Saturday, December 30, 2017

THE BLACK SHOULDERED KITE


The black shouldered kite
Shakes his silver pinioned wings
And does what he has to do
Which is hover,
Then change position,
Slip-slide, ride the wind
And hover again;
Like a feathered helicopter
Over this scrappy, scrubby field.
The black shouldered kite’s red eyes
Know no pity and see through concealments,
To detect the urine traces of
Scurrying mice and voles
Which better had, scurry like mad,
For now the black shouldered kite is god here
And god is not love,
But a grey feathered raptor,
Which wants its dinner
And will feast on saint or sinner.
It will fold its slender wings and drop,
To spear you on sharp-clawed talons,
Carry you to the top of a telegraph pole
And eviscerate you.
The black shouldered kite

Don’t take no shite.

VULTURES

In Spain at Monfrague
Three hundred vultures live on a crag.
I have seen them with my own eyes.
They have seen me and ignored me,
A fat man who gets out of a van and
Gapes up in awe.
Some sit on ledges,
Some perch on edges,
And let go, to fall,
Spreadwings and soar.
They may circle and glide,
Find a thermal to ride’
In spirals and gyres
Higher, higher and higher,
Silently curving, intersecting, interlacing
In a broad feathered dance in the sky
Over the Tagus gorge
Over the valleys and woods,
Up ever into pure azure

High above apes with their words.

COUSIN MARY


Cousin Mary strikes along the seafront at Seaford,
Walking into to the salt wind,
With her red hair streaming behind her.
She’s always dreaming,
So she’s dreaming again,
Of her Ireland of ancestors,
And the country of her heart,
Which is Spain.
She walks along the sea wall,
Past the Martello tower and the beach huts;
“NYAHHHHAYAHYAALLNEERAYHAY!” she shouts,
And then explains, when we ask her why,
That this was a Spanish muleteer’s cry.
Mary ate some mammoth once,
Unfrozen from Siberian ice, then cooked and sliced
At a Royal Geographical Society banquet.
Perhaps the flesh of the prehistoric pachyderm
Lets her access spatial and temporal dimensions,
Where others cannot be.
So there is Cousin Mary in a quiet English seaside town,
Calling out to other places and times,
There she is, we see her there,

But Cousin Mary is anywhere and everywhere.

SLEEPLESS


Sleepless in the airport hotel,
Where every molecule of air is tainted
By the aviation fuel that will fly me tomorrow,
Up high and far away
from the air conditioned box that
I have hired to have a throbbing headache in.

And the next night, I can’t sleep again
Although I’ve flown and travelled
To the extreme quiet of extreme Spain.
Being city bred,
I can sleep sound next to the sea,
Where ceaseless shushing waves soothe me into sleep,
Reminding me of the endless ebb and flow,
Of London traffic.
And if I wake to piss,
My anxious brain,
Does not let me sleep again
Without its usual background refrain
Of the sounds of more and more stuff
Moving from here to there,
Punctuated by sirens
And the rattle and hiss of nocturnal trains
Whereas out here on Iberian plains
I lay awake, waiting to hear
An eagle owl hoot

In the black black night.

Waiting for spring 2016

POEMS TYPED30/12/2017
Waiting for spring 2016
Seasons have all gorn wrong nah,
Down the tubes and up the spout,
We say, as we shiver in bus queues.
In midmay, there was an eatwave,
In February, young buzzard flew in,
Perched on a fruit tree in Dollis Hill,
Mewing for a mate.
Gawd knows what it thought it was going to eat;
But the crows that run the sky round here,
Came and chased it away.
Must have annoyed Gawd,
‘cause he’s been pissing on England,
For a month or so now,
Ever since the government announced a drought.
It was raining but it stops sometimes,
Perhaps Gawd goes off to drink
Ambrosia or soma or something.
Only Gawd knows why.
Then I scan the sky hopefully,
Looking for the screaming riders of the cloud road,
This is the time that they should arrive from Africa.
A day ago, as a another rolling wet gale blew in
I thought I heard one cry
But, my ears were cheating me;
So I checked the sky again and again,
Before I was really sure
That I saw what I wanted to see;
Swifts curving and swerving again,
Slicing the skies above London,

On black samurai sword wings.

Saturday, November 11, 2017

Lilieth leapt the electric fence

Lilieth leapt the electric fence,
Maybe, at the time, it made sense,
To pounce, claws extended, at a bird in flight,
And so, fall into freedom by accident.
Or maybe she made a deliberate jailbreak,
‘cause you gotta do what you gotta do,
To get outta the zoo.
Who knows what a lynx thinks?

But briefly, Lilieth  the lynx got away
And was no longer on display,
She was no longer confined,
To be admired or to be ignored ,
By the curious, the awestruck, or the bored.
Peering through the wire.

Perhaps real freedom then kicked in,
With no food and drink provided,
Out in the woods and the fields and hills,
To eat she has to hunt and kill,
And at first maybe she has an edge,
As it must be centuries,
Since any lynx walked and stalked
Along these thickets and hedges,
So maybe some rabbits and mice,
Or a bird or two, turned just too late
And drew their last breaths,
Between the jaws of golden-eyed death.

Sadly, hunters can be hunted too,
And Lilieth could not be left to be free,
She was the ‘property’ of a zoo,
And large predators in Britain just cannot be,
Unless they’re members of the bourgeoisie.

Uncaught Lilieth caused official fear
Alleged to pose a risk “severe”,
So a killing bullet, not a tranquilising dart,
Was sent to stop this beauty’s heart.

But the wheel will turn, and justice will be done,
And free once more,  Lilieth will run,
Padding along on larger paws,
With longer, stronger, deadlier claws,
Reborn a larger, fiercer cat,

She’ll rip out the throats of bureaucrats.

ⓒPRMURRY

Wednesday, November 08, 2017

DODO MODERN POETS: LIVE at the KING & QUEEN 23rd November 2017

DODO MODERN POETS: LIVE at the KING & QUEEN
RICHARD SCOTT     
Resonant language combining the rich and rapturous     
JASMINE ANN COORAY        
 Deep soulful seams  mining exquisite poetry      
ZOLAN QUOBBLE     
 Adrenalin soaked rhythm n' verse from muso poet   
OPEN-MIC SPOTS sign up by 7pm              
Thursday 23rd November 2017, 7.30pm
The King & Queen, 1 Foley St, London, W1W 6DL
£ 7 &6 concessions - open-mic spots £4
Info: 01303 243868; patric.poet@zen.co.uk
Goodge Street tube.

Tuesday, October 31, 2017

The Ghost of Franz Kafka: online


Dear poetry lovers,
Those of you who were unable to attend September's launch of my new collection, 'The Ghost of Franz Kafka' can now buy it online from Palewell Press. Please see attachment and link for more details. 
I hope you enjoy the poems,
Regards,
Patric Cunnane
01303 243868.

Monday, October 23, 2017

DODO MODERN POETS LIVE at the KING & QUEEN Wednesday 25th October 2017, 7.30pm

DODO MODERN POETS  LIVE at the  KING & QUEEN 
     
PROJECT ADORNO     
Smart pop meets music hall, art history and serious fun  
  
PR MURRY    
Taking aim at inanity, planet trashing and injustice  
  
SUE JOHNS     
Urban edge &  passion grown from Cornish roots 
   
OPEN-MIC SPOTS sign up by 7pm 
            
Wednesday 25th October 2017, 7.30pm
The King & Queen, 1 Foley St, London, W1W 6DL
£ 7 &6 concessions - open-mic spots £4

Info: 01303 243868patric.poet@zen.co.uk
Goodge Street tube.
dodo modern poets letting fly with words

Saturday, September 23, 2017

Stories about bombs

Stories about bombs have punctuated my life.
Born when the welfare state was also a baby;
I heard about my dad firewatching on the roof
Of an art school in blitzed London,
And composing an oil painting whilst he was up there.
I heard about the shrapnel,
Still embedded in an aunt’s leg.
And, every so often, a radio announcer might report
Unexploded ordinance, found buried on a building site.

One day, Cuba was in the news,
Nikita Khrushchev banged his shoe on a desk at the UN,
That was the first time that I saw my father scared.

Made to be a school boy cadet,
The worst bomb I heard was a thunderflash,
Just oversized fireworks,
Thrown about by boys in pretend wars;
Whilst half a world away,
Youths threw real grenades at each other
In Vietnam.

But London learned the hard way
That old wounds don’t always heal,
As propaganda of the deed reminded us,
Of an unjustly held colony,
Kept down by British army boots
Across a narrow sea.
A bandstand blew up,
A cast iron waste bin disintegrated in a high street, killing a child.
Sudden night blasts outside Territorial Army barracks;
And then, after a general election,
I heard a massive dull thud roll up from the Thames valley,
To my suburban hilltop,
As a debt was repaid in the City.
Not content with that,
The Fenians blew me out of bed,
Where I lay drunk, trying to forget
The start of four more Tory years,
As, three quarters of a mile away
A four-lane flyover was lifted off its foundations,
By an exploding van.

A truce came to London, until Jihad began
Old wounds don’t always heal,
Crusades and colonialism festered,
And oil was not a balm,
For those treacherous treaties, Sykes-Picot, Balfour
And all the other dodgy dealing,
Spooking and conniving,
To keep those motors running.
But the truth could be that
It doesn’t worry me more
Than the chance of dying in traffic accident.

Stupidity seems to breed Stupidity,
Just today the world’s prize-winning stupidest man
Addressed the UN to threaten a nation
With total destruction.

I wish, because it’s all I can do,
is wish
That he’d taken off his shoe,
Like Nikita Khrushchev did, but then
Beat himself with it,
Over his dyed blond head.


Friday, September 01, 2017

FREE by Free Painters and Sculptors A group exhibition exploring ideas of freedom in modern times

FREE by Free Painters and Sculptors
A group exhibition exploring ideas of freedom in modern times

Clerkenwell Gallery, 20 Clerkenwell Green, London, EC1R 0DP

Tuesday 26th – Saturday 30th September 2017
Opening Hours: 12-7pm (except Thursday 12-5pm)

Private View: Thursday 28th September6-9pm
(please rsvp)
Capturing the essence of freedom and diversity, a new and exciting exhibition from Free Painters and Sculptors (FPS) opens to the public on Tuesday 26th September.

This exhibition explores the principles, reflected in the core beliefs of FPS, of free speech and artistic expression and features work from members of the group using a wide variety of materials and styles.
FPS, an artist-led organisation, was first established in 1952. Since its inception, the idea of freedom has been at the heart of its beliefs. In the aftermath of World War II, it was vital for the group to be able to protect the principles of artistic freedom, free speech and expression, and to challenge established notions and values.

Clearly, since that time, there have been significant, and positive changes in attitudes concerning class, gender, sexuality, race and religion. Despite this progress, there is still a great need to defend these values.

FPS is proud to be an artistic collective that champions and encompasses the essence of diversity. Many of the exhibiting artists will be present at the show at which you will be able to discuss and see their artistic representations of freedom and diversity.

FPS was originally associated with the ICA (Institute of Contemporary Arts) and came to prominence by playing a significant part in the establishment of abstract art in the 1950's and 60's. Founding members featured many high profile and influential artists, including Roy Rasmussen, Lyall Watson and Maurice Jadot, who all feature in the permanent Tate Collection.

In 2017 FPS celebrates its 65th anniversary.

Monday, July 31, 2017

bright green caterpillar

I am an aged and disabled pillock,
And I was dragging a loaded shopping trolley,
Up an urban hillock,
When a bright green caterpillar appeared before me,
It was just there,
Level with my eyes
In mid-air.
I stopped, glad for a chance to catch my breath,
As my puzzled brain computed,
How could the caterpillar just be there,
Defying gravity as far as I could see?
But the laws of physics were not dead,
It was hanging by a thread,
Writhing and wriggling,
Struggling and striving,
To climb up its thin thin lifeline,
To regain its footing and food,
From the laburnum bush above.
A green heaven it loved so much,
That it never gave up
Its aim to return from airborne exile.
I watched it win,
Then dragged my shopping home,
With renewed determination,
And wondered if the caterpillar would now,
Stay in the bush
And save the silk
That it used to make its own rescue rope,
To later encase itself in a chrysalis.
Soon I too may enter a rigid container,
But, sadly, I won’t burst from coffin,
To fly away on brilliant wings,

Surprising those at the graveside.

Friday, June 02, 2017

'A Free Moment' is a summer pop-up exhibition from art group the Free Painters and Sculptors (FPS).




'A Free Moment' is a summer pop-up exhibition from
  Free Painters and Sculptors (FPS). 
 Celebrating its 65th year,
 FPS is delighted to be exhibiting for the first time in 
the gallery@oxo 
in the iconic Oxo Tower building
Exhibition dates: June 7 - 11 
Open daily 11am-7pm 
Free admission 

 Private View: Friday June 9 Open 6.30-8.30pm 
rsvp: info@freepaintersandsculptors.co.uk 
 gallery@oxo | Oxo Tower Wharf |
 Bargehouse Street | London | SE1 9PH

p.murry invigilating 10/7 11.00 – 14.30

Monday, May 22, 2017

ART EXHIBITION at the Trafalgar Rowing Centre

ART EXHIBITION at the Trafalgar Rowing Centre 11-13 Crane Street SE10 9NP 

PHOTOGRAPHS BY CAROL KENNA PAINTINGS BY STEVE LOBB 
also open on JUNE 11th, 17th & 18th june FROM 2 TO 6PM 
on SATURDAY JUNE 17 2017 FROM 6 TO 9 PM 
at the Trafalgar Rowing Centre 11-13 Crane Street SE10 9NP 

PHOTOGRAPHS BY CAROL KENNA PAINTINGS BY STEVE LOBB also open on JUNE 11th, 17th & 18th june FROM 2 TO 6PM



PHOTOGRAPHS BY CAROL KENNA 



PAINTINGS BY STEVE LOBB

Wednesday, March 01, 2017

LONDON SMOGS, OLD AND NEW


Once a riverran
Like cord of grey churning muscle,
Through a valley
And a city.
Current rolling, pulsing and twisting muddy waters
To the sea and back again at the same time
Running with and against the tide,
Like the city, it never ceased,
On cold winter nights, it sweated mist;
But, if the night was still,
The mist could not rise.

Every house in the city burnt a coal fire,
Nearly every adult who lived there smoked,
And then there was a time
When all the cars, buses and lorries
Smoked too.
Smog was born
And the mist and smog embraced each other
And lay down like satisfied lovers
In a sleeping yellow embrace
Above the city,
Smothering breath and life in a poisonous blanket
So every still night when the smog laid down
Hundreds died beneath.

“Give us clean air!”, the people cried
“Stop the coalfires!,
And clean the car exhausts!
Stop smoking! Cut carbon monoxide!”
Then the old smog, made illegal died,
And fewer people did.

But death was just resting for a decade or two,
Then it smiled and said:
“I’ll find a way to return,
And choke the life from your lungs and heads;
 I’ll make a finer blanket now
Than the smog of old
And when the sun is bright
And the air is still,
I’ll weave a cloth of car fumes,
And light
And lay it over the city
So that they’ll gasp for breath and cough in vain,
Again and again,
Just like they did when my smog was thick
My clear killing veil
Will hang invisible above the city
So they’ll still die for me
As the river rolls on and on
And passes the poisoned people by.




Sunday, January 22, 2017

Westminster Abbey November 2016

I walk through the grounds of the abbey,
Lost in my meditations,
With the burden that I carry,
A banner for a demonstration.

Tourists swarm around me,
Some move in files like ants
Crawling over history,
Consuming what’s left behind.

Perhaps they see the grand buildings,
The cornices, gargoyles and spires,
But I see through this feudalist frippery,
To class power that lurks inside.

I unfurl my flag of protest
Hoist on a telescopic pole
There are slogans and placards around me
Parliament’s  close and remote.

We are free to shout on a pavement
Orators can urge and rant
But concrete barriers and armed police,
Keep power and powerless apart.

London traffic never falters one second,
It’s always got somewhere to go,
Solidarity with strikers,
Shall not obstruct its flow.

The tourist buses pass us,
And phones and cameras click,
A demo is turned into data,
Impaled on selfie stick.

We’re all just part of the spectacle, that the tourists may later replay,
They saw a real genuine protest, and heard protestors shout,
With flags and placards and banners,

But what was it all about?”