Showing posts with label Donegal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Donegal. Show all posts

Wednesday, 28 April 2021

Entering the Doors of Glory

              The Doors of Glory:



There are 

moments 

when 

the world 

opens up

and is 

revealed

as a door 

to glory;

when, 

between 

the twined trees, 

or upon 

the stacked stones,

or along 

the shingled shore,

or within

the heavy houses,

in a landscape 

long known,

but fading

daily

into familiarity,

the 

slanting sun 

sudden touches, 

in its rising 

or 

in its setting,

details, perhaps 

unnoticed 

until then.

Gilding them 

gold, its beams, 

bell like, 

sound

a soul call

to slow,

to stop, 

to stare,

to attend 

upon the 

filigreed 

moment

when the 

divine depth

welcomes 

us 

home again

to the 

holy beauty

of that 

which is.

There we, 

struck still, 

and wounded 

anew

by wonder's weal, 

find our 

inner eye

opened,

and soul-see 

all afire

with

glory,

now making of 

our 

everywhere 

a door,

a gate,

a garden,

where 

our senses,

barefooted 

and blessed

anew,

behold 

the Light

by which

all 

that is

abides.


Pic of sunset on one of the fairy hills

Wednesday, 8 August 2018

Donegal Dance








Donegal Dance

After what had seemed a very long day
of talking, and visiting, and listening
to the secret woes of, oh, so many,
we had arrived at the last,
to the old farm on an ancient hill,
above a half forgotten valley,
that seemed to dwell in its own time,
to travel its own long seasoned path.
A few thorn trees broke the wind
before the whitewashed walls.
A cow watched us deliberately
conferring with the few scraggly chickens
about these strange visitors; a welcome distraction,
perhaps.
They greeted us at the door then, the old couple.
Dressed in Sunday best, they stood as much to attention
as their work bent spines allowed.
Smiling with heavy, creased, but still bright eyes.
We knew then the far away neighbours had warned them
we were near; two friars travelling from house to house.
the annual days of the parish mission come again.
They beckoned us in to two soft chairs
drawn up beside the fire, there we settled into cushions
shaped by long quiet night’s sitting for them, not us,
as they sat on hard, straight, kitchen chairs
pulled from dark corners.
Then we talked, as you do, always
observing the ancient Irish liturgy of visiting:
The Weather?
“All right for now, but sure it will change.”
Health?
“Good days and bad days, neither of us as young as we were.”
The Children?
“Well, they are busy, they can’t make it here as often as they would like.”
The land?
“Enough for us, but we will be the last to farm it,
there’s no love for it in the young ones.
It’s a hard life, but a good one.”
We listened while scanning all the while this
place caught out of time, yet redolent of deeper, quieter life.
 “You’ll stay for the tea Fathers?”
The old farmer said suddenly
It was, on reflection,
more statement than question.
For his wife was already on her feet
and heading for the kitchen.
To this day I am glad we said yes
for the miracle that came of it then
and was ours alone to witness in the holiness of home.
Though at the time the glance between us brothers
told of a different mutual desire for return and rest.

“It was ever such”, the Brother reminded me, later when we left,
speaking only after we had passed a while of silent awe at what we had witnessed there,
“God’s revelations are never expected,
Moses was not looking for a burning bush that desert day.
The Shepherds did not expect Angels overhead that night.”
“He is the God of surprises after all.”

Perhaps the Farmer did not want or need to continue chatting then,
the old man rose and joined his wife in the small scrubbed kitchen,
while we stretched our sandaled feet before the fire
and stared across the hearth to where
the door half open let us watch the dance begin,
as these two souls, long made one,
in daily sacrament of living, prepared the liturgy of tea.
Without a word and each always aware of their partner’s presence
revolved around each other as stars and planets do
in orbits long settled since the foundation of being,
so they spun and weaved, the one always in right relation to the other,
passing by at just the right moment to receive from outstretched hand
the bread, the butter, the jam, the cheese,
each always, and without asking, just where the other needed them to be,
as their silent waltz produced a table set and ready for us all
to gather, seen and unseen, together.
We sat breathless and blessed just watching,
knowing we were witnesses of a secret communion
made all the more sacred for its being born of ordinary duty.
Danced daily for long years in that place,
Danced in a Spring surrounded by chattering Children
Danced in a Winter filled with worries and woes,
Danced in love and long and lazy Summer nights
Danced now in the Autumn of long burnished gold,
Danced under the stars of Heaven
Danced with the powers of Heaven
Danced with the Divine Dancer
who is the space and music both,
between all souls who dance the daily dance of love.
Once, at the end of a long day,
through a half open door, in an old cottage,
on a half-remembered hilltop in Donegal.
I sat in silence and witnessed the cosmic dance
of love incarnate take place
in an old but well scrubbed kitchen
where brown bread was broken
and we ate beneath
the glowing lamp
of the Sacred Heart.




(Pic not mine, found on Pinterest)