Sarah Clancy is a page and performance poet from Galway, she has two previous collections to her name, Stacey and the Mechanical Bull (Lapwing Press, Belfast, 2011) and Thanks for Nothing, Hippies (Salmon Poetry, 2012). Along with fellow Galway poet Elaine Feeney she released a poetry CD called Cinderella Backwards in 2013. She has been placed or shortlisted in several of Ireland’s most prestigious written poetry competitions including The Ballymaloe International Poetry Prize, The Patrick Kavanagh Award and The Listowel Collection of Poetry Competition. In performance poetry Sarah has won the Cuirt International Festival of Literature Grand Slam Championships and has twice been runner up in the North Beach Nights Grand Slam. In 2013 on her second go at representing Connaught in the All- Ireland Grand Slam Championships she was runner up. She has recently stopped sulking about this. In 2013 she received an individual artist's bursary from Galway City Council. She is frequently invited to read her work at various festivals and events around Ireland and abroad and can’t believe she’s still getting away with it. She is on twitter @sarahmaintains and can be contacted by e-mail at sarahclancygalway@gmail.com
deep in the hold of Friday’smid-afternoon where nothing has gravitywe floated, confessed nothing to no oneand look where it got us.
Disappearances can be DeceptiveIn memory of Mariano Abarca, RIP 2009, Chiapas, Mexico
At ten past six hereyou’ll be able to mournthe disappearance of the tropical sun that baked your hairlineat ten to,two hundred whole languageshave vanishedand the people who objected are invisiblewashing windscreensat city junctions.The virgin of Guadalupe though appearedas if from nowhere in 1531and 1910 had every appearance of a revolutionbut Blackfire Exploration can show up from Canadato atomise a mountain and its villages in six months and thoughthere is no apparentdepartment for state disappearances Mariano Abarcawho resisteddisappeared,no one saw anythingand the raped virgin soil said: nothing.
fishermen with thick hair full of saltdealing men,‘living on their witsand getting pretty thin,’ menwith codes no bank has everheard of for behaviourand weird ethics no judgecould hope to understand.
but all I’ll say is that day, in hot sunshinean old man, skin brown from exposure,swam by a bridge, in a fast flowing river,and you can decide if it wasMostar,Letterfrack,Belfast,Palestine,CongoLiberia,Tibet,Iraq,Sudanor Afghanistan, no matter,all I’m saying is:people swim,after.
Revoltfor Tadhg McGrath
When the dust has settledI’ll be put to death with the well fedthat’s the way it is and I’m not sorry.
At the barricade brute truth is in the bullets, not the Molotovs.At the ballot the answers are in the batons sheathed, not the boxes.the marches the purpose is the provocateurs not the speeches.
The point is not causing conflict or trouble-makingit’s about forcing the gate keepers to expose the real rulesof this game we’re entrapped in.
It’s about displaying who calls the shots, who fires themand who feels them.