1.04.2011

How We Made a New Art on Old Ground {by Eavan Boland}

A famous battle happened in this valley.
                          You never understood the nature poem.
Till now. till this moment--if these statements
                          seem separate, unrelated, follow this

silence to its edge and you will hear
                          the history of air: the crispness of a fern
or the upward cut and turn around of
                         a fieldfare or thrush written on it.

The other history is silent: the estuary
                        is over there. The issue was decided here:
Two kings prepared to give no quarter.
                        Then one king and one dead tradition.

Now the humid dusk, the old wounds
                       wait for language, for a different truth.
When you see the silk of the willow
                       and the wider edge of the river turn

and grow dark and then darker, then
                       you will know that the nature poem
is not the action nor its end: it is
                       this rust on the gate beside the trees, on

the cattle grid underneath our feet,
                       on the steering wheel shaft: it is
an aftermath, an overlay and even, in
                       its own modest way, an art of peace:

I try the word distance and it fills with
                       sycamores, a summer's worth of pollen.
And as I write valley straw, metal
                       blood, oaths, armour are unwritten.

Silence spreads slowly from these words
                       to those ilex trees half in, half out
of shadows falling in the shallow ford
                       of the south bank beside Yellow island

as twilight shows how this sweet corrosion
                       begins to be complete: what we see
is what the poem says:
                       evening coming--cattle, cattle-shadows--

and whin bushes and a change of weather
                       about to change them all: what we see is how
the place and the torment of the place are
                      for this moment free of one another.

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