Showing posts with label Irish countryside. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Irish countryside. Show all posts

Saturday, April 13, 2024

A Gap in the Hedge

 

A gap in the hedge

where briars are looping downward

under the weight of grape-like clusters

of fat juicy blackberries

squelching cattle-trodden paths

lead onward to fresh, green, larder-like

half-acres of lush shining grass


choked with cloud

and birdsong sweet with plenty,

among stirrings in the leaf-litter,

momentary alarms;

I step, sinking in wellingtons

in the dung-gummed earth,

into a triangular field


green as the previous,

as secluded within its sycamore,

blackthorn and elder confines.

I stop as I would passing into a new room

and know I can walk the whole country,

east to west, field to field, across this mosaic

with its opulence and endless allure.


Wednesday, July 29, 2020

A Poor Man Offers Unlimited Treasure




It’s a paltry thing that sparkler on your finger,
when, on a sunny morning, I will present you
with ten miles of dazzling lake almost to the door.

Or an emerald, when my house is sitting at the bottom
of blazing green fields, and the same all the way to the sea,
two counties to the west, three to the east.

Or amethyst, when the boreen is crowded with foxgloves
ringing their bells for the attention of bumble bees who’ll be losing
their heads in nectar from May to September.

Or rubies, when the hedges are brimming with myriad constellations
of fuchsia; even the ash, high on the hill, outshines them with its harvest
of late evening sun gathered in sprays of blood-bright berries.

And that gold bangle on your wrist, how dull it will look beside the daffodils
under the beech trees not a hundred yards from my house, or June’s irises
with blooms like laughter among the flaggers opposite Scanlon’s old shed.

Over by the privet hedge, you’ll have all the pearls you could wish for
come the end of January; snowdrops, promising the year’s beauty,
will be yours every January, if only you’d come live in my cottage.

Thursday, July 2, 2020

Seeing



Walking along a country road,
I spot, ahead of me, a bird with brilliant plumage;
closer: a foxglove broken double.

I see ash trunks giraffes’ necks,
a stand of ferns green flamingos standing one-legged,
a million yellow butterflies hovering above a meadow buttercups.

Then, straining to see something extraordinary
in everything; I quite suddenly see
everything is extraordinary.