PostScript Journal 2011 - 2012

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A Witness to Belfast The storm that was to come* Did not come at all Or came and went away Like the deceptive sun I wasn’t particularly looking for that Belfast must have been like this Its Beckettian grey could not have been greyer Its cars and carts made only the breeze of a noise Its archetypal rain any less so, ever Its taverns, brimming with reddish poetry and bitter guinness A mountain-trapped, industrial town, with Gulliver guarding And its hapless, vulnerable sun I wasn’t feeling that My visa was to a foreign land But I Ianded up in a somnambulist town That woke up in an alien lane (And had to live there) Like its dreamy, moony sun I wasn’t particularly seeing The cream of Ireland that surfaced my eyes From the undergraduate reading lists Like a charmingly, cold handed sun And the refrigerated neon bulbs on the street A not so particular touch... They said no “good mornings” They made the good mornings They adjusted the sun through clocks Made it into sharp pieces, rather. The ‘not-even-witness’ sun I wasn’t particularly noticing Now I know even the sun is not universal! _____________________________________________ * The reference here is to a storm that was to hit Northern Ireland on the day of my arrival in Belfast! - N.P. Ashley, Department of English

Teeth. Tropic of Cancer. The Spy Who Came In From the Cold. The Sun Also Rises. Their Eyes Were on God. Ragtime. The Recognitions. Revolutio


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PostScript Journal 2011 - 2012 by English Literary Society, St. Stephen's College - Issuu