Richey
My great-grandfather Richey Brooks
began in mud, at Moneymore:
‘A place of mud and nothing else’
he called it (not the way it looks,
but what lies under those green hills?)
Emigrated in ‘74;
ended in Drury; mud again —
slipped in the duckrun at ninety-three
(wouldn’t give up keeping poultry,
always had to farm something.)
Caught pneumonia; died saying
‘Do you remember Martha Hamilton
of the Oritor Road ?’ — still courting
the same girl in his mind. And she
lived after him, fierce widow,
in their daughter’s house; watched the plumtree —
the gnarled, sappy branches, the yellow
fruit. Ways of living and dying.
Page(s) 34
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