It’s how he handles animals that matters most
to him: needing to be firm and sure and gentle.
Only yesterday, we found a racing pigeon in a drain,
its raw neck craning from the voided body, pink
ringed legs surprisingly strong, and still he poked
at it with intent precision, deaf to our disgust; the
two escaping frogs I stopped the mower to point
out to him, and how he deftly tracked down each
one among the docks, homing them both into his
gently clenched old man’s fists - just as all the hens
ran amok when Whitey No-name speared a third
and paddled off, jelly limbs limply flapping from her
beak, the others bearing down in hot pursuit, and he
whooping at all creation, like the circus-master’s son.
John FitzGerald won the 2014 Patrick Kavanagh Poetry Award and has been shortlisted for a 2015 Hennessy New Irish Writing Award.