SurVision Magazine |
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An
international online magazine that
publishes Surrealist poetry
in English.
Issue Five
PATRICK DEELEY Open House Aristophanes believed that, in a world beyond our own, people – and presumably animals? – lived free of conflict. A hedgehog scuttles out of the rainy weather to lie between the dog you patched up after it was hit by a car, and the cat you saved from a ditch-hole drowning. Then a mouse hops across our planers and augers to sip from the nozzle of a can of vegetable oil standing among shavings at the bench. And when a swallow flits to her mud-nest moulded into the rafters, where also a hive of wild bees thrives... well, harmonies hold and, while they hold, we dream a secret, placatory spell has turned the workshop into an open house for stray and wilding, cherish the thought of unprejudiced paradise, no battle or blood-let, the world in a state of tranquillity it has never known yet. Vaunt Ours is the competence of seeing into ingle-nook or bog murk; we can spot a measuring light to the foot of a suburban garden or the far face of an abyss. Heartbeat of a stone, if it exists, will be graphed to the tiniest palpitation, cabbage-lugged clod from back of beyond brought to book, basement ghoul or attic ghost made to show, made to speak, every iota of information pertaining to earth and humanity critiqued, put through commercial no less than intellectual vaunt. And still the world will have good reason to cry. Still a small voice inside our heads will say we could do worse than Nietzsche – supposed by some to have stumbled, at the beginning of his long brokenness, to embrace the battered Turin horse. Patrick Deeley is from Loughrea, County Galway, Ireland. The End of the World, his seventh collection with Dedalus Press, was published in 2019. His best-selling memoir, The Hurley Maker's Son, published by Transworld Ireland, was shortlisted for the Non-fiction Book of the Year Award in 2016. He is the recipient of the American-based Lawrence O'Shaughnessy Poetry Award for 2019. |
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