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16 October 2014
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Mark Cooper
Mark Cooper

Born in Manchester, raised on the Isle of Man. Have lived in Belfast for last 11 years and love the place, the people, the craic. Writing poetry is release, of experiences, ideas and feelings: It is also escapism. Initial writing was precipitated by the birth of my first niece, and as a result a significant proportion of my poetry could be classified as childrens. Most recently, three poems appear in Speech Therapy (Issue 2), including 'Ladybirds Jewels' which earned me a place in the final of the Belfast Poetry Cup 2006 . A poem recounting the fortunes of a vagrant called ‘Fivedogs’ appears in Citizen32, and is my first magazine publication.

The Occasional Otter by Mark Cooper
Down by the river on a bank of mud,
a trail of footprints where I stood.
Not fox, not dog - these toes were webbed,
into reeds was where they led.

With eyes bright, all senses keen
the otter now is rarely seen.
At dusk a glimpse is sometimes caught,
but it’s early morning when best sought.

Long and sleek in a dark brown coat,
a splash of white about the throat,
in search of fish on which to feed,
bouncing off currents and gliding through weed.

Under water the chase begins -
a game of stealth and necessity wins.
Twisting and turning between rocks and tree stumps,
fleeing and frightened, high the trout jumps.

A favourite meal is the slippery eel -
hard to keep hold of, but worth the ordeal.
A shining salmon is the ultimate prize,
its speed, its strength, its frightening size.
A battle won against this leader of fish
is the answer to an otter’s wish



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