Poem
Michael O’Loughlin
On Hearing Michael Hartnett Read His Poetry in Irish
On Hearing Michael Hartnett Read His Poetry in Irish
On Hearing Michael Hartnett Read His Poetry in Irish
First, the irretrievable arrow of the military roadDrawing a line across all that has gone before
Its language a handful of brutal monosyllables.
By the side of the road the buildings eased up;
The sturdy syntax of castle and barracks,
The rococo flourish of a stately home:
The formal perfection and grace
Of the temples of neoclassical government
The avenues describing an elegant period. Then,
The red-brick constructions of a common coin
To be minted in local stone, and beyond them
The fluent sprawl of the demotic suburbs
Tanged with the ice of its bitter nights
Where I dreamt in the shambles of imperial iambs,
Like rows of shattered Georgian houses.
I hear our history on my tongue,
The music of what has happened!
The shanties that huddled around the manor
The kips that cursed under Christchurch Cathedral
Rising like a madrigal into the Dublin sky
– But tonight, for the first time,
I heard the sound
Of the snow falling through moonlight
Onto the empty fields.
© 1985, Michael O’Loughlin
From: Another Nation: New and Selected Poems
Publisher: New Island, Dublin
From: Another Nation: New and Selected Poems
Publisher: New Island, Dublin
Poems
Poems of Michael O’Loughlin
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On Hearing Michael Hartnett Read His Poetry in Irish
First, the irretrievable arrow of the military roadDrawing a line across all that has gone before
Its language a handful of brutal monosyllables.
By the side of the road the buildings eased up;
The sturdy syntax of castle and barracks,
The rococo flourish of a stately home:
The formal perfection and grace
Of the temples of neoclassical government
The avenues describing an elegant period. Then,
The red-brick constructions of a common coin
To be minted in local stone, and beyond them
The fluent sprawl of the demotic suburbs
Tanged with the ice of its bitter nights
Where I dreamt in the shambles of imperial iambs,
Like rows of shattered Georgian houses.
I hear our history on my tongue,
The music of what has happened!
The shanties that huddled around the manor
The kips that cursed under Christchurch Cathedral
Rising like a madrigal into the Dublin sky
– But tonight, for the first time,
I heard the sound
Of the snow falling through moonlight
Onto the empty fields.
From: Another Nation: New and Selected Poems
On Hearing Michael Hartnett Read His Poetry in Irish
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