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The bee-loud glade

But there I was in remote and gusty western County Clare

Picking my way along the glaciated limestone pavement of the burren

Stepping over the vertical grykes, block to block, clint to clint

Remembering lines of escape and solitude from Yeats*

I will arise and go now, and go to Innisfree,
And a small cabin build there, of clay and wattles made;

I’d felt the sense of self-sufficient hermitage, the greasy clay in my hands

Pulling and cutting wood into wattles in four-foot strips

Daubing the clay in my slimy hands, adding straw

Forming the inverted basket of a small cabin, a hat of a home.

Nine bean rows will I have there, A hive for the honeybee, and live alone in the bee-loud glade.

But, what glade could be loud with bees?

The burren’s deep cracks filled with turf and tiny, brave flowers

Looking for a place away from the men

Tired of the watching and the following and the accommodating

Just then dreaming of my own aloneness in a bean-and-honey paradise.

At last looping back to the family

Down through a long, grass-choked ravine, threading down one glade                         

And suddenly there were bees                               

Thousands of them, streaking with me, above me, alongside, past me

Humming, whirring, buzzing, so incredibly loud

Celestial bee-loudness like a great vibrating harp.

And me, the incredulous English major, American, alone,

Stock still in a bee-loud glade, no longer just words in a poem,

My ears blasted by Yeats’ Irish thunder.

burren: a limestone karst        clint: slab of limestone pavement     gryke: fissure

* You can hear William Butler Yeats himself read this at   youtube.com/watch?v=hGoaQ433wnw

See also “Beneath Ireland”

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