(Robert Hoffmann/Unsplash)

You are running, delighted, up the rough-made
laneway to the lake where you are sailor, eel-fisher, 
pilot; it’s after-school time, you are free-bird, lark
and soaring; turf-banks, and the rickety green door
into the wood-shed; on the unsafe, rough-plank
boat you have built, you will raise a sheet-sail
to explore the reeds and small, boggy inlets,
sweet breezes accompanying, silence, your own
sensual pleasures, and high anticipation; 
                                                                        then
on your way, you meet the old man, poet prophet, 
coming down the laneway, bearded, a little stooped, 
back from the distinguished Fellowship he has held, 
there by the shores of Lake Michigan, its flotillas
of swift-moving yachts, its waters stretching away
to far horizons;
                                    you meet, alter and aliud, 
your Other and Stranger; you meet where age-old
boglands and bright campus together have fallen still
as in a painting, and suddenly, all you have known
is a nothingness, a nowhere, a now, an always;
a moment of silence falling away from the old
rickety door that opens out of, and into, eternity.

John F. Deane is the founder of Poetry Ireland, the national poetry society, and of its journal The Poetry Ireland Review. He has published nine collections, including Selected and New Poems (2023) and, most recently, Jonah and Me. He is a member of Aosdana, the Irish academy of the arts.

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Published in the July/August 2026 issue: View Contents