminds us of young minds present, when the conversation gets risky, with a subtle joke.

David’s laughter where ever, when ever, always, enough to bring a smile to any face and lift the soul,

And clove tobacco smoke drifts, sweetness in the mouth and in the air.

 

 Misty hills and small Islands mid river look enchanted in the evening dusk.

Moon dappled water laps against the boat drifting close to the bank, whilst the quiet man and boy fish.

Herons cry out to each other, in warning? Who knows, overhead night time traffic passes, geese and ducks, they talk, and we listen.

A small Salmon moon crests the hills and rises against the darkening inky sky,

My fella reads in the fading light as the boat drifts and turns,

Conor and Brian fish, changing baits, few words, a meeting of minds?

And clove tobacco smoke drifts, sweetness in the mouth and in the air.

 

 The fish jump, not big perhaps but they announce their presence again and again…and again

Swarming may-fly just hatched, charge like an express train in their thousands, like a speedway across the boat, Conor ducks and laughs.

Last night in the light of the setting sun, one, ten, scores of tiny bats swooped and spiralled behind us, above the boat’s wake.

And the trails of three parallel jet planes looked like distant, incoming meteors.

Kayaking, the sweet feeling as you glide and watch, feel the river, and the fishing, are done for another year,

And clove tobacco smoke drifts, sweetness in the mouth and in the air.

 

 

© Vincent Creelan 2006

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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The Number 3

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I see a yellow number three,

Fixed high upon a tall, long dead tree.

Its roots, branches, bark, is shorn; and

Now with wires and cables it looks so forlorn.

 

Standing lonely as it has done for years.

Quite dead, discoloured, and yet it appears,

It carries power, light and even chatter,

To our homes and lives, and that’s what matters.

 

Long lost cousins all look on,

Fir, Ash, Lime, Beech and even Almond

It’s a scene repeated a million times,

Just one more example of our bloodless crimes.

 

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Mrs Robinson.

 

Fuck you,

Yes you Mrs Robinson.

We listened to your high brow

High road, I love the sinner;

Hate the sin platitudes.

I sat before you, your hand,

Resting on not one

But two bibles!

Fresh and as relevant as

Today’s newspaper.

You ranted,

 I listened,

To your racist, sectarian

 hate filled  moral potty mouth.

Was there no one you didn’t paint

With that weary old Whitehouse brush.

Teenagers, now that was a good one.

You in your black leathers, and ‘oh

I wouldn’t touch those Free Presbyterians

With a barge pole, bless them”

However, that young man,

Well his yard of teen age filth,

Was another matter entirely.

Your fall from grace, or into

Madness, who can say, was

Hard, brutal, anguished. So,

Now you know, a little

Of how it feels. I for one,

neither love or forgive the sinner.

In your own words;

You disgust me.

Fuck you,

Yes you Mrs Robinson.

 

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