March 4th - 10th 2013
Ailbhe Ní Bhriain Great Good Places III
Bernard O’Donoghue Westering Home
Westering Home
by Bernard O’Donoghue
Though you’d be pressed to say exactly where
It first sets in, driving west through Wales
Things start to feel like Ireland. It can’t be
The chapels with their clear grey windows,
Or the buzzards menacing the scooped valleys.
In April, have the blurred blackthorn hedges
Something to do with it? Or possibly
The motorway, which seems to lose its nerve
Mile by mile. The houses, up to a point,
With their masoned gables, each upper window
A raised eyebrow. More, though, than all of this,
It’s the architecture of the spirit;
The old thin ache you thought that you’d forgotten-
More smoke, admittedly, than flame;
Less tears than rain. And the whole business
Neither here nor there, and therefore home.
from Selected Poems
By kind permission of the author and Faber