Tuesday, 18 November 2025

“Irish Poetry” by Eavan Boland



 

for Michael Hartnett

 

We always knew there was no Orpheus in Ireland. 

No music stored at the doors of hell. 

No god to make it. 

No wild beasts to weep and lie down to it. 

 

But I remember an evening when the sky 

was dark at four. 

When ice had seized every part of the city 

and we sat talking – 

the air making a wreath for our cups of tea. 

 

And you began to speak of our own gods. 

Our heartbroken pantheon: 

 

No Attic light for them and no Herodotus 

but thin rain and dogfish and the stopgap 

of the sharp cliffs 

they spent their winters on. 

 

And the pitch-black Atlantic night. 

And how the sound 

of a bird’s wing in a lost language sounded. 

 

You made the noise for me. 

Made it again. 

Until I could see the flight of it: suddenly 

 

the silvery, lithe rivers of your southwest 

lay down in silence 

and the savage acres no one could predict 

were all at ease, soothed and quiet and 

 

listening to you, as I was. As if to music, as if to peace.

 

 

 

Eavan Boland, 1944-2020 – “Irish Poetry” from New Collected Poems


ImageTwo Sheep on a wet and windy day on Arranmore Island Cliffs - Black & White by Camcool11, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons

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