An Scáthán The Mirror
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An Scáthán (i gcuimhne m’ athar) The Mirror (in memory of my father)
Niorbh é m’athair níos mó é
ach ba mise a mhacsan;
paradacsa fuar a d’fháisceas,
dealbh i gculaith Dhomhnaigh
a cuireadh an lá dár gcionn.

Dhein sé an-lá deora, seirí,
fuiscí, ceapairí feola is tae.
Bhí seanchara leis ag eachtraí
faoi sciuird lae a thugadar
ar Eochaill sna triochaidí
is gurbh é a chéad pháirtí é
i seirbhís Chorcaí/An Sciobairín
amach sna daicheadaí.
Bhí dornán cártaí Aifrinn
ar mhatal an tseomra suí
ina gcorrán thart ar vás gloine,
a bhronntanas scoir ó CIE.

Níorbh eol dom go ceann dhá lá
gurbh é an scáthán a mharaigh é.

An seanscáthán ollmhór Victeoiriach
leis an bhfráma ornáideach bréagórga
a bhí romhainn sa tigh trí stór
nuair a bhogamar isteach ón tuath.
Bhinn scanraithe roimhe: go sciorrfadh
anuas den bhfalla is go slogfadh mé
d’aon tromanáil i lár na hoiche.
He was no longer my father
but I was still his son;
I would get to grips with that cold paradox,
the remote figure in his Sunday best
who was buried the next day.

A great day for tears, snifters of sherry,
whiskey, beef sandwiches, tea.
An old mate of his was recounting
their day excursion
to Youghal in the Thirties,
how he was his first partner
on the Cork/Skibbereen route
in the late Forties.
There was a splay of Mass cards
on the sitting-room mantelpiece
which formed a crescent round a glass vase,
his retirement present from CIE.

I didn’t realise until two days later
it was the mirror took his breath away.

The monstrous old Victorian mirror
with the ornate gilt frame
we had found in the three-storey house
when we moved in from the country.
I was afraid that it would sneak
down from the wall and swallow me up
in one gulp in the middle of the night.

 

   

Michael Davitt
1950-2005


Ealaíontóir/Artist:
Peannaire/Calligrapher:
Aistritheoir/Translator:
Ainmníodh ag/Nominator:
Andrew Folan
Réiltín Murphy
Paul Muldoon
The Author

 

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