.
Frost Fair on the Thames at London during the Great Winter of 1683/4 when even the seas of southern England froze for up to two miles from shore #LittleIceAge: image via The Ice Age @jamie_woodward_, 28 January 2018
I The Sun Sets On The Code of the West
As an ageing boy
Always feared everything foreign
Devoted to Baldur Benedikt von Schirach, cousin to Scylding kingsIn pubs recited Roman history while affecting mechanical nazi saluteTubercular, the Scylding king's weakling sons
The Code of the West was so much bloody nonsenseAll it ever was was Old Hrothgar talking your ear offTrying to bum five bucks steal your wife or girlfriendIt never believed a word it saidThis was its innocenceBehind its silken sad uncertain rustling curtains you heard it
The music, still and notwithstanding
The hibbing of those vipernlorke that quann
You'd never want to dream of having a drink with it
.
A man rides an escalator in front of high rise buildings in the financial district Lujiazui in Shanghai: photo by Johannes Eiseke/AFP, 6 April 2016
A man rides an escalator in front of high rise buildings in the financial district Lujiazui in Shanghai: photo by Johannes Eiseke/AFP, 6 April 2016
A swan floats on lake Weissensee near Fuessen, southern Germany: photo by Karl-Josef Hildenbrand/dpa/AP, 6 April 2016
A swan floats on lake Weissensee near Fuessen, southern Germany: photo by Karl-Josef Hildenbrand/dpa/AP, 6 April 2016
A monkey jumps from a branch at Yangon Zoological Gardens in Yangon, Myanmar. Yangon Zoological Gardens (Yangon Zoo) is the oldest and second largest zoo in Myanmar.: photo by Lynn Bo Bo/EPA, 6 April 2016
A monkey jumps from a branch at Yangon Zoological Gardens in Yangon, Myanmar. Yangon Zoological Gardens (Yangon Zoo) is the oldest and second largest zoo in Myanmar.: photo by Lynn Bo Bo/EPA, 6 April 2016
III little here has changed least of all the crows divebombing
Frost Fair on the Thames at London during the Great Winter of 1683/4 when even the seas of southern England froze for up to two miles from shore #LittleIceAge: image via The Ice Age @jamie_woodward_, 28 January 2018
An awful lot they are
These descendants of Old Hrothgar
These descendants of Old Hrothgar
I know them, I lived among them as a boy
And I knew their father, Old EdgethrowAlways feared everything foreign
Devoted to Baldur Benedikt von Schirach, cousin to Scylding kings
The Code of the West was so much bloody nonsense
The music, still and notwithstanding
The hibbing of those vipernlorke that quann
You'd never want to dream of having a drink with it
.
A man rides an escalator in front of high rise buildings in the financial district Lujiazui in Shanghai: photo by Johannes Eiseke/AFP, 6 April 2016
A man rides an escalator in front of high rise buildings in the financial district Lujiazui in Shanghai: photo by Johannes Eiseke/AFP, 6 April 2016
A swan floats on lake Weissensee near Fuessen, southern Germany: photo by Karl-Josef Hildenbrand/dpa/AP, 6 April 2016
A swan floats on lake Weissensee near Fuessen, southern Germany: photo by Karl-Josef Hildenbrand/dpa/AP, 6 April 2016
II "The hibbing of those vipern lorke that quann..."
The hibbing of those vipern lorke that quann
The hibbing of those vipern lorke that quann
Hither sometimes sinne steales and staines
The silken sad uncertain rustling in the thousand
Wreaths of dangling water-smoke of each borble quartan
Wreaths of dangling water-smoke of each borble quartan
Sweet Fido at my feet curled like a quarled willow
Upon the wild sea-banks an waful wuv moved wivver
Smooth cartage from thy chamber
On boated heapes of heavy gold thickwit ermidsA monkey jumps from a branch at Yangon Zoological Gardens in Yangon, Myanmar. Yangon Zoological Gardens (Yangon Zoo) is the oldest and second largest zoo in Myanmar.: photo by Lynn Bo Bo/EPA, 6 April 2016
A monkey jumps from a branch at Yangon Zoological Gardens in Yangon, Myanmar. Yangon Zoological Gardens (Yangon Zoo) is the oldest and second largest zoo in Myanmar.: photo by Lynn Bo Bo/EPA, 6 April 2016
III little here has changed least of all the crows divebombing
Then let the sharp March wind tread our ears
little here changes least of all the crows oblivious divebombing
little here has changed least of all the crows divebombing
little here changes least of all the crows oblivious divebombing
little here has changed least of all the crows divebombing
the speeding cars on the Ave don't they know it's Holy Week
Then let the sharp March wind tread our ears
Then let the sharp March wind tread our ears
I to you turn with tears starting
who to wedlock this wonder wedlock brought not
enough to stand up to the numerousness of years expecting
enough to stand up to the numerousness of years expecting
each be other’s comfort kind but then life happens
always the same forever feeling sometimes merciful
sometimes binding close sometimes falling apart
deep deeper than divine
charity dear charity, where are you, I scout the whole harbour
nobody but the weathered sea dogs are there, who testify
knew him, knew him as a boy, knew that gnarled weirdo
his father, Old Edgethrow, who always said these
knew him, knew him as a boy, knew that gnarled weirdo
his father, Old Edgethrow, who always said these
same simple words:
Fast you ever, fast bind,
Then let the March wind redden our ears
I to you turn with tears starting
Who to wedlock this wonder wedlock brought not
enough
enough
(Old Hrothgar, to himself: Déals tríumph and immortal years - not!)
Untitled [street carolers, Poland]: photo by Joanna Mrowka, 27 January 2018
Street One | Aalst (Belgium), 2017: photo by Jeffrey De Keyser, 26 February 2017
Untitled: photo by Sakis Dazanis, 3 January 2017
the coming on of autumn often heightened awarenessold Hrothgar never had a clue nor will other find nor seenone knew you as a boy as did I nor did I know younor did my interior mentor and semblable Old Edgethrowthe colours of the bushes and of the fallen leaves
repeat themselves in the streaming headlightsO absent hand discovered in fallen leaves on the backroads of leaf muck and little stars that live in emptied skies
By the rivers of my memory clinging to the rocks and ivy
in the early morning separate shared blurred vision
Thank God for my life: photo by carlo barberio, 2 April 2017
Untitled [Circular Quay, Sydney]: photo by Sam Ferris, 19 April 2017
Benbo Mountain, Manor Hamilton, County Leitrim.About three miles from the town of Manorhamilton is a mountain called Benbo. It is about one thousand seven hundred feet high. Once a man who lived at the bottom of this mountain dreamed three nights in succession, that if he went up to the top of the mountain at a certain time he would see a cow coming out of the lake which was on the top of the mountain. ... The lake which is on the top of the mountain is small and round. In it is black bog water. In dry weather it never dries up, or in wet weather it rises any higher than it is. He also was told in his dream that if he stood between the cow and the lake, and if he spit at the cow three times, before she could get into the lake he would have her. He did so and got the cow. Benbo means the hill of the cow's horns.... Another story is that a man dreamed three nights after other, that if he went up to the top of the mountain at twelve o'clock, at night and sat there for some times beside the lake, he would see a crock of gold sailing towards him. In his dream he was told that if he took his eyes off it, while it was sailing towards he would not get it. He did so and while it was sailing towards him he heard a noise behind him. He looked around and saw nothing. When he turned round again the crock of gold was gone. -- Thomas McTernan.Boys National School. Manorhamilton. 18-3-1938: photographer unknown, c. 1900-1920 (Eason Collection, National Library of Ireland)
Benbo Mountain, Manor Hamilton, County Leitrim.About three miles from the town of Manorhamilton is a mountain called Benbo. It is about one thousand seven hundred feet high. Once a man who lived at the bottom of this mountain dreamed three nights in succession, that if he went up to the top of the mountain at a certain time he would see a cow coming out of the lake which was on the top of the mountain. ... The lake which is on the top of the mountain is small and round. In it is black bog water. In dry weather it never dries up, or in wet weather it rises any higher than it is. He also was told in his dream that if he stood between the cow and the lake, and if he spit at the cow three times, before she could get into the lake he would have her. He did so and got the cow. Benbo means the hill of the cow's horns.... Another story is that a man dreamed three nights after other, that if he went up to the top of the mountain at twelve o'clock, at night and sat there for some times beside the lake, he would see a crock of gold sailing towards him. In his dream he was told that if he took his eyes off it, while it was sailing towards he would not get it. He did so and while it was sailing towards him he heard a noise behind him. He looked around and saw nothing. When he turned round again the crock of gold was gone. -- Thomas McTernan.Boys National School. Manorhamilton. 18-3-1938: photographer unknown, c. 1900-1920 (Eason Collection, National Library of Ireland)
Benbo Mountain, Manor Hamilton, County Leitrim.About three miles from the town of Manorhamilton is a mountain called Benbo. It is about one thousand seven hundred feet high. Once a man who lived at the bottom of this mountain dreamed three nights in succession, that if he went up to the top of the mountain at a certain time he would see a cow coming out of the lake which was on the top of the mountain. ... The lake which is on the top of the mountain is small and round. In it is black bog water. In dry weather it never dries up, or in wet weather it rises any higher than it is. He also was told in his dream that if he stood between the cow and the lake, and if he spit at the cow three times, before she could get into the lake he would have her. He did so and got the cow. Benbo means the hill of the cow's horns.... Another story is that a man dreamed three nights after other, that if he went up to the top of the mountain at twelve o'clock, at night and sat there for some times beside the lake, he would see a crock of gold sailing towards him. In his dream he was told that if he took his eyes off it, while it was sailing towards he would not get it. He did so and while it was sailing towards him he heard a noise behind him. He looked around and saw nothing. When he turned round again the crock of gold was gone. -- Thomas McTernan.Boys National School. Manorhamilton. 18-3-1938: photographer unknown, c. 1900-1920 (Eason Collection, National Library of Ireland)
Glencar Lake, County Leitrim: photo by Robert French, between 1865 and 1914 (Lawrence Photograph Collection, National Library of Ireland)
Glencar Lake, County Leitrim: photo by Robert French, between 1865 and 1914(Lawrence Photograph Collection, National Library of Ireland)
Glencar Lake, County Leitrim: photo by Robert French, between 1865 and 1914 (Lawrence Photograph Collection, National Library of Ireland)
A bomb placed in an ambulance set off a huge explosion on Saturday on a busy street in Kabul, Afghanistan, killing at least 95 people and injuring dozens of others. The Taliban claimed responsibility.: photo by Andrew Quity for The New York Times, 27 January 2018
Untitled [street carolers, Poland]: photo by Joanna Mrowka, 27 January 2018
Street One | Aalst (Belgium), 2017: photo by Jeffrey De Keyser, 26 February 2017
Untitled: photo by Sakis Dazanis, 3 January 2017
IV awareness
the coming on of autumn often heightened awareness
that was then this is uniquely almost now almost tomorrow
never more than a modicum of it at any given time
never more than a pinch, to startle one out of the shadowlands
there you are on the back roads ever gentle on my mindrepeat themselves in the streaming headlights
By the rivers of my memory clinging to the rocks and ivy
Thank God for my life: photo by carlo barberio, 2 April 2017
Untitled [Circular Quay, Sydney]: photo by Sam Ferris, 19 April 2017
William Butler Yeats: Two Poems
Benbo Mountain, Manor Hamilton, County Leitrim.About three miles from the town of Manorhamilton is a mountain called Benbo. It is about one thousand seven hundred feet high. Once a man who lived at the bottom of this mountain dreamed three nights in succession, that if he went up to the top of the mountain at a certain time he would see a cow coming out of the lake which was on the top of the mountain. ... The lake which is on the top of the mountain is small and round. In it is black bog water. In dry weather it never dries up, or in wet weather it rises any higher than it is. He also was told in his dream that if he stood between the cow and the lake, and if he spit at the cow three times, before she could get into the lake he would have her. He did so and got the cow. Benbo means the hill of the cow's horns.... Another story is that a man dreamed three nights after other, that if he went up to the top of the mountain at twelve o'clock, at night and sat there for some times beside the lake, he would see a crock of gold sailing towards him. In his dream he was told that if he took his eyes off it, while it was sailing towards he would not get it. He did so and while it was sailing towards him he heard a noise behind him. He looked around and saw nothing. When he turned round again the crock of gold was gone. -- Thomas McTernan.Boys National School. Manorhamilton. 18-3-1938: photographer unknown, c. 1900-1920 (Eason Collection, National Library of Ireland)
Benbo Mountain, Manor Hamilton, County Leitrim.About three miles from the town of Manorhamilton is a mountain called Benbo. It is about one thousand seven hundred feet high. Once a man who lived at the bottom of this mountain dreamed three nights in succession, that if he went up to the top of the mountain at a certain time he would see a cow coming out of the lake which was on the top of the mountain. ... The lake which is on the top of the mountain is small and round. In it is black bog water. In dry weather it never dries up, or in wet weather it rises any higher than it is. He also was told in his dream that if he stood between the cow and the lake, and if he spit at the cow three times, before she could get into the lake he would have her. He did so and got the cow. Benbo means the hill of the cow's horns.... Another story is that a man dreamed three nights after other, that if he went up to the top of the mountain at twelve o'clock, at night and sat there for some times beside the lake, he would see a crock of gold sailing towards him. In his dream he was told that if he took his eyes off it, while it was sailing towards he would not get it. He did so and while it was sailing towards him he heard a noise behind him. He looked around and saw nothing. When he turned round again the crock of gold was gone. -- Thomas McTernan.Boys National School. Manorhamilton. 18-3-1938: photographer unknown, c. 1900-1920 (Eason Collection, National Library of Ireland)
Benbo Mountain, Manor Hamilton, County Leitrim.About three miles from the town of Manorhamilton is a mountain called Benbo. It is about one thousand seven hundred feet high. Once a man who lived at the bottom of this mountain dreamed three nights in succession, that if he went up to the top of the mountain at a certain time he would see a cow coming out of the lake which was on the top of the mountain. ... The lake which is on the top of the mountain is small and round. In it is black bog water. In dry weather it never dries up, or in wet weather it rises any higher than it is. He also was told in his dream that if he stood between the cow and the lake, and if he spit at the cow three times, before she could get into the lake he would have her. He did so and got the cow. Benbo means the hill of the cow's horns.... Another story is that a man dreamed three nights after other, that if he went up to the top of the mountain at twelve o'clock, at night and sat there for some times beside the lake, he would see a crock of gold sailing towards him. In his dream he was told that if he took his eyes off it, while it was sailing towards he would not get it. He did so and while it was sailing towards him he heard a noise behind him. He looked around and saw nothing. When he turned round again the crock of gold was gone. -- Thomas McTernan.Boys National School. Manorhamilton. 18-3-1938: photographer unknown, c. 1900-1920 (Eason Collection, National Library of Ireland)
William Butler Yeats: An Irish Airman Foresees His Death
I know that I shall meet my fate
Somewhere among the clouds above;
Those that I fight I do not hate
Those that I guard I do not love;
My country is Kiltartan Cross,
My countrymen Kiltartan’s poor,
No likely end could bring them loss
Or leave them happier than before.
Nor law, nor duty bade me fight,
Nor public man, nor cheering crowds,
A lonely impulse of delight
Drove to this tumult in the clouds;
I balanced all, brought all to mind,
The years to come seemed waste of breath,
A waste of breath the years behind
In balance with this life, this death.
William Butler Yeats (1865-1939): An Irish Airman Foresees His Death, 1919, from Selected Poems, 1933
Glencar Lake, County Leitrim: photo by Robert French, between 1865 and 1914 (Lawrence Photograph Collection, National Library of Ireland)
Glencar Lake, County Leitrim: photo by Robert French, between 1865 and 1914(Lawrence Photograph Collection, National Library of Ireland)
Glencar Lake, County Leitrim: photo by Robert French, between 1865 and 1914 (Lawrence Photograph Collection, National Library of Ireland)
William Butler Yeats: The Fisherman
Although I can see him still,
The freckled man who goes
To a grey place on a hill
In grey Connemara clothes
At dawn to cast his flies,
It’s long since I began
To call up to the eyes
This wise and simple man.
All day I’d looked in the face
What I had hoped ‘twould be
To write for my own race
And the reality;
The living men that I hate,
The dead man that I loved,
The craven man in his seat,
The insolent unreproved,
And no knave brought to book
Who has won a drunken cheer,
The witty man and his joke
Aimed at the commonest ear,
The clever man who cries
The catch-cries of the clown,
The beating down of the wise
And great Art beaten down.
Maybe a twelvemonth since
Suddenly I began,
In scorn of this audience,
Imagining a man,
And his sun-freckled face,
And grey Connemara cloth,
Climbing up to a place
Where stone is dark under froth,
And the down-turn of his wrist
When the flies drop in the stream;
A man who does not exist,
A man who is but a dream;
And cried, ‘Before I am old
I shall have written him one
Poem maybe as cold
And passionate as the dawn.'
William Butler Yeats (1865-1939): The Fisherman, 1916, from Selected Poems, 1933"Dev. Anti-Conscription Rally, 1918" [?], Eamon de Valera addressing a meeting, Grand Parade, Cork, c. 1918: photographer unknown, c. 1918 (?)(Republican Photography Collection, National Library of Ireland)
A bomb placed in an ambulance set off a huge explosion on Saturday on a busy street in Kabul, Afghanistan, killing at least 95 people and injuring dozens of others. The Taliban claimed responsibility.: photo by Andrew Quity for The New York Times, 27 January 2018