Wednesday, February 6, 2019

Still Island*



The trees make a cracked sky;
beyond that, they make no sense at all.
There is so little soil beneath them;
they grow into deformity, arguing
for each inch of the ground they stand on.

Heaped stones made the island. Hands:
imagine the skin, softened by the lake water,
shredded by sharp-edged slabs.
What soil gathered, gathered by growth
of moss, beetle, moth wing.

The water gurgles between the stones,
still puzzling at the intrusion.
The hands are shining somewhere between
Cassiopeia and Cepheus.
The trees whistle to the birds.


It is thought that Still Island at Baile Dhubh Loch near Corr na Móna on the Galway Mayo border is a crannóg (a man-made island,  built for safe dwelling, and once quite common in Ireland and Scotland).

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