A SEAT ON THE TRAIN

 

A factory man
forged in fights
on streets
and bars
on iron clad nights
and a local girl
born and raised
in longing,
loss
and dreams unglazed
who crash sometimes
behind the shades
to drink,
to fuck,
to drop their blades
on this desert town
of dirt and dust,
of cactus,
crows
and mounting rust.

An old train tears
right through the town
to tense,
to tease
all those around,
it rarely stops,
just blows on through
the drab,
the dust,
that vacant view.

A factory man
forged in fights
on streets
and bars
with small town sights

and a local girl
born and raised
who now owns
a ticket
toward freedom days.

All words and photographs by Damien B. Donnelly

Audio version available on SoundCloud:

https://soundcloud.com/damien-donnelly-2/a-seat-on-the-train

 

 

FIRST THRUST

 

There
in the crook of hope,
like fluff caught
in the navel,
of youth barely tasted,
(I had barely licked air)
of freedom newly found,
(note: first flights often fail)
of fulfillment
before it failed
(before we faded),
I am in a bed
in Belfast
no longer bloody
(the city not yet I)
no longer blown to bits
(the streets not yet my hope)
and we are better
than I believed,
trusting in our thrusts,
truer than we were
and more lasting,
more intact
than reality
left that first kiss
(already gone once it’s given)
of something bright,
of freedom felt
before it was shattered
on my bed;
bloody
and blown to bits,
I, not the city.

We were never
more than momentary
(a training ground
for grown-up toddlers),
a meeting at Bewelys
(when it was creative
and cozy like cuddles
when it’s cold
and still accommodating
after clubs)
when Dublin
was still my day,
was still within interest
(when its size didn’t matter;
isn’t it all relative?)
a courting over coffee
(footsies in the shadow
of a table that wobbled
on the third floor
near the theatre
and therein the warning;
unstable and all an act)
in the afternoon,
in the aftermath
of my outing;
freshly feathered bird
on the first flight
from the nest
from the tit;
the search
for something new
to suck from,
so full on faith,
so blind to the fall
but eager to climb
over dreams,
over desires,
over you in the end,
(or up from under you)
obstacles to rise to,
to arouse me
(did you arose me
or just your attention
to trembling erection?)
obstacles that came
until they were gone
and other conquests
(obstacles become conquests)
took their place
in my head,
in my bed
after I’d cleaned up
what had been left
broken
by our blast.
A bright wave
in the dark enlightenment
of a Dublin night
by the shore
swept off the ring
that wrapped us
(faith falling from finger)
when your wandering ways
and hands and eyes
(that turned like tides)
washed over
my innocence
(my Disney-like devotion)
and drowned
your deviations
and my dedications
to the blind side.
We’d been better
in Belfast
after the conflicts,
in that bed
that night
before our conflict,
but that was just one act,
one thrust
before dublin
demolished
the trust
that was an illusion
revealed
behind the crook
of the curtain
of our pale play
with too trite twists.

All words and photographs by Damien B. Donnelly

Audio version available on SoundCloud:

https://soundcloud.com/damien-donnelly-2/first-thrust

SING NOT OF SATISFACTION

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I’ve looked for you
in corners of the past
no longer concerned
with connections
to considerations
I once cradled
(we never cradled)
but since carefully
filed and folded
(like pictures pressed
into pages of albums
never opened)
into a folder
of foolishness
fantasised
on foreign fields,
though never fertile,
though never suitable
for the fondness
we felt but never held,
a fleeting flirtation
we never saw
to fruition,
no admission,
no submission
to mounting
attraction,
seduction
(sing not of satisfaction!)

I’ve seen you
still surviving
in the shadow
of sleep’s delusions;
delirious distractions,
abstractions
of colour and light
of ‘could have beens’
that blanket me
in mistruths,
piling passion
into pillows
never pressed
with your lips
or my caress
to your comfort,
sojourns of sleep
that soothe not
the waking visions
violated by your
polar position,
leaving me
breathless
in the restless
dark naked night,
far too far
from your face,
your flesh,
your form.

Album
barely filled,
rarely opened,
never disregarded.

All Words and Sketches by Damien B. Donnelly

Audio version available on SoundCloud:

https://soundcloud.com/damien-donnelly-2/sing-not-of-satisfaction

 

 

ONCE, ON A SUNDAY

 

And I see you
standing with apron on
on a Sunday morning,
rollers turning
mum’s sleep
into mother’s style
like time turns
moments into memory,
I see you there
roasting
in the kitchen
before the bacon’s burnt
and the sausages sizzle,
before the decision
of where to go
to find God
(we were faithful then
but never loyal)
hoping to find him
singing somewhere
as it’s Sunday
and it’s spring
and everything seems better
with a song
aside from the peas
you’ve been steeping
since last night (after Dallas)
Mum’s marrow
and soon to be mushy
peas peer back at me
from the distant pan
on a distant Sunday
in the kitchen
on the yellow lino
and the yellow
caged canaries
who died
in their dozens
(careful excavating the yard)
as the morning
moans towards mass,
moves in the memory;
time springing
from somewhere dormant
to somehow recalled.

And I see me
up the stairs
in the biggest room
for the only child
(I took the box-room
for a change of air
in summer)
drawing daydreams
and escape roots
on wooden floors
I stained one summer,
neath the reds walls
others thought angry
and I thought cozy,
maybe happy little me,
happy in my own anger,
happy on my own,
in my own bitter brooding,
brooding for better days
and lips to kiss,
a kiss,
the simplicity of a kiss,
had not yet tasted
from tender lips
that kiss of betrayal
(had not yet tasted
that first kiss
which is gone
once it’s given)
me, in my red walled room
waiting for the hold,
no longer forbidden,
no longer unacceptable,
a bedroom of shelter,
of sanctuary,
of singing out,
out of tune,
out of need,
out of want,
to break out,
I’d repainted walls
and pulled down closets
at 16
now I just needed
to come out of one!

And I see you
in the distance
in that time
that spring recalls
from slumber,
from the window
above the garden,
by the van,
the travelling van,
that white van,
that smelly van
(truly)
washing,
always washing
as if trying to find
something
in all that grease,
in all that confusion;
wash, shine, polish,
harder, rougher,
harder on yourself,
harder on the rest of us,
silence
for the rest of us,
sorrow in the springtime,
no marrow on the bone,
no back bone!
Oh hush now,
you hear me,
you can’t get
beneath the surface
with brute force;
it’s not as strong
as the brute you spray
in the morning
on your frown.
Stop!
See the reflection
in what you have
not just the objection!
Look Daddy;
see it all,
it was all right there
in the kitchen
in her apron,
in the bedroom
in my closet,
she’ll grow tired of you
(she did before)
her foot’s been out the door
longer than it’s been in it!
(Was it ever fully in it?).
Shut it
if you wanna keep it,
have it,
hold it,
for they’re about to run away
and leave you with nothing
but the marrow
going mushy
in the pan
that I never
acquired a taste for,
just like cars
and polish
and peas
and the pieces of you
I couldn’t put together.
Three peas in a pod
that I never learned
to swallow
on a Sunday
in a Spring
that time just can’t digest.

All Words and drawings by Damien B. Donnelly

Audio version available on Soundcloud: 

https://soundcloud.com/damien-donnelly-2/once-on-a-sunday

THE FIGHT THAT CAME BEFORE ME

 

I am standing
because others have fallen,
I am carefree
because others were brave,
I am kissed
because others were beaten,
I am open
because others were caged,
I am integrated
because others were segregated,
I am enraged
because others were electrocuted.

I am vocal
while others were silenced,
I am loved
while others were shamed,
I feel change
while others were chained,
I feel inspired
by others who were restrained.

I am walking
on the path others paved,
I am thankful
my days weren’t so cursed,
I am grateful
to those who came before
and will never be ignorant
to the fight that came first.

I am happy
to stand in the shadow
of those who fought

for the right
to live

in the light
of love.

All words and photographs by Damien B. Donnelly

Audio version available at Soundcloud:

https://soundcloud.com/damien-donnelly-2/the-fight-that-came-first

SOMETHING MORE

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If I asked you
would you sever the skin
from your body
            layer by layer
and blanket me
in your living flesh?

Maybe the nights would feel warmer.

If I asked you
would you bleed the blood
from your body
            value from veins
and feed me
with the liquor that lives in you?

Maybe the pain would taste different.

If I asked you
would you ease your eyes
from your body
            sight from sockets
so I that maybe
I could understand your vision?

Maybe the emptiness would look like less

and less
            endless
the end of less and less.

I never asked you
but you fucked me over
anyway

to pleasure your flesh
to boil your blood
to darken your eyes

I never asked you!

Maybe
I should have asked
            for something more!

All words and photographs by Damien B. Donnelly

Audio version available on Soundcloud:

https://soundcloud.com/damien-donnelly-2/something-more