The Lament of the Irish Women
The babies are dead
on the sea. Far from home, watery shapeless arms
embracing the little bodies, the little cries fed brine,
the timbers cracking like skulls.
Silver fish, in days to come gripped in heavy net,
split open on china plate rimmed with gold, Wedgewood and Waterford,
generations back through centuries and hurricanes and wide
sargasso calms,
bore the small squalling things down and down
to the floor from which rises Azores and Iceland and
Canary and the rolling green land of the mothers
who are told
You will bear the children of rape or you will be hanged.
Years away they will tear the lightning from the sky and put it in machines,
but also they will build drafty houses with cellars they will fill with
bones and the smell of turf on the wind will set the fist around the heart.
Better to fall forever into the gray palace of the seabed
than to eat grass and dirt in the dolmens of a throatcut land.
This is what the mothers say, but they speak with the tongue and not the heart.
Turning over and over, head over heel, slowly turning and tumbling,
somersaulting
held by no cord
a greater hold
Ah but they say it is the most peaceful way to die, he tells them on the beach
when the news comes in
weeks later. But what does he know, who will break his neck falling from a ladder?
Is not the world a ladder, she thinks, all of us God's creatures climbing and going down
at whim it seems. And what is at the top but the land of
dead children, we wail to see them again and this is the sound we all have within us
that we are desperate to unhear with song and silence and drink and
lightning in machines
automatons to take the helm of the world and run it onto the breakers
and shake us all down a few rungs of the ladder.
[You used to hold my hand when the plane took off]
A tiny small coughing then
a tiny small
belly
head
bottom
settles on soft sand
this is the final peace of the in-between
if there is such a thing as peace
in this desert of sea
this is the calm
coming to rest within this garden of souls
waving like sea grass though there is nothing here
just the weight of the entire ocean holding
like a womb.
Someday the sea will boil away just as the land
and the coils of chain and broken ships and the thick black python of cable
that powered the machines
will crack in the sun
and the bleached bones of coelacanths and whales
will be the cathedrals to be dismantled,
to be rebuilt into a new ladder
so we can carry the babies up
- the sea will give up her-
after so much time in dark
let them, as warriors, bathe in the calm
milk
of the stars
for once.