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Boundary
Aware
of her boundary, she walked on. Careless of her step, feeling
the uneven surface beneath her light shoes. It was becoming
more difficult to see where the land ended and the water began.
She
heard the rain arriving above her in the trees
before she felt it on her thin and fragile skin. Its smell
refreshing.
Static
and reliable, her boundary had defined and encompassed her
body like the fine line of a pencil drawing. Fitting snugly,
it had been flexible yet unconsidered. The bluegrey companion
line had protected, held her in comfort.
The line darkened as the sky darkened, more linked to the
night than to her body. Becoming tighter and tighter, it suddenly
releases at her head, uncurls like a spring, snaps back, cracking
hard against her ankles. She jumps, moves beyond it, leaving
it coiled up behind her. It lies in an oval on its edge. Quiet.
Infinite space spreads out around her. Unprotected, she is
fluid and formless. Seeping.
Oozing. Dissolving. She might occupy no space or limitless
space. She is everywhere at once. And nowhere. Everything
is within her grasp, yet nothing can be reached.
Liquid and amorphous, delineated only by her memory, she stretches
unbounded. Vast and broad. Deep and capacious. Unencumbered.
The
night is quiet.
Sand
Bottle
blue sea in sunshine. Lens rounded pale blue-grey pebbles
and white frosted sea-blunt glass fragments. Rock pools with
bloodsucking sea anemones and transparently striped shrimps.
Icy mist envelopes three-dimensional angular planes of other
memories. Isolates and obscures. Dampens and swirls around
mottled sounds.
Needing
to meet but fearing the heavy clash of friction and cold spark.
Geometric encounters. Engagements without compassion. Battlefield
charges against an outnumbering and unbeatable
enemy. Reloading with distant words. Words cold. Closed faces.
Angles
and sweating leaden surfaces. Ashes and moist oyster faces.
Grey thin and angular. Thin grey and sealed. Cut.
Sharp
eyes squint mechanically as wedges of speech volley across
the gap and implode on impact.
Square
against square. Line on line. Uncompromising sandpaper corners
of cubed memories appear through the mist. Scraping and rasping
they flatten into slowing ashen oblongs. Turning silently.
Wet powder-grey mist.
Compressed
into flat squares and folded neatly edge to edge they enclose
the memory. Drawings created on the backs of memories fracture
on folding. Making unexpected links and connections.
Folded
and pushed into the slim gap between today and yesterday,
into the sliver of space between now and then, they fall haphazardly.
The
folded memories sit quietly. Waiting. They have no power to
move or intrude. Powerless. Immobile. They cannot posture
or threaten. Grasp or subvert. Cannot persuade, invade or
delude. They may overlap but each has its own boundary. Merging
only when prised open.
Jinking
images on ciné film, to rhythm of revolving sound, of children
laughing and running on the beach.
A
line of cousins grin at the camera.
^
Biography
I
was born in Dublin and in 1985, having worked in business
for over fifteen years, I decided to go to college. In 1989
I achieved a First Class Honours Diploma in Textile Design
with a Special Commendation for my written submission at the
History of Art at the National College of Art and Design.
Two years later I was awarded a Master's Degree in the History
of Art from the same institution. On completion of my thesis,
I realized that I needed to continue writing. I also knew
that I needed to create my own stories, my own histories,
and to break away from the tyranny of the footnote. I began
writing short stories in 1991 and have written many short
prose pieces and poems, in addition to two stories for children.
My work has been broadcast by the BBC World Service, and by
RTE. Many of my stories and poems have been published in anthologies
and magazines at home and abroad. I aim to have my poems published
together in book form.
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