Tag Archives: poetry

This Sea Season

by Maura A. Conlon

Her body could wait no longer.

That’s how it happens, how a woman

Leaves for the hills or the sea, when the

One she loves is lured by quicksand, 

The quest for heroics, needing to be

a lauded one.

But far below his crown ascendant shimmered 

the sweetest red rose,

Perhaps you can smell it, the

one—in another lifetime—he might

Have draped along her smooth thigh 

at night,

Peering into her eyes, 

Trusting, finally, his own tidal song, how

She’d stood at the water’s edge, all along.

Waiting.

–September swirls, and the sunset sea bathes her body.

A seal alights, creates ripples, slithers into the

Ocean whose tides deepen to rose red.

She unloosens her skin’s threads, 

Weaves a blessing upon the green linen land,

Which blesses her in return, no second thought, 

no hesitation, at all.

This is love, she whispers: the wink of surrender,

The pulse of the wild current,

Holding her flesh in ecstasy, this sea season.

A Leprechaun Tree Grows in Orange County, Part 6

A Leprechaun Tree Grows in Orange County

Ireland, 1987

Taunted by the secrecy and silence within the trauma, I returned to Ireland after I graduated from college and visited my Great Aunt Johanna on the ancestral farm. I decided to surprise her with no advance warning of my arrival. When she answered the door, her shock collapsed into flitting anger: “Why the hell didn’t you tell me you were coming, I would have killed a goose?!” We settled in for tea and sandwiches. My great aunt examined the photographs I’d brought from California, inquiring how close our family lived to Hollywood. Then, before I could pull out my notebook with the carefully crafted questions I’d hoped to ask, questions about our ancestors, the farm, and their traditions, Aunt Johanna blurted with visceral concern: “And who do you think it was that killed J.R.?”  Dallas, the wildly popular, 1980s American television show had come to Mullagh, Ireland. And she wanted to know everything. I realized then I’d have to find the buried stories elsewhere. I started reading the Irish authors, James Joyce, WB Yeats, Oscar Wilde…looking for clues into that forlorn condition of “waiting.” Or as Seamus Deane writes, that “specifically Irish form of nostalgia…This nostalgia was consistently directed toward a past that was so deeply buried that it was not recoverable except for sentiment.” Yes, that sentiment. The faraway look in my grandmother’s eyes and in my father’s eyes, that sentiment courting me in the quest for my own identity. (more on the Audio Diary.)

A Leprechaun Tree Grows in Orange County

A Leprechaun Tree Grows in Orange County