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Only the Greens

Just as I snapped this shot a blade of grass blew in front of my lens, coloring the whole scene green. I decided I liked it and found if most appropriate for St. Patrick's day posting! Best to View Large On Black

 

I'm from the McCarter clan - wishing you and yours a Happy St. Patrick's Day! I know this poem is long -- but oh, how I love it!! I feel a sense of instant recognition and kinship with so many elements passed down through the generations of my Irish heritage ... I felt much the same when I first read Frank McCourt's "Angela's Ashes" and "'Tis" ... all of a sudden things I didn't understand about how my people came to be the way they were -- their philosophies, their way of looking at and dealing with life became so much clearer...

 

Spenser's Ireland

 

has not altered;--

a place as kind as it is green,

the greenest place I've never seen.

Every name is a tune.

Denunciations do not affect

the culprit; nor blows, but it

is torture to him to not be spoken to.

They're natural,--

the coat, like Venus'

mantle lined with stars,

buttoned close at the neck,-the sleeves new from disuse.

 

If in Ireland

they play the harp backward at need,

and gather at midday the seed

of the fern, eluding

their "giants all covered with iron," might

there be fern seed for unlearn-

ing obduracy and for reinstating

the enchantment?

Hindered characters

seldom have mothers

in Irish stories, but they all have grandmothers.

 

It was Irish;

a match not a marriage was made

when my great great grandmother'd said

with native genius for

disunion, "Although your suitor be

perfection, one objection

is enough; he is not

Irish." Outwitting

the fairies, befriending the furies,

whoever again

and again says, "I'll never give in," never sees

 

that you're not free

until you've been made captive by

supreme belief,--credulity

you say? When large dainty

fingers tremblingly divide the wings

of the fly for mid-July

with a needle and wrap it with peacock-tail,

or tie wool and

buzzard's wing, their pride,

like the enchanter's

is in care, not madness. Concurring hands divide

 

flax for damask

that when bleached by Irish weather

has the silvered chamois-leather

water-tightness of a

skin. Twisted torcs and gold new-moon-shaped

lunulae aren't jewelry

like the purple-coral fuchsia-tree's. Eire--

the guillemot

so neat and the hen

of the heath and the

linnet spinet-sweet-bespeak relentlessness? Then

 

they are to me

like enchanted Earl Gerald who

changed himself into a stag, to

a great green-eyed cat of

the mountain. Discommodity makes

them invisible; they've dis-

appeared. The Irish say your trouble is their

trouble and your

joy their joy? I wish

I could believe it;

I am troubled, I'm dissatisfied, I'm Irish.

 

by Marianne Moore

 

 

 

 

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Uploaded on March 17, 2008
Taken on March 16, 2008