Green
Poems by PATRICK MORAN


| Paperback | 127 x 203 mm | 64 pages | ISBN 978-1-903392-95-9 | October 2008

Green, Patrick Moran's second collection of poetry, shows a poet trying to reconcile his rural heritage with an Ireland in the process of transition. In doing so, these carefully wraught poems explore the implications of leaving: the parting from loved ones; what is left to us; and the scraps we are left with. The title poem, Green, with its elegiac blend of wonder and loss, strikes a characteristic note. As he comes to terms with changing landscapes and thwarted dreams, the poet concludes: "It's all in the harvesting". Yet, even in the face of transcience, Moran is ultimately positive. In Autumn, for example, he can still hear birds chirping in his "inner hedges". And, as another spring dawns, he prays for the grace to "go with the flow".

Patrick Moran's first collection was widely praised. Southword noted the poet's "fine eye for the banal, for seemingly subtle shifts that can have huge implications"; while Poetry Ireland Review lauded "a very well-crafted body of work, poetry that is always lyrical and on occasion truly startling".

Patrick Moran was born in Templetuohy, County Tipperary, where he still lives. He works as a teacher. His poems have been widely published. A winner of the Gerald Manley Hopkins Poetry Prize, he has also been shortlisted for the Hennessy / Sunday Tribune poetry award. His work is featured in anthologies, including the inaugural Forward anthology. His first collection, The Stubble Fields, was published in 2001.

Sample Poem

Fire, Ashes

Sometimes, I wonder if I should have lived
like the others who just set a time-clock
or flick a switch to summon heat;
not have to fret over damp turf or kindling,
nor struggle with slow fires, erratic smoke
and ashes gathering in the grate.

But if I’d done that, what would I have known
about fire’s glow and afterglow, or sparks
being moulded to blazing sods;
the whoosh and thunder when dampers open;
or, after lengthy vigil, breaking through
to flow and pulsing in the rads?

Reviews/Articles

Coming Soon...

 


Salmon Poetry, Knockeven, Cliffs of Moher, County Clare, Ireland
email: bookshop@salmonpoetry.com  
© Salmon Poetry