Three Poems – DS Maolalai

Cold fireworks.

we came out of the car,

sleepy and falling asleep,

lazy as coal nuggets

rolling from torn

open coalsacks. 1am – stars out

and all over leitrim. wonderful;

like looking through windows

to christmas and seeing the trees.

I remember being 8

and my parents

pushing bedward. We’d come

from the movies,

it was winter and a city boy –

I’d never expected

such sky. sky

over countryside

clear as water,

sparkling

like water. as big as my parents,

big as horses and god

and big buildings.

I went inside

still spinning, my life

doing cartwheels. I remember

“cold fireworks”. I remember

other things.

The handyman

to lay out

some phrase

clean as tiles

in a bathroom.

something

to be torn out

when someone

moves in.

Making footprints.

sky empty, all clear

and wide open,

no colour – the colour

of walls in a short-

rental flat. the world

a cracked egg and a cold

pouring downward,

the yolk sticking hard

to the pan and the tines

of a fork. we were walking

the park. we were drinking;

making footprints together

which sank into frost-

stiffened grass. fallen

leaves lying there, crisping

beneath us, as chipped

and as brittle as used

china cups. on the ponds

the ducks stood about

looking quite foolish,

confused in their tottering

iced afternoons.

pausing a moment

and drinking our wine,

throwing sticks in the warm

joy of winter. we listened

to whistles as they slid

on the surface,

going end over end

over end. they could

have been sirens

which played in the distance,

whooping out dopplers

and going away.

Illustration : Paul Reshmi

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