LOVE SONG TO THE IRISHWOMAN
1985 began a period of time when I was living near the school and still taking part in many school activities, but was also writing essays, publishing a quarterly journal of alternative education and traveling a lot.
The first of these trips I took was inspired by a reading of Merlin Stone's When God was a Woman, which precipitated the outburst below, a paean to the Great Mother in her many guises as I had met her in literature. My reading and studies also sent me off on a pilgrimage to visit some of Her sacred sites of all kinds, which became the inspiration for a book I wrote the following year which I called Rushing to Eva, based on the daily journal I had kept during the trip.
- Where was it I saw you first, dear Lady?
- Was it in my mother's dark and shining eyes
- As she looked down at me, swaddled, newly born?
- Or later, when she read to me that lilting poem?
- Did I see you there, down in the cellar,
- Dancing with the potatoes, the Irish potatoes?
- Or was it trotting by the bogside that I saw you,
- Following the cows home at sunset glow,
- Their full bags swinging?
- Or following young Tom the sweep
- Who wanted so much to be clean
- And didn't know how -
- Following after him unseen over the fells,
- Your kirtle turned up above the knees
- To give bare legs and feet their freedom?
- Are you Mrs. Do-as-you-would-be-done-by
- Or Mrs. Be-done-by-as-you-did?
- And how could you be both?
- Or did I stand in the twilight road with Curdy
- Gazing raptly at your golden moon hanging there in the night,
- Lambent in the gathering dark,
- Knowing what was to be yet always had been? -
- The white-hot fragrance of your glowing bank of rosefire
- From out of which my hands and arms would one day emerge
- So coolly pure, so newly cleansed
- And fitted now for what they had to do.
- Or did I peer, tiny, safe, unfrightened,
- Huddling with little Diamond,
- From out the dark nest of your woven hair,
- Even as you swept the night sky with your besom,
- Roaring away above, uprooting trees, flattening houses,
- Raising the ocean waters mountain high
- To engulf mens' ships and scour the earth
- Of its manmade dirtiness?
- Your grandeur fills my being!
- Your tenderness opens my heart.
- The awesome beauty of your terrible wrath
- Bows me to the ground:
- Clothed in the dark and flowing robes of night,
- The moon and stars your crown,
- The sun your heart,
- The earth your body,
- Rain and wind your tears and your breath,
- Lightning the fire of your anger -
- You are the Mother of life and death alike,
- Beauty Herself in all her forms.
- And of ugliness?
- Yes, even with ugliness you will treat,
- Take on that form if you must,
- Knowing the teratoid to be earth-spawned,
- Not of yourself, yet still to be encompassed!
- Still to be taken in,
- Transformed by your rosefire.
- Even as our monstrous offspring ravage the earth,
- Can you yet forgive the blind and savage appetites
- That spawned such as us in the days of our youth?
- Turn not away but teach us still at this late hour -
- And may I ever remember as I look at them joined in prayer
- That my hands carry your very shape and function,
- My clasp, your presence.
- Oh, Lady, Lady!
- All these years
- I've been singing to you,
- Yet knew you no better than Tom -
- Still only catch a glimpse now and again -
- These songs are for you.
- Always were.
- July, 1984.