Monday, March 14, 2011

Erin Go Bragh

Image by Jimmy Daniels


Erin Go Bragh

“Romantic Ireland’s dead and gone.
It’s with O’Leary in the grave.”---W.B. Yeats

In Eire, from the shoulders of the twelve Bens
to the stone monuments at Ceide Fields,
the emerald sun focuses its first radiance
directly on the stone centers of those
massive Celtic crosses dotting the landscape;
like the one at the cathedral of Downpatriot,

perched defiantly over the tiny tomb
of St. Patrick, where the ground around it
is always devil damp with a green coat
of clover, ringed decoratively with
the vibrance of purple heather.

County cocks crow as the pounding
of hidden bodhrans synch sumptuously
with the tumultuous tolling of mossy
encrusted church bells
as dawn bursts upon another March 17th,
forbidding the hoary flocks of banshee
from flight on that day,
as every family stirs, and soon cooking pots
and ancient stoves are ablaze,
sweet with the fellowship
of corned beef, colcannon, and boxtys,
as the great lighthouse at Cook’s Head
in County Wexford goes dim with daylight,
and the spirit of Molly Malone fades
just as the dusty streets of old Dublin
ready themselves for the parades of pride.

Glenn Buttkus

March 2011

Listed as #37 over on Magpie Tales 57

Would you like the Author to read this poem to you?

31 comments:

Brigid O'Connor said...

What a spirited, rousing post, as an Irish cailin, I thank you and wish you a Happy St Patricks Day.
I've always loved that Yeats quote, I think Romantic Ireland is still here, just buried under recession at the moment. But we will keep writing, and singing and dancing.

Elaine said...

So rich with celtic folklore!

Guy Marsh said...

Very nicely done!

Paul Bauck said...

'll tip one in your honor when we're there in June!
Paul

Berowne said...

Perfect response to the prompt.

Tess Kincaid said...

Saturday was the big parade in our dusty streets of Dublin...Ohio, that is. We celebrate St. Patrick's Day with flourish. (I love "devil damp".)

Helen said...

I have a wee bit o' Irish in me .. corned beef last night, followed by you guessed it ~ corned beef on THE DAY!

Your Magpie is rich.

gautami tripathy said...

Wonderful magpie!

coloured perspective

Lane Savant said...

Guinness

Isabel Doyle said...

a refreshing look at the flower pot, very elegantly and professionaly done
Thank you

~T~ said...

A feast of Irish name-dropping! Lovely image.

Coloring Outside the Lines said...

Nice mag!

Jannie Funster said...

LOVE the moss on the churchbells.

xoxo

Claudia said...

this is nice..but you know...i'm waiting for the fairies...smiles

Brian Miller said...

nice textures glen and a bit o the beauty of ireland...it is a place i would love to visit sometime...happy st pats...and i believe i saw in my research of fairy tales a few from ireland so i am sure you can find some inspiration there...

Unknown said...

cool take on the Irish/Celtic Tales, reminds me in particular of a couple, I have a bunch of references on Fairy Tale Lore and now I feel compelled to go back through some of the Irish ones to see which I'm reminded of here. Great job. Thanks

Marbles in My Pocket said...

A wonderful St Patricks Day poem. Nicely done!
http://charleslmashburn.wordpress.com/2012/03/17/the-wolf-and-the-rose-2/

Ginny Brannan said...

Thank you for sharing this lovely and descriptive poem and audio reading on the final resting place of St. Patrick, and the food and festivities surrounding March 17th. We have been to Ireland 3 times, my favorite place on God's green earth, but have not had opportunity to visit this site.

Sharing a link for my tribute to the emerald isle if you might care to read: http://insideoutpoetry.blogspot.com/2011/04/ireland.html

Mark Butkus said...

A beautiful ode to the Emerald Isle.

Cheers,

Mark Butkus

Glenn Buttkus said...

I am re-posting this for March 16, 2013, because it is the perfect green poem for Karin today.

Claudia said...

smiles...i remember this... ireland must be a beautiful country...and did i ever tell you that i always wanted to live in a lighthouse when i was a kid...i still would...smiles

Brian Miller said...

ah i would love to take a visit...and even or especially this time of year...have a friend over there right now and every picture she send i get a little more jealous...smiles...

Anonymous said...

Such great sound - it is almost as if you have writing it in Irish. Well done! k.

brudberg said...

Oh you do Ireland fair with such poetry

Laurie Kolp said...

Now you've reminded me why I've always dreamt of visiting Ireland.

Tashtoo said...

It's as beautiful as I imagine it to be. One day I hope to see. Have always dreamed of such an adventure. The history...the old paths...you've engaged all senses and my imagination...might have to pause and grab my pen :)

Anonymous said...

The imagery is so evoking - so nice to read it over and over. I particularly like the mossy church bells.

Unknown said...

Perfect title. Love it. I hope that Ireland is silk romantic, I've never gotten a chance to go and I've always wanted to :)

kelvin s.m. said...

...'tis too far from where i live... a real stranger in my mind...yet for a moment (after a solemn read) i feel proud of the place, its beauty captured in words, its history and more..and more... i know and i feel in time i'll make a better communion with the place... excellent sir... smiles...

Anonymous said...

'purple heather and the dusty streets of Dublin and parade of pride' I love these and the celtic crosses and the picture with it. Happy St. Patty's Day!
gardenlilie.com

Wyeth Bailey said...



You did an excellent job of putting the reader deep into the scene. I swear as I read, I could feel the air in my room shift as if I were on a verdant hill near an Irish coastline somewhere. Beautifully done.

I must (over)share with you that my joke of the day has been "Wyeth go bra-less."