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Two Poems: Sneddons Bees; Another Day, Another DollarAuthor(s): Howard WrightSource: The Irish Review (1986-), No. 6 (Spring, 1989), pp. 90-91Published by: Cork University PressStable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/29735426 .
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Two Poems
HOWARD WRIGHT
SNEDDONS BEES
They seem to butt the glass drunkenly insisting On entrance. 'Please let us in', they hum,
'We are too good to be out here chasing
Glory's colours upon fortune's blind wind.
'Please let your pretty flowers burden us.
For we've seen Napoleon dust Europe with freedom; heard
Cosimo spank at Italy's rebirth; and that sweet pus Of yours can likewise spin our spangled spurs of blood
'And purity.' So I went with this Brumaire, opening the window
And following them to the sickly whiff of my Blue Rockets
Remembering the U.S. research which shows
These heavy, bumbling creatures will lead mutant
Fauna through and beyond the pollen fallout of the next war.
I know the last dinosaur is a vulture
Somewhere in Africa; I scratch the back of my hairy claw
And try my best to understand family murder;
And watching those bees busily screwing up beauty I suddenly knew leadership to have its sting.
90
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Poetry 91
ANOTHER DAY, ANOTHER DOLLAR
I got out of my bed mid-morning, And set the fire
With a yellowpack firelighter In Tuesday's Guardian.
I understood the breakfast smells
And where the family had gone from.
I sat there how George Segal Would have me sit:
At a Texaco service station,
Among my mother's ornaments
Splattering and chinking On a dust road, the earth's radius.
Art's my right arm and should be
As pure and refreshing as iced Coke; But I'll cling to my name for the time being Even though I'm somewhat blank
And only hoping the heavy traffic Will stop going away.
This content downloaded from 195.78.108.81 on Sat, 14 Jun 2014 03:32:59 AMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions