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Steve Denehan

wave

1

winter

2020

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the poet

Steve Denehan lives in Ireland with his wife Eimear and daughter Robin. A widely published, award-winning poet, he's the author of two chapbooks and two collections (one of which is forthcoming from Salmon Press). He's been nominated for The Pushcart Prize, Best of the Net and Best New Poet.

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the poems

Fists

00:00 / 02:01

It took me forty thousand punches to realise

forty thousand too many

sure, I landed a few, enough to take me to this ring

but he is quick as light and made of iron and his punches

his punches come again, and again, and again


the fists of my father, my mother, my schoolmates, of God himself

the glancing blows, the blows of the children I saw for half an hour

last Christmas eve


I am winded from two body shots unseen

I disguise it

but he knows, I look in his eyes, he knows

he comes for me and though the ring is an infinite thing

I can find no place to hide


then, an opening, a tunnel for my right hand and

I watch my fist blur toward him and

feel the contact rock the columns of his temple and

he is dazed and he is mine and his eyes look through me

and I call upon that old right hand one last time

the hand that signed my title deeds, my wedding certificate

my divorce papers

the hand that held my babies, that held your face before that first kiss

my sledgehammer, my bomb

but, it is so heavy now

and the fuse won’t light, and then, I know


two seconds pass

two seconds that will stretch over all my days

two seconds when it was all there, another world

two seconds when I betray myself, as I always do


and so, I wait, with nothing left

to get what I deserve and when he comes

I do not run, and I am baptised in a flood of fists


I fall through the roar of the crowd and am caught

by the blanket of childhood

the lights above are so bright, and so pure, and just beyond my reach


I lie on my back and watch dozens of moths

in frenzied compulsion

flying head first into the lights again

and again, and again

Jesus or Rasputin

00:00 / 00:46

I wonder how many times these raindrops have fallen

they land on the attic window

loud and heavy

reminding us that eventually

they will win


I wonder what these raindrops have fallen on

spitfires and lollipops

brides and widows

endings, beginnings,

endings


I wonder if these raindrops have fallen

on Hitler or Harold Lloyd,

Cleopatra or Elvis,

you,

Jesus

or Rasputin


the sky is a grey lake

pouring itself upon us

muddying the garden

puddling the drive

trapping us, again

it is June

Plastic Bag

00:00 / 01:03

We stood on the canal bank

under a bruise of a sky

she was full of questions

questions that

as usual

I couldn’t answer

we stared at the fish

“What type of fish is that?”

“How can you tell which fish are boys and which are girls?”

“Why is a swarm of fish called a school?”

“How many fish are there?”


I don’t know

I don’t know

I don’t know

I don’t know


she pointed at a plastic bag in the water near the far bank

“Is that a jellyfish?”

I did know

I told her that she was a silly monkey

that it was just a plastic bag

that jellyfish would never be in a canal

only in the sea

in saltwater

she was quiet

for a moment


“Would jellyfishes like canals?”

“Why is there salt in the sea?”

“Will there ever be salt in the canal?”

“Who put that plastic bag there?”


I don’t know

I don’t know

I don’t know

I don’t know

Publishing credits

Fists: The Irish Times (February 2019) – a Hennessy

  New Irish Writing 2019 winner

Jesus or Rasputin: Miles of Sky Above Us, Miles of Earth Below

 (Cajun Mutt Press)

Plastic Bag: exclusive first publication by iamb

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