UNDER LEAF IN THE GARDEN

 

Here in this garden
beneath the trunks of trees, towering;
like funnels stretched to sun, suckling,
under a lid of leaves,
little leaves, light leaves,
the leaves of grass,
precious petals procure colour,
caresses of colour bursting bright
as if tempered by a tenuous touch,
like tears on the angel’s cheek at night
no longer seen, no longer heard,
colour, crawling through the chaos,
fragile flickers of faith
falling under footsteps.

I hear the heavens wail as you walk,
walls falling under flattening feet
as what was light and life
returns to soil,
fowled and foiled from strife.

We are all petals in the garden,
in this garden of greed and glory,
looking for a leaf to live under,
as we unfold the shrouds of our story,
ravenous to raise our arms to the sunlight,
striving to be seen in bolts of colour, bright,
breathtaking colour,
brilliant colour,
before we fall under foot
and return, once again,
to the waste and the worms
already twisting and turning,
already sensing our scent,
so confident they are
to conquer our carcasses
when our dreams are done
and our names carved into cement.

All words and photographs by Damien B. Donnelly

MORE OR LESS SENSELESS NONSENSE

 

What if spiders were pink
What if rats had a perm
What if mozzies sang sweetly
What if fear was just a term

What if mice poohed diamonds
What if worms wore hats
What if medicine tasted of vodka
What if lions were the size of cats

What makes thunder threatening
What makes darkness dour
What makes silence sinister
What makes lemons sour

What if pigs wore perfume
What if sweat didn’t stink
What if Monday was Friday
What if nothing was as we think

What if panthers had pigtails
What if ants wore pants
What if ghosts were glitzy
What would you rhyme with pants

What if sad was happy
What if funny was just a taste
What if the end was just the beginning
What if this poem is too silly to paste?