August 7, 2020 heaney


GLANMORE SONNETS
By Seamus Heaney
 
I.

Vowels ploughed into other: opened ground. 
The mildest February for twenty years 
Is mist bands over furrows, a deep no sound 
Vulnerable to distant gargling tractors. 
Our road is steaming, the turned-up acres breathe. 
Now the good life could be to cross a field 
And art a paradigm of earth new from the lathe 
Of ploughs. My lea is deeply tilled. 
Old ploughsocks gorge the subsoil of each sense 
And I am quickened with a redolence 
Of farmland as a dark unblown rose. 
Wait then...Breasting the mist, in sowers’ aprons, 
My ghosts come striding into their spring stations. 
The dream grain whirls like freakish Easter 


II.

Sensings, mountings from the hiding places, 
Words entering almost the sense of touch 
Ferreting themselves out of their dark hutch— 
‘These things are not secrets but mysteries,’ 
Oisin Kelly told me years ago 
In Belfast, hankering after stone 
That connived with the chisel, as if the grain 
Remembered what the mallet tapped to know. 
Then I landed in the hedge-school of Glanmore 
And from the backs of ditches hoped to raise 
A voice caught back off slug-horn and slow chanter 
That might continue, hold, dispel, appease: 
Vowels ploughed into other, opened ground, 
Each verse returning like the plough turned round.


—(I and II of X)

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