Pages

Monday 12 January 2015

Back (In Mind) Across The Irish Sea

He told me his wife was having an affair
He had taken some time out to stay with his sister, herself a recovering schizophrenic
With a dedication to The Mass that he admired, he admired her dedication greatly

Earlier, and the reason I am writing this, he told me he had seen the light
He was staring out to sea, on the cliffs of his hometown near Donegal
He had become at one with peace, he had found inner love (my words not his)

He said that if I wanted to find it I had to be prepared, I had to make myself ready
It would be hard work but it would be uniquely fulfilling
He sold me on his story, which also included only ever telling the truth, the truth as he saw it


This is the final poem, I hope you enjoyed the journey
From Christopher Sanderson's Ireland Poems
Read free in Ibooks on Itunes here
Listen free on soundcloud here
Watch free on youtube here
Read and download for free from ISSUU here

Sunday 11 January 2015

Return Ferry Cross The Irish Sea

How many more ideas might a man have that he hasn’t the time to write them all down
Moving across the horizon, speeding towards the mainland
Something about the paintings of John Miller’s seas
And his Cornish summer sandbars


From Christopher Sanderson's Ireland Poems
Read free in Ibooks on Itunes here
Listen free on soundcloud here
Watch free on youtube here
Read and download for free from ISSUU here

Saturday 10 January 2015

Vacation, Vacation

I thought to take the train to Dublin, take a glass or two in the Palace Bar
Leave my place west of Killarney, out on the headland, past Dingle Bay
I’d meet a fair-minded legal couple who would tell me of their land
Of planting trees and building houses, for the returning poor folks to stay
I’d hear talk of a new kind of landlord, a guardian of his own destined way
He’d pay a Welsh man to carve his pastures, in the ideal of Capability Brown
His mission was tied into the desire for a legacy, to be achieved through land and book
He would read all that he could, such that one day he should write his own piece
So complete, and so succinct, so much more in the line of Hemingway and land
Than of F.Scott Fitzgerald’s labours, with the splintered souls of soul-less society


From Christopher Sanderson's Ireland Poems
Read free in Ibooks on Itunes here
Listen free on soundcloud here
Watch free on youtube here
Read and download for free from ISSUU here

Friday 9 January 2015

Back Streets

I take myself out of the dereliction, feeling unsafe in the squalid world of the half-life
I retire to the Japanese coffee shop and art gallery, where jazz music plays soulful
I look back on my photographs of Beckett, and that wild phantom of a man whose name evades me right now
Yet twenty five years past I saw his ghostly portraits, back then I thought, as I think now, there is the man who captured the troubled soul
The French jazz singer seemingly achieves only that half-way point of angst, in her search for today’s equilibrium


From Christopher Sanderson's Ireland Poems
Read free in Ibooks on Itunes here
Listen free on soundcloud here
Watch free on youtube here
Read and download for free from ISSUU here

Thursday 8 January 2015

Straight Lines; Obtuse Angles

Old rectangles came into my life today, in walls with windows, in hallways with stairs, in tall tales of Pythagoras on the road to Donegal
Thin slots, reminiscent of the rill constructed in another’s garden’, with log, with neoprene, with sand and water on the road to Nowhere
Alarm bells in square boxes guard the heavy wooded doors, elsewhere John Singer Sergeant is kept from public view, although if I recall he was on the road to Venice


From Christopher Sanderson's Ireland Poems
Read free in Ibooks on Itunes here
Listen free on soundcloud here
Watch free on youtube here
Read and download for free from ISSUU here