DAYS IN THE DAM

 

It’s funny
how you slip in
along the side lines
on days that don’t deliver
that don’t distract.

It’s strange
how you pull me
from the pit falls
on days when I feel undone
when I feel attacked.

It’s alarming
how you linger
in the background.

It’s odd
how you hold me
despite the distance
even though
I thought us done.

It’s funny
how you trickle by
when bikes blow past
and windmills bellow.
Its funny how a land
can be as addictive
as a hand to hold
a tie to bind
and a heart to heal.

All Words and Photographs by Damien B. Donnelly

All Photography taken in Amsterdam, The Netherlands 

WORDS LIKE THE WALRUS

 

What are words
when they don’t just
wander in weary

What are words
when not wild waffle
but wonders
weaved with wisdom
and written with worth

Words
are like water
washing over the reader
in warm waves

Words
are like wings
raising the receiver
from worrying days

Words
are the world

Words
can be whispers
that wake you

Words
can be ripples
that shake you

Words
are like the welcome wind
on a warm weekend

Words
can be the witness
to all that must walk to its end

Words
can be weapons
in a world waged on war,
weak and enslaved

Words
can be wonderful,
like a walrus
rising over the waves

Words are the world.

All Words and Photographs by Damien B. Donnelly

Photograph taken on the Champ de Mars by the Wall of Peace, Paris

LA MERE ET MOI

Last weekend my mother and her two sisters, the identical triplets of Lusk, Co Dublin, the women who shaped my life, came to visit me in Paris for my mums birthday. Mum has been celebrating her birthday abroad with me since I first moved to Paris in 1997, and then to London and then to Amsterdam and now back to Paris again. Some things, it seems, never change. The below poem I wrote 18 years ago after mums first visit…

Mum and I on my street 22 July 2016

IMG_1583

IMG_1580

IMG_1582

The Sisters

IMG_1584

Birthday celebrations at La Rotunde, Montparnasse, Paris

IMG_1586

IMG_1730

Aspirational house hunting by Parc Montsouris

IMG_1728

Wishful thinking

IMG_1725

Blondes in the Parc

IMG_1662

Fairytales

IMG_1745

 

I am sure it was Spring but in the scattered photos
by my slippered feet the weather recalls it winter.
Your first foray into the new world I had run to,
forsaking the familiar for the unknown,
discarding childish ways for other adult desires.

Your glistening eyes lit up as I showed you
the treasures I had found, enlightened eyes that hid
so well the tears reeked down since my departure.
Eyes that frowned upon my green sofa bed
resting but a foot from the floor, that laughed
at the view from my first window; just another window
perched but a hands throw away and loving eyes
that saw through mine and smiled; relieved,
relaxed and enthralled. And quickly you began
to revel amid it all; my new transitory family
who took you to their hearts, tempted you with cocktails,
boat rides and frolics within a Spanish tavern
in the Frenchest of all cities where you slowly found
my raison d’être and the joie that had become part
of ma vie became, as always, a part of yours.
My adventure you, now, a witness to, a part of
and integral to. You had been no more deserted
by me than I by you and so geography became now
no more than a different view and no longer
a means of separation. You floated through the city,
your feet feeling nothing but comfort
even as I dragged you up the steps of Montmartre,
hiding from you the lift behind the trees.
With the wind freezing our faces and tears
streaming from our eyes, we huddled together
in queues filled with adolescent vacationers
and mounted fair Tour Eiffel. Through the night’s
falling darkness the city lit up below us
and I traced for you the paths I had taken.

You left amid only tears of joy, my life no longer
to you an empty canvas a world away, but a painting
being filled up and coloured in, in tri-colour, technicolour,
Damien colour. We painted away the days and nights
ourselves, Mother and son, as inseparable as Mona
from Lisa or the Moulin from the Rouge.

It may have looked like winter but we knew
that behind the wind lay a spring in bloom
for both of us. We had earned our time in the sun
and we would wear its rays like medals of honour.

 

From the vault, Paris 1998.

All Words and Photographs (except the ones I’m in) by Damien B. Donnelly

 

 

 

THE RACE OF MAN

 

Barriers
are just illusions;
a twist of lights
delusions

Colour
is just a feature;
a twist of our own
nature

Race
is just a reasoning;
a word with too much
meaning

Man
is flesh and bone
and breaks when stands
alone.

All words and photographs by Damien B. Donnelly

STILL NIGHT

 

Still night,

still light
in corners
not yet caressed
by shadows,

in thoughts
not yet crushed
by dreams

that will never
see the light,

that stilled light
that lingers

beneath
the stillness
of the night.

All Words and Photographs by Damien B. Donnelly

WILFUL IN THE WILD

 

Wilful in ways worrisome 
like in the wilderness weaned,
he was born of the breeze
and bound from baby to be breathless 

and when they caught him he said;

‘When I lay me down
let the ground make of me what it wants,
let the soil seek substance beneath my skin.’

Reckless in ruthless rebellion
like the river ravages routes,
too timid to be touched
and too tormented to be tamed 

and when they chained him he said;

‘When I lay me down
let the sun make of me what it wants
let its rays find rest on my remains.’

But as they strung him up
he heard, in the distance, the feathers running restless,
and as they pulled the rope
he knew, in the mountains, the vultures were hovering

eager, at last, to make a meal out of what was a beast of a man.

 

All Words and Photographs by Damien B. Donnelly

Photograph taken just outside of Galway in Ireland.

Audio version available on Soundcloud:

PARISIAN PROTECTION

 

And there stands
reassurance
right on front of me
at the exits of metros
still moving behind me,
where men,
always black men,
always banlieue,
who I recognise
from the streets
yesterday begging for bread,
now search
for bombs in bags
so Parisians feel more protected.
Really Paris,
is this your position
or are you just trying
to reduce the homeless
by placing then closer
to possible blasts
and kill two birds
with the one bomb?
Unarmed, untrained
and unexplained
boys looking for
booby traps
that would only
make them collapse
if they found one.
These gullible gangstas
are no MacGyvers.
Appearances, it seems,
in Paris are still everything
while the streets
stink with rubbish
hiding the homeless
from the tourists,
the jobless, non-nationals,
uninsurable non-entities,
at least the ones
you haven’t yet picked
to reassure commuters
that dangers are being derailed
before style trends board trains.

 

All Words and Photographs by Damien B. Donnelly

IN THE GARDEN OF MOTHER EARTH

 

Mother,
the path
has been puzzling
and there are patterns
now, penetrating patterns
once thought impossible, entwined
around veins, like vines that vie for vittles
on walls already wavering, on buildings bare
as if each brick banished is a breath
broken,
Mother,
I carry more
now than before
but fragments have flown,
not yet cremated but I’ve scattered
ashes over mischievous maestros who tussled
tarnished tunes along my tissue, who cut cords, crude
and often crippling, who leeched the lyrics from my limbs
when I thought a relationship meant relenting to the rhythm,
when I thought love was a note
never ending,
Mother,
we’ve seen
how sacrifice
can separate mother
from her making, little girl
blue you had to give up and woman
who had let me go, the root cut from rose,
adapting far from the garden of creation, but we
adapted to adoption as if it wasn’t an option, as it wasn’t
a question, for there was always
a connection,
Mother,
I see you
with the bud
of your womb now
returned to you as woman,
your vines reattaching as nature
intended while I rarely regard the roots
of my own becoming, still too busy looking
up and over, looking always for the next interchange
and questioning every other connection in a garden scattered
with those ashes, the bush burning
as the blossom still blooms,
but Mother,
I’m more you
than the woman
who made me, I am
more product of the carer
than sewer of the seed who
so long ago saw the sacrifice
in her own soil and replanted my life
in your warm embrace,
Mother,
I’ve seen stars
setting fires to skies
in other lands where other
oceans wash over other sands,
stars that still fade, though they are far,
sands that still sweep into all consuming currents
while populations ponder the same problems as stars
flicker out and time slips
through our hands,
Mother,
I’ve seen money
makers in plastic palaces
following white lines to narcotic
nirvanas as if salvation was snortable,
I’ve seen wiser men, on the sojourn, in India,
blind to all light, perhaps shielded from the fight,
holding tight to a smile that has slipped from our grip
with eyes still able to trap the light, with hearts too hungry
for more of more of more, polluting once stubborn seas as we
rape other roads, take other fruit from other gardens, while blind men
begged for nothing and saw more than I could
ever imagine,
Mother,
the days
are now shorter
and even before night
falls there is less light that falls
and people are crying in the streets,
the flowers are folding and retreating into
the dirt as if hell might be better, Mama, people
are dying in discos and in diners and in school halls
where they should be learning to be better, not leaving blood
behind on broken desks and chalkboards with equations that don’t add up
because the book has been swapped
for the bomb,
Mama,
there are
horrors happening
now, not yearly, but daily,
one chaos no longer fills one
book, but one chapter, followed by
another and another with no let up, no
intermission, our gardens becoming desert
landscapes as all that tries to exist is destroyed,
as all that was once deemed right is declared wrong,
as all rights are removed and all races viewed
as radicals,
Mother,
they’ve mistaken
the mask for the man
and they can’t see though
those smiles I’ve staged to still
the shadows that line these lines,
these lives played out upon my breaking
breast, pouring like riverbeds raging over banks,
over blank pages, drowning them with tales, twists
and turns, loves and losses that have taken up home
below the shivering skin, mostly uninvited, like wild flowers
in the garden, like weeds we mistake to be worthy of their place
till the thorns bear
their treachery,
but Mother,
amid the mayhem
there are moments magic,
there are babies being heard
with first breaths beating, there are skies
singing of the sunrise, there are still sunsets
still sweeping shores where lovers still linger, long
after the first kiss, there are words whispered on winds,
glorious hymns of hope and heroes and there is art, still
filling walls with light and life, there is music
and there is, as always,
your smile
Mother,
life is a series
of spirals, not just circles,
for it elevates on the turn, not
just levitates, for I am back, again,
at the beginning, but frail are the things
once thought familiar in this once foreign land
I fled and feared never to return, in this land where
nothing changes while everything moves and the shadows
I once knew have up and vanished and grass is growing where
once there was concrete and concrete has crushed all that was once
green and grand and 40 is not as adventurous as 20 but the questions
still remain unanswered so there is no turning back because, as I said, the vines
have entangled themselves around me, in this garden I’ve grazed in, from a distance,
for so long, pulling across my chest, either aching or yearning, they are drawing me down,
down towards the ground, down, at last, to regard the roots of where it all began,
so long ago, when I first dared to ask;

Mother,
Will we ever have all the answers?

All words and drawings by Damien B. Donnelly

Self portrait at 19 in the Botanical gardens, Dublin

Audio version available on Soundcloud:

https://soundcloud.com/damien-donnelly-2/in-the-garden-of-mother-earth