Dennis O’Driscoll (1954–2012), born in County Tipperary, Ireland, was the author of nine poetry collections, including Dear Life (Copper Canyon Press, 2013), as well as a compilation of nearly two thousand contemporary quotations on poetry. An editor of and contributor to many periodicals in Ireland, the UK, and the United States, he was also the author of Stepping Stones: Interviews with Seamus Heaney. His prizes included a Lannan Literary Award, the E. M. Forster Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, and the O’Shaughnessy Award for Poetry. O’Driscoll worked as a civil servant in Dublin.

Four Poems

by Dennis O’Driscoll

At Rest

Even the busiest of businessmen—

time is money merchants—are out
for the count, paying the price for
the compensation of a satisfactory rest
by giving up each night’s potential output
gratis, like the takings of a benefit gig.


Happy as the night is long, sleepers
revert to a primitive state and—working
components switched to standby mode—
heave steady breaths like sighs of relief,
snort the addictive air. Slack penises relax
at half-mast, a complete flop, breasts level off.


Equality officers, hedge-fund speculators,
lap dancers, rubber tappers lay down
their lives, defenceless against the night’s
inexorable threats, naked or attired in cotton
bedwear, stripped of rank. Can evolution
not dispense with this primeval throwback?


People on couch
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