Great poet, a friend of mine Michael Keaney first put me on to him in the 70's.
North is my Favouritte collection
and I loved his collected prose work Finders Keepers.
St Kevin and the Blackbird
And then there was St Kevin and the
blackbird.
The saint is kneeling, arms stretched out,
inside
His cell, but the cell is narrow, so
One turned-up palm is out the window, stiff
As a crossbeam, when a blackbird lands
And lays in it and settles down to nest.
Kevin feels the warm eggs, the small
breast, the tucked
Neat head and claws and, finding himself
linked
Into the network of eternal life,
Is moved to pity: now he must hold his hand
Like a branch out in the sun and rain for
weeks
Until the young are hatched and fledged and
flown.
*
And since the whole thing’s imagined
anyhow,
Imagine being Kevin. Which is he?
Self-forgetful or in agony all the time
From neck on out down through his hurting
forearms?
Are his fingers sleeping? Does he still
feel his knees?
Or has the shut-eyed blank of underearth
Crept up through him? Is there distance in
his head?
Alone and mirrored clear in love’s deep
river,
‘To labour and not to seek reward,’ he
prays,
A prayer his body makes entirely
For he has forgotten self, forgotten bird
And on the riverbank forgotten the river’s
name.
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