Unlikely 2.0


   In those days there was no king in Israel, but every man did that which was right in his own eyes. —Judges 17:6


Recent Articles:

Three Poems by Alia Vancrown
Three Visual Poems by Nicholas Komodore
Three Poems by Lawrence Welsh
Three Postcards by Jacob A. Bennett
Three Poems by Wendy Taylor Carlisle
selections from Symphony No.7 (detached resonating hour): Poetry by Ric Carfagna
Three Poems by Lizzy Swane
Whisper, then the illusion lengthens: Poetry by Felino A. Soriano
Three Poems by Marc Thompson
Three Poems by B. Z. Niditch
Civil Servant: Fiction by Tom Bonfiglio
Listen, Arcada: Riffs on Invasions, Violence, Doom, and Other Pathologies: Fiction by George Sparling
Waitstaff: Fiction by Bruce Memblatt
The Spa Owner's Family: A Novella by Dirk van Nouhuys
Phil Rockstroh on police repression, official mendacity and why OWS has already overcome
Jerel C. Wilmore documents the March 3rd protest at Virginia's Capitol Square
Rev. John Helmiere describes being beaten by Oakland cops
At the Crossroads of Climate and Food by Councilman Richard Conlin
Starhawk on green entrepreneurship in impoverished San Francisco
Two Songs by The Buffalo Skinners
Belinda Subraman's film of Occupy El Paso: Oct. 15 2011
Eclipse Landing: 60 moons @voodoo rock: a Short Film by Cecelia Chapman
Paintings and Details by Carla Lobmier
Janina Darling on Carla Lobmier
Nine Paintings by MOO | Monika Mori
Sam Vaknin on the continuing banking crisis
Mike Peake on the abuse of Occupy Oakland by Oakland Police
An Open Letter to the Occupy Wall Street Activist by JohnPaul Montano
John Cavanagh and Robin Broad on corporations suing El Salvador
Three Poems by B. Z. Niditch
Three Poems by Raymond Keen
Three Poems by Ally Malinenko
Three Poems by Dennis Mahagin
Three Poems by Michael Farrell
Two Poems by Louise Landes Levi
Two Poems by Jay Passer
Two Poems by Mindy Mae Friesen
Tropisms: A Poem by Bruce Holsapple
Fighting Words: Wrestling Words Revisited: a Video-Story by Grace Andreacchi
Cliffhanger: A Short Story by Ian Woollen
Marina: A Short Story by Brent Powers
If Buttons Had Their Own Wills, Agnes Probably Wouldn't Be So Obsessed With Them: A Short Story by Brian Katz
Psycho-Geo-Cato: A Short Storyesque by bart plantenga


Join our mailing list!


Print this article


Three Poems by Colin Dardis

Prayer for the Ragged, Torn, and Confused

It's feckin' cold in Ireland, Jesus,
the dogs have nowhere to hump
and all the rain puddles have mud;
where's a dog got to go
to get a clean drink these days,
with no owners to leave
out bowls of kindness or charity?

All the dogs do now is lick their balls
and wait; at least the free ones are left
alone to do so; Ganymedes, Cai Lun,
Origen and Boston Corbett moan
their loss, despite degrees of self-
infliction, lost in the kennels of
Skopsty, Heaven's Gate and Cybele.

The bitches turn their heads away,
Cerberus-come-woman,
snarling, barking, slobbering
waves of hatred flow freshly
from the River Styx: let them
keep in the dead, if only to
remind the living what lies in wait.

It's feckin, cold in Ireland, Jesus,
what with all these lifeless mutts
fouling their tongues onto the pavements,
cuckolded by their own spirits;
Leopold roams, unfulfilled
by a faithful wife, he masochistic,
she, no sadist to the end.




Turn Down the Volume

Record every moment,
describe every thought. It gets weary,
like listening to a songbird
through a megaphone:
you appreciate the melody
although you don't need to hear
every note, a bomb blast
pushed out from the throat.

You stab your own neck with a pen,
a tracheotomy of speech
for others to choke on,
so eventually who can tell
what is blood and what is ink.
Did no one ever whisper to you
that man can't live on words alone,
no matter how much you shout them?




Raising the Bucket

The presence of a well
at the garden's bottom
was enough to discourage
the cheekiest of birds,
their venture sports
confined to motorways
and cats.
             A dog once drowned
down there, before you moved in
you know, I remember the year.
After summer, and the thirst of canines
was enough to encourage
a sad exploration.
If this tragic canine
was told in advance of his death,
he might have waited
until he knew what true thirst was.


E-mail this article

Colin DardisBorn at the tail end of the seventies in Northern Ireland, Colin Dardis is a poet, artist, and sometimes musician. He edits Speech Therapy, an online zine focusing on poetry from Ireland and beyond. He is also the co-ordinator of Make Yourself Heard, an open mike poetry night. His first collection, left of soul, is available via lulu.com.



Comments (closed)

omar
2011-03-25 07:00:13

right on. that is what i am talking about.