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Street
Poet
What
was he thinking
To come out in the street like this,
Offering poems for a few pence.
His
accent raw and Irish,
His poems open to everyone -
What was he thinking, in this day and age!
Better for him the fawning look,
The accent shaved of all commonality:
Better for him if he'd shaved himself!
Better again, to know the right people,
Tarting up falsehoods for their bright pennies,
A pat on the back for saying nothing.
The tongue itself has no voice -
Has no one told him of the new men,
Who play master to servants like himself?
What
was he thinking, Irish poet,
To take his wares into the open street,
Like a poet of a scalded dispossessed.
More
luck to him to go unrecognised!
When he moves on we'll lament him
The more in the verse of his absence.
^
Biography
Fred
Johnston was born in Belfast in 1951 and has published seven
collections of poetry, one novel, and a collection of short
stories, 'Keeping The Night Watch,' (1998). A new novel, 'Atalanta,'
will be published this Autumn (2000). In 1986 he founded Galway's
Cuirt festival of Poetry (now Literature) and resigned in
1988. In 1972 he received a Hennessy Literary Award for prose
and in the mid-Seventies was co-founder of the Irish Writers'
Co-operative. He edits a literary page, 'Markings,' for the
Galway Advertiser, and their reviews page, 'BookView,' and
works as Literary Arts Worker with Galway Centre for the Unemployed.
In 1988 he was writer-in-residence to Galway City/County Library
and later ran 'Caidreamh Dhomnaigh,' evenings of poetry and
prose and music at Galway's An Taibhdhearc. He teaches Creative
Writing as part of the evening Adult Education programme at
NUIG. In 1988 he received an Arts Council Literature Bursary
and later a Galway County Council bursary; last year he was
awarded an ArtsFlight. A reviewer of new poetry for a number
of publications and an occasional reviewer of visual art for
The Culture section of The Sunday Times, he also recorded
two traditional folk albums with the group, 'Parsons Hat'
in the early 'Nineties. A sequence of new poems is expected
to be published this year and he is working on a novel set
in North Africa. In 1995 his play, 'No Earthly Pole,' based
on the life of explorer Sir John Franklin, was produced by
Punchbag Theatre Co. during Galway Arts Festival. The poem,
'Street Poet,' is based loosely on Gaelic metre and is a satire
in that form.
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