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Georgia Hilton

wave

2

spring

2020

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the poet

Georgia Hilton is a poet and fiction writer originally from Ireland who lives now in Winchester, England. In 2018, her poem Dark-Haired Hilda Replies to Patrick Kavanagh was joint winner of the Brian Dempsey Memorial Prize – her debut pamphlet, I went up the lane quite cheerful, being published by Dempsey & Windle that same year. Georgia’s first collection, Swing, is also published by Dempsey & Windle.

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the poems

Dark-Haired Hilda Replies
to Patrick Kavanagh

00:00 / 01:26

On Raglan Road I saw you first

a dishevelled man with heavy

black-framed glasses. So severe

you looked but you had a wound

that made you beautiful.


After we talked that first day, I

dreamt of you. You were walking

towards me very fast and purposeful

with an intent that might have been

mistaken for malice, had I


not loved you. I abandoned

caution at first. But my father gave me

a great gift when he said to me, Hilda,

you cannot eat words and air,

so I became a doctor

and married the engineer.


​But not before I had given you

poems with your own name in them,

given you my youth. Let you open

the catch to a window in my mind,

thinking I would fly, but you had me

chained to a pedestal. I,


​no marble idol, just a flesh

and blood woman. And you were always

an awful man for the drink, you said so

yourself, Patrick. Oh to think

I might have been one of those

sorry women who follow


​their husbands to the pub screaming

for them to come home before they spend

the rest of the housekeeping. I might

be a creature made of clay, Patrick,

in fact, I’m sure I am,


​but you have a brass neck

calling yourself an angel.

Cinderella

00:00 / 01:19

If I were to slip into the river,

it would not be at Poor Man’s

Kilkee, where teenagers

and vagrants take their ease

with cans of lager.


Nor would it be on O’Callaghan’s

Strand, where the grey silt

is deep, deep and a dozen swans

are on the slipway.


Nor would I make a dramatic

leap off Sarsfield Bridge

by the boat club, where an

indecisive light flickers

over the martyrs of 1916.


No – I would choose this

stretch, just downstream

of the Curraghower

with views of King John’s Castle

and Thomond Bridge.


By day the seagulls swoop

and dive, swans fight

the estuary current,

and you can see the hills

of Clare beyond the bend

of the river at the Island Field.


But by night my eyes are drawn

only to the water –

the roiling inky black

inviting me to shed

my history,

surrender my skin.


The old stone steps are there,

I would not need to climb or jump

but simply descend like a debutante –

keeping both shoes on.

On the Naming

of Convict Ships

00:00 / 00:45

It seems cruel to name a convict ship

the Eleanor. Eleanor, after all,

is the parson’s daughter,

who smiled at you once or twice.

You could no more touch her

than you can touch thin air.


Eliza is the girl who took your hand

at the county fair.

Caroline is your sister, Georgiana

the grim mistress you have only

glimpsed on horseback.


Jane is the governess at Manor Farm.

Mary is the dairyman’s daughter.

Elizabeth the name you sometimes murmur

in your sleep, and Isabella is someone

you will never meet. Isabelle, Isabella,

Bella, Belle.

Publishing credits

Dark-Haired Hilda Replies to Patrick Kavanagh:

  I went up the lane quite cheerful (Dempsey & Windle)

Cinderella: Lunate

On The Naming of Convict Ships: Swing (Dempsey & Windle)

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