Irish love speaks to loyalty - not possession.Irish beauty is that of memory - not escape.Sorrow refers to Ireland's shared inheritance -and not private failure.Her songs dreamt of cultural survival -without promise of healing unshut its wounds.In all, Ireland's promise was to herself -built in faithfulness, enchantment, love, and land.- R.E. Slater
What Songs Were For
Ireland did not sing because the world was gentle.
It sang because it wasn’t,
She early learned silence can be a form of death,
and acts of grievance yet another form.
So she found the narrow road between -
one that bends,
one that remembers.
Her poems were never meant to save.
They were meant to keep her human.
When Irish lands were stolen,
Erin Fair rose from Irish mouths.
When her language thinned,
she hid it in her melodies.
When her heart broke,
shee did not call it defeat,
Love was never conquest.
It meant staying.
Staying when leaving would have been easier.
Staying when hope came back empty-handed.
Staying long enough for grief
to learn how to speak without shouting.
You’ll hear it if you listen properly -
not in the loud lines,
but in the soft undertones.
The pause before blessing.
The joke told at wakes.
The song that carries sorrow
without dropping one's grief.
Her poets did not write to escape the world.
They wrote to endure it without becoming cruel.
And if Irish poems sound tender,
don’t mistake them for weakness.
A people do not learn tenderness
by living softly,
So if you ask what the old songs were doing,
what the love poems were really for,
this is the answer:
They were saying quietly, stubbornly,
we are still here.
And more than that:
And that, in a hard Irish century,
was resistance enough. ☘️
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Old Love Song for a New Century
I loved you not by trumpet nor vow,
but the way dear 'Erin loves her hills -
knowing her soils will break the heart
when sowing its rocky green fields.
A bounteous harvest ne'er was promised,
though weather and time required;
we could but toil in love's untold pain,
praying our efforts reaped enough.
longer than certainty
deeper than hope.
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The Country We Carry Within
There are countries you can leave
and countries that walk inside you.
Ireland is the unsettling latter -
We gladly inherit her grammars,
her griefs half-sung, half-sworn.
She taught us how to bless the wound,
without naming it holy or right.
And when the night turns cruel,
it is her voice we answer within -
low, cracked, always faithful,
faithful to the bitter end....
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A Love Poem Written in Rain
The rain knew you before I did.
It touched your face like memory,
falling as if it had been waiting
centuries to find you.
We spoke a little,
Ireland wanted it so.
But every echoing silence
held words that only bruised.
When you left, the sky did not protest.
It simply kept raining -
as if to say:
love had never belonged here.
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May your sorrows never harden you,
nor seldom joys make you cruel.
May love come late if it must,
but may it come ever true.
May you learn the Irish practice -
that beauty more often limps,
that faith survives in fragments,
and laughter find its own courage.
And should you lose what you loved,
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Between the Roads
The darkling road is narrow,
the kind that doesn’t argue
with stony weather or doubt.
It absorbs its wanderers
and moves along its paths.
A young lass walks its bends,
not because she is certain,
but because stopping
would mean turning around.
The valise pulls hard on her arm
like a question she hasn’t answered.
Behind her, a pause -
a man-shaped hesitation
is left standing in the middle.
Some choices linger like that,
not chasing...
but not letting go.
Ireland does this to people.
It puts space between them
asking what still belongs.
Her rocky walls listen.
Her fields keep their counsel.
Her coastal airs smell like fresh rain
remembering its birthing mother.
Nothing is decided here -
only momentarily revealed.
The road holds both directions,
and love, if it’s real,
will walk its own way too.
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The road ran thin between its fields,
no promises lay in its bends,
but hedgerows leaning closely together
listening to hearts pretend.
the day unsure its stays,
with every step she took ahead
left something further away.
She walked with unsure confidence,
wrapped a coat, a hat, her doubts,
her love folded inward like a letter
she had not unfolded back out.
Ireland knew what she did not -
that leaving leaves a wound,
and love might only choose
when to become earthbound.
Behind stood the man she loved
as still as hewn granite stone,
not chasing what was leaving him,
but not brave enough alone.
Ireland held them in its way -
not sorrowed nor disgraced,
but room enough for longing
that growing distance has to face.
No vow was broken on the road,
neither promises fully forsworn.
Some loves cannot be kept,
but neither can they be over-worn.
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there is no hurry in them,
no need to wake and shine.
They are tender and sturdy,
like stone warmed by sun,
holding the day’s last heat
long after its light has gone.
You can lean your back against them
when the wind turns sharp.
They will not move.
They will not preach.
They remember one's hands -
those that lifted,
those that buried,
those that stayed empty
and still learned to bless.
Such words do not promise rescue.
They offer company.
They sit beside you
until grief learns its own shape.
And when spoken aloud,
they sound like this:
not hope shouted,
but endurance sung low -
a warmth kept quietly
for whoever comes next.
@copyright R.E. Slater Publications
all rights reserved
carrying every wayward sin downstream,
that the mouths that curse the night
might learn to bless each morning with song.
For in Dublin faire, the broken laugh,
refusing to die and dying to live.
2) A verse in Irish romantic-tragic tone
heard its doorways and late prayers,
Her beloved city remembers what was done,
and still dares to forgive by morning.
3) A verse with a satirical Irish bite
with an Irish grin and a blessing.
Its truth is traded cheap at the bar
without ever admitting its payment.
4) An elegiac civic lament
are heard the old songs,
and forgiveness bruised.
5) An Irish proverb
Dublin is a city of chances and cheats
and still calls it home.
May the wind be always at your back.
May the sun shine warm upon your face,
the rains fall soft upon your fields,
and until we meet again,
may God hold you
and never want as long as you live.
May God be with you and bless you,
may you see your children’s children,
may you be poor in misfortune and rich in blessings,
may you know nothing but happiness
from this day forward
