Monday, July 19, 2004

The Singer's House

In its entirety -
 
(Thanks, Thomas).
 
The Singer's House

When they said Carrickfergus I could hear
the frosty echo of saltminers’ picks.
I imagined it, chambered and glinting,
a township built of light.

What do we say any more                                            
to conjure the salt of our earth?
So much comes and is gone
that should be crystal and kept,

and amicable weathers
that bring up the grain of things,                                  
their tang of season and store,
are all the packing we’ll get.

So I say to myself Gweebarra
and its music hits off the place
like water hitting off granite.                                        
I see the glittering sound

framed in your window,
knives and forks set on oilcloth,
and the seals’ heads, suddenly outlined,
scanning everything.                                                  

People here used to believe
that drowned souls lived in the seals.
At spring tides they might change shape.
They loved music and swam in for a singer

who might stand at the end of summer                        
in the mouth of a whitewashed turf-shed,
his shoulder to the jamb, his song
a rowboat far out in evening.

When I came here first you were always singing,
a hint of the clip of the pick                                        
in your winnowing climb and attack.
Raise it again, man. We still believe what we hear.
 
- Seamus Heaney