Showing posts with label irish famine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label irish famine. Show all posts

Monday, February 5, 2024

Bohreen

 

Bohreen*


Burgeoning spring growth,

the hedgerows of hawthorn, hazel and elder

ankle-deep in profusions

of primrose, celandine and vetch

bowing towards each other over the bohreen,

claiming the light if not the tar.

Swallows, sleek as fighter jets,

bulleting down the narrow corridor,

skimming our heads,

wheeling behind us to come again.

Bends along the way revealing curiosities:

a bed-end stopping a gap,

moss-covered walls along cow-dunged lanes,

an ivy-draped ruin, pre-famine cottage

featureless but for the fireplace,

and those potato ridges on which blight-

blackened leaves once signalled starvation

still there, grassy corrugations in destitute fields.


Cattle with chomping jaws lift their heads

to watch us pass with quizzical stares;

all around beauty crowding into our eyes

birdsong and the sounds of fields filling our ears

and yet, behind it all, even now,

there’s the held breaths of the departed.



*boreen or bohreen from the irish word ‘bóithrín’ meaning a narrow country road










Thursday, January 24, 2013

Remembering


A lot has been written on the subject of the Irish famine; most of what’s needed to be said has been said. However, when I found myself digging potatoes in water-logged soil beneath the Bluestacks, gathering up marble-sized potatoes; I couldn’t but be reminded of the value even these had for families whose survival depended on ground such as this. 

Hard to appreciate, but the span of two just lifetimes (by today’s standards) would land us right back into the middle of those years, and hard to credit also, that affluence and starvation still live cheek by jowl today. 

Remembering 

In November, this charcoal month of sagging
clouds slung low between granite mountains,
while the trap-jawed landscape stalks,
diggers hunched double to the ground
are harvesting bright potatoes that constantly
endeavour, like mice, to escape, scuttle back
into the sodden soil, where roots compete
for water, and decay is life rekindling.  

Round-backed labourers, boulders fallen off
the mountain, sieve the soil for each stunted práta,
(size of a fingernail, ten minutes of a child’s life),
that scampered off the sleamhán, scuttled back
into the earth, fugitives from scrabbling fingers.
Potatoes, apples of the soil, sole currency of life
to those whose DNA shaped these fingers,
now rough with working the same earth.