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On the first attempt by the Monastery of Cluain Moccu Nois to 'record and correct the stories of the simple people.'
He questioned me with eyes burnng with certainty and a mouth closed tight like a fist with suspicion, with distaste, he questions me. if the word inquisitor had been invented he could have worn it like an old coat settling into the dark corners of its meaning with comfort. but his religion is yet young though he was born old.
I am the old man, marking time til death. He has taken to this new religion fully. It has no corners only clarity. Think? there is a formula for thought. all needs prescribed, proscribed scribed this man calls himself a scribe
Like portable dolmens, stone circles of words he seeks to imprison the knowledge, my gold, the stories of my race. he waits with the kind of careful patience that allows torturers to wait befre applying a second heated blade to already burned skin. In each stoke of quill on vellum seeks to pin down with weighty thoughts the gods whose blood still flows in these veins seeks to cleanse them 'if they must be told, let them be told properly with all due reverence to almighty god'
I think he means it.
Fr my part I am illiterate
92 years and in all that time I have never yet felt the want of words or knowledge until they brought me here and told to me that word illiterate I turn it over in my mouth taste it it is sour like the bitter herbs my mother used for battle wounds acrid like the spring smoke used to clease the calves what price knowledge for an illiterate? I am the sacred liar teller of tall tales He assures me all wilts in the glare of his god's truth.
I had thought to have earned my place. In my youth a warrior in my old age the filí of Eriu have sat at my knee fuelled their visions on the back of my words, my stories my store of treasures The druids now turned culdee wearing their new religion lightly like to see chieftain, farmer, warrior around the fire like little boys again reminded of their place in this busy world.
He has no place in that world removes himself with fastidious care away from the noisome press of us his god is deaf i think he can only hear him in silence. I shift and sigh buying time at my age I thought to have done with war but now like a distant echo sound of bone on bodhrán faintest tone of spear on shield in some long-disused shadow of my soul I feel the blood stir rise against the cool smiles and impatient patience of these neutered men.
I reach out, half blind, half lame reach out across decades I feel my stories, how they turn in on themselves fold, unfold, reveal by hiding mislead and teach a dozen lessons I grope through them, their secrets laid out waiting for the words to come words to blind words to shine
I think suddenly of my own grandmother of how she would tell her favourite story not of men, nor gods nor heroes but of how when she was small she had in this world one treasure an string of beads, a bracelet that she found in the river a gift from Suir for rescuing a swan The fear of losing it, or it being stolen was upon her it fretted at her until she knew no peace she hid it nine times and nine times changed its place until at last she hit upon the one how she laughed to know her precious gift was safe under the muck and shite of the pig-sty, where no sane person would ever think to look
I face him his middle-aged youth with milk-blind eyes and smile I begin to speak and he to write he the erudite... I, illiterate I have one more war to fight: one weapon left at stake a priceless store.
I'll hide it in the murky depths in plain view in every twisted phrase Let him pile on the swill I'll match him word for word I will, My treaure will not tarnish will not fade. and someday come the people to their own and seeking hands will grasp the buried loot My sacred lie will outshine his tawdry truth.
Geraldine Moorkens Byrne
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Comments about this poem (At Cluain Moccu Nois
by
Geraldine Moorkens Byrne
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comments about this poem (At Cluain Moccu Nois by
Geraldine Moorkens Byrne
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Sara Curran
(8/23/2008 7:56:00 AM) |
that is amazing, utterly amazing. I was in awe, a wonderful poem.
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Geraldine Moorkens Byrne
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