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Michael McCarthy grew up on a farm in West Cork, Ireland. His first poetry collection Birds' Nests and Other Poems won the Patrick Kavanagh Award. His children's books have been translated into seventeen languages. He works as a priest in North Yorkshire.
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For the people among whom I grew up, and for you who have sustained me in life and in poetry.
Thanks to the editors of the following, in which some of these poems first appeared:
London Magazine, The North, Other Poetry, Poetry Ireland Review, The Rialto, The Shop, Stride, and The Tablet. 'The Fields' won the Leslie Richardson Award.
Some of these poems appeared in the pamphlet Cold Hill Pond (Smith/Doorstop Books, 2007).
Also by Michael McCarthy:Birds' Nests and Other Poems (Bradshaw books)The Story Of Noah and the Ark (Barefoot Books)The Story of Daniel and the Lion's Den (Barefoot Books)
DedicationAcknowledgementsContents
The FieldsOur HouseBelow The WellTo SchoolBlue JumperLearningHeading HomeKnittingJanuaryEverestSmokingThat SummerEnglish Exam
Bobby KennedyShroggs ParkShillelagh37 Grasmere DriveOliveTheologically SpeakingSaxton ChurchyardRoom at the InnRemembering HanyangIn The BeginningNoddfaTransfiguration
Long Road to LondonIrish MiceJasperStainless SteelBrains of a TeapotIn ReverseArriving BackBeachcombing
UnderpassThe AccidentTread SoftlyDelayedCold Hill PondReturningNot Being a SingerIs It YourselfScarfEclipseThe TownPortrait
The AppointmentPassing OutPatientMistaken IdentityAsparagus TipsWhite FlowersVolivoliDuetAt The RacesLast Will and T
Biography
Before Aunt Nora ever sent me that prayer book
with the red cover, before St Albert the Great
and The Man Who Got Even With God, before
school books and books from the Library Van
I was reading the fields and the run of the land.
The pathway that ran straight as a story
through the middle of the field below the house
coming to a full stop at the well. The pond
where the gander ruled and the geese hissed
the hill-field, and the meadow with the chained bull.
The brake, its folds dressed forever in yellow furze
with spiders hiding in their nylon webs. Pairc na Phurt,
the bog, the field where the rabbits sat on the rock
and the Camlach field, and the road that ran down
to the inches, to the river singing its own song.
The big inch where we learned to swim, the coarse inch
where we galloped the horse, the long inch where
the hares had their set and the flood came out,
and the spot where my father hid, up to his nose
after drowning the dog, the time of the Black and Tans.
The gravel field with the dug-out where they slept,
the briar field, Catherine's bog, Conaic na Muc,
Graif na Linnga, Claishe Ghapail, the fields by the road,
the field at the cross. The Moonaideen, Pairc na Bharrica,
the cabbage garden, and the field in front of the house.
Fields where cows grazed in summer then trudged home
weighed down with milk; where heifers stood stock-still
under trees, drizzle gathering like jewels on their backs.
The field where the fox jumped out through the ferns
brazen as the sky with a hen in his mouth.
Fields in spring where potato drills were lines on a page.
Autumn fields lyrical with oats, verses of barley in stooks.
Turnips in winter fields, exclamation marks on frozen ground.
They're all one field now, ditches a thing of the past.
Under my bare feet still the grammar of the grass.
In the hallway: a holy water font on the door jamb.
On the hall-stand your father's hat. Beside the stairs
- linoleum covered with brass rods - a picture (a woman
in a blue dress) with verse: The Road of Friendship,
and framed, a list of names: West Cork's Heroic Dead.
In the kitchen: the fireplace between twin hobs.
On the range - Modern Mistress - a kettle and large pot.
From the chimney the smell of soot. On the clevy:
a come-lately radio, a tea caddy with sailors, sugar
in a Fox's Mint jar. Nine rosary beads hang from a hook.
On the wall: the clock with key inside. A lamp flickering
before the Sacred Heart. Next to the settle bed, a bucket
with spring water. A dark ring on the ceiling over the Tilley lamp.
On the dresser: a jug of milk, large Wilton patterned plates,
glue marks where a tinker repaired the cracks.
In the parlour: a big round table, six horsehair chairs, one broken.
A chaise longue. Chiffonier with purple breakfast cups and china set.
Silver teapot. Another, elephant-shaped, with black woman riding on top.
A clock on the mantel-piece, the time always at five o clock.
On the wall: your parents wedding; a picture of your brother aged ten.
Mushrooms grow wild in the round field,
The dewy grass hides each bald head.
You can pick a few and bring them home,
As many in your hands as there is room.
Don't put them in your pocket, you'll forget
and they'll only get bruised and break.
Peel them, lay them on the range, let them sit.
Watch their pink ridges darken and go flat.
When they start to sizzle put them on a plate,
Let them cool, then sprinkle them with salt.
Lift them up with a fork, don't spill the juice.
Shape your lips like you were giving a kiss.
They'll be like the host on your tongue only hot
and they won't stick to the roof of your mouth.
Summer time and the short sleeves, and no shoes
and rabbits bobbing west-side of Sean Neill's bog.
Dew on the grass, and the gap in the ditch,
and frog spawn in the long-go flax pond,
and the water-works and the briars by the big tank
and smoke from Johnny Noonan's one chimney.
The faucet like a small fountain beside the river
where Mrs Noonan gets the water for their tea,