The English Department of St Columba's College, Whitechurch, Dublin 16, Ireland. Pupils' writing, news, poems, drama, essays, podcasts, book recommendations, language, edtech ... and more. Since 2006.
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Wednesday, April 30, 2008
Learning the Hard Way
I don’t know how, but one day I said to myself: if I don’t talk more to people and make things easier, no-one is going to do it for me, and I still have to be here for nine months, so wake up!’ I can’t explain how much did I change, and what a positive mentality I got. I took my cousin’s old translator and I carried it everywhere I went. I was interested in learning English. I was trying to be as nice as I could, smiling when I had to tell people: ‘I’m really sorry. I don’t understand you, could you please repeat it again?’ Being myself.
And here I am. Basically, I’m writing an English essay. I couldn’t have done this a few months ago! People say to me that my English has improved so much, and I’m so happy for that. It’s already April; I’ve been here for seven and a half months, and I actually can understand everything.
Read Lluisa's full piece here.
'Captivation' and 'Serenity'
Captivation
We knew there must be
More to living.
We'd heard of places where
People laughed with genuine joy.
We knew that lying here in
Metal beds watching
The starless sky
Couldn't be forever.
We would be released
From our solitude,
Shown how to embrace
The moon's glinting hollowness
And tell them...
We survived.
Serenity
The pure look of understanding
In his eyes burnt a hole
In my heart.
The simplicity of his smile
And contentment of his soul
Screamed out to me through barriers of wickedness.
He had seen life,
Seen death.
Then,
He had seen me.
Beckett at Montparnasse
Tuesday, April 29, 2008
'Home' and 'Those Sepia Photos'
Home, by Kezia Wright
There, the tree tops meet the sky
And the leaves flutter in the autumn wind as
they bid their tree goodbye.
There, purple evenings are home to the giant moon.
There, snow blankets the land
And icicles drip onto the morning frost.
The land is still when the bitterly cold wind marches in.
There, grasses of green arise from the fields
While sounds of the lamb throng the air.
There, the sun will spread its wings and shine brightly once again.
There, a soft breeze blows through the boiling heat
And gentle waves lap against your feet.
There, the sun will never die and light is everlasting.
Those Sepia Photos, by Opeline Kellett
Those sepia photos in the morning light
reflect memories of many times past.
The débutante ball in 1950,
the young gentleman at my hand.
Those sepia photos show happiness,
a world so simple, so young,
a world without fluster or time,
and laughter at a gleeful song sung.
Those sepia photos show memories
I don't want to leave behind.
What use now is colour in a world left so grey?
Those sepia photos,
Those times were the day.
Off to Pompeii
They plan to keep us up to date via the Classics 'Clog', which you can see here.
Monday, April 28, 2008
Junior Poetry Prize Winner, 2008
In addition, the English Department awards book tokens to :
III form : Amelia Shirley and Rosanna Young
II form : Opeline Kellett
I form : Kezia Wright.
We will shortly be posting poems from these entrants.
'Hearts', by Joanna Tottenham
Like a time-bomb they tick,
Always running,
Loving, scarlet,
Sweet like syrup.
Tender as an eggshell,
Broken so often yet
Rebuilt
By the antidote of others.
Working alone,
No coffee break.
As precious as gold
Yet
Carelessly cast away
In the depths of darkness,
Ticking on
Precisely.
Saturday, April 26, 2008
'Place', 'Beach Ball', 'Solitude'
Place, by Kezia Wright
And there the leaves flutter in the autumn wind,
As they bid their tree goodbye.
There grasses of green arise from the fields
While sounds of the lambs
Throng the springy air.
And gentle waves lap against your feet.
Daylight never ends
And flies buzz in the sticky heat.
There snow blankets the land
And icicles drip onto the morning frost.
The land is still,
When the bitterly cold wind marches in.
There the sun will spread its wings
And shine brightly once again.
There purple evenings are home to the giant moon.
Beach Ball in the Summer Sun, by Josh Kenny
Its bright colours colliding
With the sun’s warmth,
Rolling in the summer’s breeze,
On the sandy surface of the beach.
Bouncing and rolling along the sand,
As though it has a mind of its own,
Until the breeze weakens,
And the ball comes to a standstill
In the warmth of the summer sun.
Solitude, by Josh Kenny
My place of solitude is a field,
Not far from my home.
The air is fresh, the ground is moist
And I can see the mountains perfectly.
In the middle of the field I sit
On the wet green grass
Listening to birds and relax,
Forgetting the past.
Solitude and freedom.
Friday, April 25, 2008
'Light' and 'Driftwood'
'Driftwood', by Jamie Boyd
I started out in life
As a huge and mighty crate,
Filled to the brim
With ammunition for an army.
Till one day tall and powerful waves
Crashed down on our ship
Making it toss this way and that way,
Men shouting orders
Slipping and sliding.
Suddenly a rogue wave hits
And flings me into the raging sea,
I smash open and all the bullets
Sink to the ocean’s bed.
And I begin to drift.
Drift far and wide,
To the edge of the world.
I may get washed up,
But the ever-moving sea
Will pick me up again,
And drift away I will again.
'Light', by Zachary Stephenson
There is a dim light
Glowing in front of us.
What could it represent?
Maybe it is God’s light
Keeping us safe;
Or a signal fire
Looking for help.
Perhaps it is comfort
For those with grief,
Inspiration for an idea,
Courage for the cowardly
Or soothing for the stressed.
As it illuminates our lives
I am certainly glad
There is light.
Scribbling the Cat
I left Zambia in 1982 having lived in Africa for the greater proportion of my life. In 1980 Robert Mugabe had been elected as Prime Minister of the new Republic of Zimbabwe. In the same year in June a car near my house in Ndola had three hundred rounds of ammunition pumped into it by a group of Joshua Nkomo’s returning guerrilla freedom fighters. Three young friends of mine had been ‘scribbled’. I recall the ghastly image vividly and have often thought of the waste and pointlessness of the fact that it was the car behind theirs that was then stolen.
Once you have lived in Africa the place runs in your blood like an itch you cannot scratch. Alexandra Fuller describes it as ‘how to belong to a place that does not belong to you’ I returned to Zambia for the first time when I read her acclaimed memoir Don’t Let’s Go to the Dogs Tonight, a child’s eye view of the continent she grew up in.
I am currently reading Scribbling the Cat: Travels with an African soldier. It spans the time when Fuller returns to Zambia from the USA as an adult and embarks on a harrowing but ironically hilarious journey into the past. She takes this moral journey with ‘K’, a white African veteran of the civil war. They travel through Zambia, Zimbabwe and Mozambique reliving this devastating time in conversation with other war veterans.
‘Scribbling’ is the Afrikaans for killing and it is this casualness to violent death and the irrelevance of human life that strikes home. The book is hard and unforgiving, dealing with race, politics, war and self-justification. Fuller’s prose is clear, unsentimentally honest and strikingly idiomatic and atmospheric. Both of these books must be read in tandem and although they hold a poignant and personal significance for me you will certainly get a unique and realistic feel for the idiosyncrasies of Africa, even if you have never been there.
Thursday, April 24, 2008
The Baghdad Zoo
Here, Bullet, Turner's outstanding debut collection, is the first strong poetic voice in English to come from the Iraq conflict. He was recently interviewed in a Guardian podcast with Lindesay Irvine here, and on RTE's 'The Arts Show' by Vincent Woods here. Both interviews are well-worth attention. There's a review of the book by H.R.Coursen in the Wolf Moon Press here.
Yesterday Brian Turner took a poetry masterclass at the 23rd CĂșirt International Festival of Literature in Galway.
Letter to a Famous Person
I was asked to write a letter to a famous person and as I don’t really have a significant idol who I look up to, I thought I would take this opportunity to write to you. I admit I am going to have some trouble posting this and am proposing just throwing it high into the air and hoping that it will disappear dramatically.
Her full piece is here.
Wednesday, April 23, 2008
December 26th 2004
It didn’t feel like an earthquake which would register 8.9 on the Richter Scale. Tucked up in my bed in my home in Singapore, it felt rather as if an extremely large lorry had rolled past my window.
Read the rest of Ciara's piece here.
Monday, April 21, 2008
William Trevor at 80
On Sunday, John Bowman's RTE Radio 1 Sunday morning programme replayed a clip of Trevor being interviewed by Andy O'Mahony about his book Landscape in Literature (1984).
If you click on the episode from Sunday 13th, you can hear him talk with Mike Murphy about his education, including discussion of St Columba's. He remembers thinking before arriving from Sandford Park that SCC boys would 'speak strangely', but then found that the school was socially 'pleasantly mixed'. He says that, having mocked the school (fairly gently), he now remembers it 'with affection' and thinks 'it was a very good school indeed', largely because during the War 'the staff were interesting men'. He goes on to talk in much detail about the profound influence that the then art teacher, the great Irish sculptor Oisin Kelly, had on his life.
On Thursday at the Mansion House William Trevor will be receive the Lifetime Achievement Award in Irish Literature at the Irish Book Awards. Also, at the weekend the author is the subject of a symposium at the Oscar Wilde Centre in TCD (here).
Sunday, April 20, 2008
Willis Shakespeare Prize
Of course, Shakespeare's birthday is on Thursday 23rd.
Saturday, April 19, 2008
Bernard O'Donoghue
His own verse is elegant, understated - a slow burn. He can be heard reading his poem 'Tea Dolls' and 'Geese Conversations' on a Bodlean Library 'bodcast' here. O'Reilly says rightly that the poems are 'clever and self-conscious, but blessedly uncontaminated by the abstract language of ideas or by brittle academic rhetoric'.
O'Donoghue was interviewed on this week on Monday's Start the Week (BBC Radio 4) with Andrew Marr (available on Listen Again).
Friday, April 18, 2008
Summer in the Countryside
Take a large white canvas. Paint a great blue sea, and dot the waves with white beads. With a flowing motion paint the ripples in the harbour as they lap against the hard grey pier. Scribble in a lighthouse at the end of the quay and children playing around it. Fill the air with the sound of happy voices and the smell of dead fish. Draw the squiggly coastline, snaking its way up north. Dot yellow on the serpent's back, to make the rape seed crops sitting on the side of the hills. Let the smell of freshly cut grass float away on a breeze.
Here is Steffan's full piece.
Thursday, April 17, 2008
'Time', by Fiona Boyd
'time'
I promise that I can see tomorrows
Yesterdays and Fridays
and I promise to watch out for all the other days
You said would keep coming around.
I promise I won’t forget the months
Even though there are so many
Or how a week can drag on forever
And disappear in the blink of an eye.
I’m keeping track of all these hours
And minutes and seconds
And half moments of hope.
And I’m saving them up
And I’m writing them down
Just so we know
Just so we know.
Wednesday, April 16, 2008
'What Was Lost', by Catherine O'Flynn
'Crime was out there. Undetected, unseen. She hoped she wouldn't be too late.' Our detective from Falcon Investigations is Kate, a 10 year-old heading for her daily holiday surveillance shift at the new local Green Oaks Shopping Centre. Together with her assistant Mickey the Monkey (who she made from a Charlie Chimp the Gangster craft kit), she keeps an eye on the centre's customers, staff, shops, banks ... It is 1984. Not so much Big Brother as Little Girl.
The novel then moves to 2004. Kate vanished twenty years ago (and is seen on CCTV in images reminiscent of the James Bulger story). The story moves to security guard Kurt ('he'd been looking at the same monitor screens for the past thirteen years') and music store assistant manager Lisa, stuck between nightmarish senior management and deranged floor assistants. What follows is a kind of mystery story - what happened to Kate all those years ago, and how are the lives of Kurt and Lisa affected by this?
What Was Lost is both very funny and very moving. Catherine O'Flynn captures perfectly the ferocious seriousness of childhood, and the heart-breaking emotional void below this child's detective role-playing. There are many other vivid minor characters -the sad (and sweet) sweet-shop worker Adrian, the appalling ranting manager Dave, the security guard Gavin (who manages to be both boring and sinister). This is partly a story of lives of quiet desperation, taking place against the background of a post-industrial deracinated Britain: thus the ironically named centre. In the end, it also becomes a love story.
Go to the Daily Telegraph here for a reading by the author, and an interview with Katherine O'Shea.
One further mystery : it was long-listed for the Man Booker Prize. Only long-listed?
JMG
New Library Books
In Junior Fiction: Siobhan Dowd's The London Eye Mystery (website here). The author was born in 1960 to Irish parents, but died in August 2007, just as her career as a children's author was taking off.
In Senior Fiction: Catherine O'Flynn's What Was Lost is described in another post today. Another debut novel is Julia Kelly's With my Lazy Eye from Lilliput Press, described by OC Sophie Grenham as 'heart-warming' : she recently interviewed the author in the Independent here.
Also, there's Denis Johnson's huge new novel Tree of Smoke, reviewed here by Jim Lewis in the New York Times as 'a tremendous book, a strange entertainment, very long but very fast, a great whirly ride that starts out sad and gets sadder and sadder, loops unpredictably out and around, and then lurches down so suddenly at the very end that it will make your stomach flop.'
Tuesday, April 15, 2008
The Merchant of Venice
The publicity says that this is 'A five person cast perform a commedia dell’arte production set in 16th century Venice. This is Shakespeare as you’ve never seen him, with a slapstick, bawdy style brimming with zany comic energy.'
Jenkins and Vivaldi
This time we present two different works from two different eras - The Armed Man (choral suite) by Karl Jenkins, and Antonio Vivaldi's Gloria. All are welcome. There is no charge in, though there will be a voluntary retiring collection in aid of Habitat for Humanity.
Three English teachers are part of the choir, and another literary connection is that the Jenkins suite concludes with the first two stanzas of 'Hymn Before Action' by Rudyard Kipling:
The Earth is full of anger,
The seas are dark with wrath,
The Nations in their harness
Go up against our path:
Ere yet we loose the legions—
Ere yet we draw the blade,
Jehovah of the Thunders,
Lord God of Battles, aid!
High lust and froward bearing,
Proud heart, rebellious brow—
Deaf ear and soul uncaring,
We seek Thy mercy now!
The sinner that forswore Thee,
The fool that passed Thee by,
Our times are known before Thee—
Lord, grant us strength to die!
Monday, April 14, 2008
'Transience', 'Apparition'
Transience
My skin tingles magnetically against the wind,
The floating element potent, piercing
My stripped fingers, stripped ribs and raw throat.
The perfect ticking of measured time
Carries with it a delirious, self-induced deterioration.
Minuscule seconds click into tiny forms,
Weighted and falling away,
As aspects of my corpse slip invisibly,
Gone but still somehow latching on,
In greedy insistence.
Apparition
I fell asleep,
Blue darkness bleeding over my eyes.
From the deep shadow
You stepped out,
Light melting silently
Upon your sallow skin.
You looked a little scared.
It seemed more than a grasping
Fabrication of my mind,
Because your voice was
So lucid, so distinctively yours,
Bare and shaken.
A locket dangles in desolate pain,
And will remain forever.
The stony sharp chain
Pleasingly slices the fingers
Which wrap tightly around
Never surrendering to release.
It's so heavy,
Encapsulating
What you
Told me.
Saturday, April 12, 2008
More Senior Poems
Matters of Death, by Hanne Grainger
No matter how strong,
no matter how weak,
no matter how tall,
no matter how small,
no matter how beautiful,
no matter how ugly,
no matter how smart,
no matter how stupid,
it takes us all eventually
and never give us back.
It's Your Turn, by Ellie Russell
He used to close his eyes, as he thought out his strategy.
And I never considered his long fingers cold and tired
as he moved to checkmate with a grin.
But now as he lies on this bed,
Each breathe more shallow than the last,
I realize that those times are over
And this smile is different.
It's a wave goodbye.
As he lays his king down,
And leaves the table.
Revelations, by Cordelia Mulholland
You are the composer of my silent prayers,
The cross on which I am fixed.
I clasp your indifference to me
Like a child clutching its most precious possession.
Rosary beads slide through my fingers
As you snake through my mind.
You are my religion, my revelation,
The only faith I could ever cling to.
Friday, April 11, 2008
King Chicken
Thursday, April 10, 2008
'My Deepest Fears' and 'A Winter's Night'
My Deepest Fears
I lie awake,
Tossing, turning in my bed.
It’s dark and quiet.
The night is so silent
Nothing can be heard.
I walk over to the window
And glance across the city.
Each light means something -
Someone lying awake like me
Just pondering,
Waiting for the final call
From the hospital
Where their loved one is,
Upset because they had
Yet another argument
And he left in a storm,
And those like me.
Sweet dreams to all of those
Like me.
You are amazing:
Hold on.
A Winter’s Night
Late at night, the house is asleep.
Not much can be heard,
Except for rattling noises, and the crackling fire.
Except for that, it’s quiet.
Except for that, it’s quiet.
Now is my time, nobody else’s.
There are only two things in use,
The centre light and my wine glass.
The centre light and my wine glass,
Sitting on the oak chest,
The centre of the room bright, the rest dark.
The Aga rumbles slightly.
The Aga rumbles slightly,
A breeze passes through, I shiver.
I walk upstairs,
I walk into my room, into the warm darkness.
I walk into my room, into the warm darkness.
I lie down on my bed.
She breathes lightly, I can feel her warmth.
She is sleeping softly.
She is sleeping softly.
I can see the approaching light.
Darkness is fading.
Night fights, day fights back.
Night fights, day fights back.
Dreaming in the darkness,
The windows rattle, the wind howls.
Late at night, the house is asleep.
Not much can be heard,
Not much can be heard.
The Burial at Thebes
In the Irish Times, Peter Crawley says that 'Heaney's graceful, nimble version seems stunningly attuned to the political moment' and that it is 'now honoured as a vivid and supple work by Patrick Mason's focussed production'. The design by Ferdia Murphy renders 'Thebes as a bullet-pocked concrete city'. He particularly praises the acting of Jane Brennan as Eurydice and concludes that this is 'a production worthy of the play; lucid, compelling and forever relevant' (only available online for Premium subscribers).
In the Independent, Bruce Arnold is less positive, criticising Declan Conlon as King Creon, saying that his acting is 'one-dimensional' and finishes by saying that 'Patrick Mason's direction is a transition from slick stage movements, which set the tone at the beginning, and then fail to embrace the tragic carnage at the end.' (full online review here).
Helen Meany's review in the Guardian states that 'While such a deliberate, formal staging and an almost motionless cast draws our attention back to Heaney's language, it seems too reverential to involve us. Setting it in such an iconic historical period removes the play's conflicts from us, too, making them very abstract. While a contemporary setting might be reductive, at least it would have risked something.'
Wednesday, April 09, 2008
The Path, 5.47 pm
The Path, 5:47 pm
The sky glows in melting sweeps of orange and violet,
Barricaded by the black, brittle outlines of a bare forest.
My presence visibly affects the atmosphere,
As whispering folds of mist expand from my mouth.
Layers of neon graffiti stand stark against
Cracked, frozen blocks of cement.
The air is glacial and infinite,
And it breezes by
Like tiny frozen metallic particles piercing
And scattering over my skin.
The only corporeal movement that exists
Is the twitching of a minuscule form of crimson feathers.
Altered into an array of chipped glass and porcelain,
The world is menacing in its calm perfection.
Senior Poetry Prize winners, 2008
Monday, April 07, 2008
Start of Term
Sunday, April 06, 2008
Gentlemen of Verona
Pictured, two gentlemen of our English Department at the plaque and bust marking Shakespeare's influence on the city, beside Piazza Bra, on a recent holiday visit. The main tourist venue is the entirely fraudulent house of Juliet on Via Capelle (thus the dubious connection); the approach to the house (the balcony, below, was added not in 1596 but in 1936) features hideous grattifi-laden walls (bottom). Perhaps more evocative is Romeo's house on Via Arche Scaligere (left), reportedly the ancestral home of the Montagues. It can't be visited and thus maintains some sense of mystery.