These poems were previously published by Sheldon Lee Compton in Revolution John magazine. Someday they will be in a new book of poems about people and places I've discovered while researching my family's ancestors. I do believe we are all cousins and that we might as well get along, eh?
"On a Lee Shore" Winslow Homer 1900 |
The Liverpool
census in 1851 lists him:
“Thirteen
years old, Irish. Occupation: beggar.”
Only that. I
will do more for him.
I will see him
in torn jacket and too-short pants
singing all
day of the sea, the cliffs, the rivers
Shannon and Liffey,
the lass who died too soon.
I will give
him a pure tenor and a brother clicking bones,
keeping time
while he’s tuned to the doings in the street,
his freezing
feet, his big brother’s sweet, hungry voice.
Two
stevedore’s march past, heading for work on the docks.
Their clothes
gray and their caps grimy, they’re tired, silent
men who have no
time, money, or even a listen to give them.
Here is a man
coming through in a well-cut coat,
and his hat is
a gentleman’s hat. The boys eye him
slow down and
stop. Sure, but he’s English
thinks the
singer and the rhythm of the bones
never falter
though the player is thinking of boots.
They finish
their tune, stand, stare, and wait.
“I’m a music
teacher and I thank you for your music.”
He smiles,
opens his purse, and hands them coins.
“Get some
food, go home, rest your fingers, rest your voice.”
The Englishman
walks on and the beggars are done for the day.
The census
taker’s fine script hurled itself at me; his facts smashed something too soft
in me, but I’ve caught these boys,
given them
music and food. Tomorrow I’ll give them warmth.
Strength & Luck
There was no food in Ireland for young Patrick
Kennedy who'd known nothing of blooming. So he crossed the wintry sea in a
bucking, groaning boat to Liverpool. Once the damn ship docked in sloppy,
exhausted triumph, Patrick was shoved and hurried to join the mass of his
countryman lost in the dirty alleys snaking from the docks. English churchwomen
met them with bread and jugs of weak ale. There was more food if he worked and
he would not go without food again so Patrick, who'd been a farmer, became a
stevedore, all the while hating coal-smothered Liverpool, and hated by the
English working alongside him. When he'd had enough of the place and the place
had had enough of him he boarded The City of Manchester, a ship bound to New York, or so he'd
heard. The voyage was 49 days of hell, the only good being the end of it.
Patrick's skinny self stayed free of the typhus that forced quarantine on those
it didn't kill. When he stumbled down the gangplank the recruiting man grabbed
him by the shirt and pushed him onto a cart belonging to the Union Army and he
survived the Civil War, too. Because Patrick Kennedy went through all
that and lived to have a family with Catherine McCarthy I am here to write
these things down about my great-great grandfather, born in Cork, Ireland in
1836, dead in New York in 1877.
2 comments:
Still love that first poem, Cuz.
We share a similar ancient history. My Irish ancestor also emigrated to Liverpool at the time of the famine. The difference is that he stayed there and founded an English family with an Irish name.
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