Alan Patrick Traynor: A STORM OVER GLEN OF IMAAL

Επιμέλεια: Εύα Πετροπούλου Λιανού

O darling time
Where have you taken me

To the joy of a young man cutting turf
To the ghost of my father

Through the lowlands and foothills
A strange moving light

A storm over Glen of Imaal
Through the miles

The rocks of bawn scattered in the
Charcoal hills

To the ruthless winds that cross the
Barnbawn bog

A soliloquy of the heart

A look of love
In the hardmens’ eyes

In the soft damp steps of the fàl
Cut of ode

When I was younger
When love meant something to me

Old woman wearing a Galway shawl on the strand near seashore, O’Briens castle in background, Inisheer Aran island
by Brendan Doyle
c1958

When I let the Siscín go
And heard her sing

To the call of its “tew”
And deeply forked tail

To her long pierced eyes
Did I listen

By the cross of Spancil Hill
In the dark-green hills of Killaloe

Where I saw you wash your wings
In the belly of a soft worn stone

As If water could ever
Hold you

An aria
On the Linnet’s face

The harmony of rain across the glen
A rapid “vist” from the Meadow Pipit

That comes and goes
That holds the heights

Lovers singing over yellow whispers
To the lingering Ling

Perch in
My refuge

Perch in my arms till the storm creeps
Over

Till the wild grass settles
On the Glen of Imaal

Whisper softly my darling
Like a murmuration
In flight—that is a prayer

Like the cold wind
Listens to the road

So do I

by Alan Patrick Traynor
© Aug 14th 2023

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