Beltane Bride
Máire go to the forest fathoms.
There are ribbons to guide your way
Beware lost roaming cattle,
Moss in their wide horns,
And the crazy stickling withy dolls
That creak as you pass by.
Shiveringly white Máire
We took your grandmother’s sheet -
Washed it in an icy stream.
It is your dress of passing
Under the dazzle-green leaves
Where none of us have ventured.
We hear there is a chapel
Of split rocks, and vaulted oaks
And a bluebell aisle Máire
Before a granite table,
Where your snow-white groom
Stands silent in the green.
A choir of jays will praise you
In your crown of forget-us-nots
And your splendid antlered suitor
Waits for his wine-berry kiss.
Go well, go well Máire. For we may never
Know you in this world again.
Steven O’Brien
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