Thursday, July 30, 2015

Battle Amour - A poem by Liam UiCearbhaill

I hope to see you all at my book signing this 
Saturday, August 1 2015 
at 101 Donuts and Burgers
1661 S Main St, Willits, CA 95490
8:30 AM to Noon
Now, on to the poem!
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The dating scene, like any war,
Is strewn with casualties
The walking wounded go about
As shell-shocked as you please

Their wounds become their armor worn
To drive the war away
The more they’ve fought, the less it seems
You’ll find them in the fray

As innocence gives way to pain
And dreams to cynic thoughts
The likelihood they’ll find the one
They seek is all but lost

Even so, we veterans of the
Wounds and of the wars
Still hold a hope within our breasts
Akin to that before

We may not dive into the fray
As quickly as we might
Nor wrap our lives around our dreams
So altogether tight

But still we dream our little dreams
Of things that just might be
And cautiously, so cautiously
Pursue the hopes we see

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This poem is in the collection Poetry's Purpose

Available for Kindle download at http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00YX2VZ78

Available in Printed version at http://www.lulu.com/spotlight/uicearbhaill

Available for purchase at The Book Juggler http://www.thebookjuggler.com/store.php

Sunday, July 26, 2015

The King and His Castle - a poem by Liam UiCearbhaill

The King, he wanted a castle.
It seemed like a straightforward thing.
Four towers and walls with a keep built inside.
So he thought that he’d give it a fling.

The place he selected was level.
He cleared out the woods all around.
He quarried the stone just two miles away
Then hired a crew to break ground.

They dug out a shallow foundation.
They laid out the stones in the trench.
The Britons were sure to be proud of this place.
The King watched the work from his bench.

The walls had reached just about ten feet
When the earth shook and trembled below.
The workers went running and dodging the stones
That tumbled and bounced to and fro.

The King was discouraged, but stubborn.
He called to his workers, who quailed,
Start over again, use more mortar this time.
Surely, this time, we won’t fail.”

So they built the walls thicker and stronger
And they had them about twelve feet high
When the earth shook again, knocking over the men
And the walls fell before the Kings eye.

The King said, “We’ll start her again boys!”
The crew said, “We’ll not touch a stone
Till you’ve called on your druids to find out what’s wrong
And a way to correct it they’ve shown”

So he called on his wizards and druids,
And they read every omen they could.
They read entrails and stars and the flight of the birds.
They consulted the bees and the woods.

The gods want a sacrifice proper,
Laid under the stones that you lay.
A boy, six years old, with a father unknown.
You must mingle his blood with that clay!”

So the King sent a search for the child
And they brought one back really quite quick.
Dark hair and dark eyes with a faraway look,
But the boy put up quite a kick.

What’s your name?”, the King asked the child.
It’s Merlin, but what’s that to you?
My death will not help your castle stand strong,
If you spare me, I’ll give you the clue.”

If you can make quit of my problems,
I gladly will spare you your life.
I need this place built ‘fore the summertime comes
And the Saxons arrive with their strife!”

Dig down,” said the boy to the monarch.
Right there where your keep’s to be built.
Dig deep and dig wide and a cavern you’ll find,
Right under a layer of silt.”

So they dug, and they found there a cavern
And two dragons sprang up in the air;
A Red and a White and they battled and fought
As they leapt from their prisonous lair.

The Red one fights strong for the Britons”,
The boy, Merlin, said to the King.
The White one contends for the Saxons cruel horde
And the blood and the burning they bring.”

Build your castle, and build your defenses.
Call your allies from all over Wales.
The Cymru must fight with all strength they can find,
Or be nothing but old poets' tales.”

Merlin went on to raise Arthur.
The war lasted two hundred years.
The Red Dragon still flies from the Welsh flag today

And helps them to banish their fears.

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This poem is in the collection Poetry's Purpose

Available for Kindle download at http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00YX2VZ78

Available in Printed version at http://www.lulu.com/spotlight/uicearbhaill

Available for purchase at The Book Juggler http://www.thebookjuggler.com/store.php

Monday, July 20, 2015

Eyes - A Poem by Liam UiCearbhaill


Eyes that hold a luster
A brimming living tide
Ocean full of love of life
Reflected from inside

Eyes that tell a story
Of pain and joy and growth
Of years of getting older
To live a new found youth

Eyes that hold my own eyes
Made captive in the gaze
While all the world, round about
Recedes into a haze

Eyes that draw me onward
To think of future skies
Blue and free of lonely clouds
If I can see your eyes

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This poem is in the collection Poetry's Purpose

Available for Kindle download at http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00YX2VZ78

Available in Printed version at http://www.lulu.com/spotlight/uicearbhaill

Available for purchase at The Book Juggler http://www.thebookjuggler.com/store.php

Friday, July 10, 2015

Julia Pfeiffer Falls - a poem by Liam Uicearbhaill

 Rocks craggy
Smooth and strong
Cypress stand
For ages long
Foam of surf
Jeweled bay
Seagulls soaring
High today
Deep blue distant
Sea green near
Water cascades
Joy is here
Foggy haze
Clear blue sky
Heart at peace
When sea is nigh


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This poem is in the collection Poetry's Purpose

Available for Kindle download at http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00YX2VZ78

Available in Printed version at http://www.lulu.com/spotlight/uicearbhaill

Saturday, July 4, 2015

Ode to a Burger - a poem by Liam UiCearbhaill (appropriate on this 4th of July1)

When I was 19 years old my sister took me to a talk by Ray Bradbury, where his address was aimed at prospective writers. One quote stuck with me all my life (though I probably don't have it in my memory with the exact words he spoke): "If you want to be a writer, write a thousand words a day. If it's crap, throw it away, but write it anyway. The crap you write a year from now will be better than the good stuff you are writing today."

When I decided to get serious about writing poetry I adapted that advice to verse by choosing to write at least one poem every day, not waiting for inspiration but deliberately drawing it from my surroundings. This poem is one I wrote in that discipline while waiting for my order in J's Burgers on J Street near 10th in Downtown Sacramento.

This poem is in the collection Poetry's Purpose

Available for Kindle download at http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00YX2VZ78

Available in Printed version at http://www.lulu.com/spotlight/uicearbhaill


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Ode to a Burger


It’s greasy and it’s messy 
It’s high in fat and salt
The red meat and the cheese on it 
Will cause my heart to halt

There’s no dietary fiber 
Its vitamins are few
It won‘t balance my electrolytes 
Like some health foods will do

But, damn, if it ain‘t tasty
Especially served with fries
A really greasy hamburger 

Will please me till I die


Friday, July 3, 2015

The Woman and the Sea - a poem by Liam UiCearbhaill

Sometimes it takes another person to tell you that a poem is good. I wrote this poem in 2003 tending a roadside booth in Laytonville, CA. Once I had written it I thought it was too dark and decided to hide it away. My then wife, Tabitha, made me recite it to her and then insisted that I put it in my performances. She was right, of course.

This poem is in the collection Poetry's Purpose

Available for Kindle download at http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00YX2VZ78

Available in Printed version at http://www.lulu.com/spotlight/uicearbhaill

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The Woman and the Sea


“I had a boy and lost him”
The woman to me said
“Upon the Sea I lost him
I fear that he is dead”

“Born of love long years ago
When I was seventeen
His father was a fisherman,
In those days I wore green”

The black dress and brown shawl she wore
Were clean, but worn and old
Her hair was dark, but graying
Her brown eyes flecked with gold

“I loved that man most fiercely
He worked hard to keep us fed
And when the Sea would try men’s souls
He always kept his head”

“But when my man was thirty-one
The ocean claimed her own
His boat was lost and all aboard
Went off to Davy Jones”

“My boy was then a strapping lad
Of nine or maybe ten
He worked at mending nets and such
Fish cleaning now and then”

“He grew strong and he grew tall
And always loved the Sea
But stayed ashore to ease my fears
He always honored me”

“But then he met a lassie
With eyes of sea-foam green
Her kisses like a rolling tide
Her hair a wavy dream”

“Her father said there’d be no match
If he’d not test the Sea
And so he took to fishing
And left my fears to me”

“They say the cycle turns and turns
And I suppose that’s true
My grandson was but twelve years old
When first the news I knew”

“The boat was lost without a trace
Now six long years ago
I had a boy and lost him
To the Ocean’s cruel flow”

She bowed her head to check a stitch
And turned to watch the sea
Where now her grandson plied the waves
And the wind blew wild and free