Tag: Out of Ours

  • Like dublin by DS Maolalai

    under the boiling pot
    dropped leaves
    smolder; the top of a litterbin
    filled with cigarettes
    and reducing to soup
    on a dry afternoon. summer,
    full of that smoky air
    and missing fire. those little pops and cracks
    like walking barefoot
    and stepping on crisp packets. like dublin;
    walking up o’connell street
    while the sun shines
    and everyone dresses
    comfortably. men in shorts, t-shirts
    and football jerseys
    sliding over chests and bellies
    as if loose water
    were tumbling on rocks.
    women too;
    those airy dresses,
    showing more of their legs
    than the men even. sunglasses all over,
    black as burned vegetables. earth slipping, filling with scent
    and a hot meat market. in the pot at home,
    outside of the city,
    vegetables boil among fistfuls of ham. the air is humid,
    the windows shut, full of steam
    and the smell of toasting broccoli.
    at the kitchen table
    I open my shirt down as far as the belly,
    lean back, and remember walking
    home.

    DS Maolalai has been nominated for Best of the Web and twice for the Pushcart Prize. His poetry has been released in two collections, Love is Breaking Plates in the Garden (Encircle Press, 2016) and Sad Havoc Among the Birds (Turas Press, 2019)