Suibhne is wounded, and confesses
There was a time when I thought
the sound of a dove cooing and flitting
over a pond was sweeter than the voices
of friends. There was a time when
I preferred the blackbird and the boom
of a stag belling in a storm. I used to think
that the chanting of the mountain-grouse
at dawn had more music than your voice,
but things are different now. Still,
it would be hard to say I wouldn’t rather
live above the bright lake, and eat watercress
in the wood, and be away from sorrow.
“Suibhne is wounded, and confesses” from Tongues of Fire by Seán Hewitt. Copyright © 2020 by Seán Hewitt. Published by Cape Poetry. Used with permission of the poet.
This poem was originally read in the Poetry Unbound episode “Seán Hewitt — Suibhne is wounded, and confesses.”
Reflections