Betjeman

I confess that I am shockingly ignorant of John Betjeman’s poem; he was a much loved Poet Laureate; my featured image is of the statue of him by Paul Day at St Pancras Station London, a place he helped save, thank goodness from the vandals of post-war Britain. He was passionate about Victorian architecture and helped save many glorious buildings and monuments as a founder member of the Victorian Society.

I know of his poems, ‘A Subalterns’s Love Song’ about Miss Joan Hunter Dunn, ‘Summoned by Bells’, ‘Slough’ with the much quoted opening line, “Come friendly bombs and fall on Slough…” But I had never come across this one:

Ireland With Emily

John Betjeman

Bells are booming down the bohreens,
White the mist along the grass,
Now the Julias, Maeves and Maureens
Move between the fields to Mass.
Twisted trees of small green apple
Guard the decent whitewashed chapel,
Gilded gates and doorway grained,
Pointed windows richly stained
With many-coloured Munich glass.

See the black-shawled congregations
On the broidered vestment gaze
Murmer past the painted stations
As Thy Sacred Heart displays
Lush Kildare of scented meadows,
Roscommon, thin in ash-tree shadows,
And Westmeath the lake-reflected,
Spreading Leix the hill-protected,
Kneeling all in silver haze?

In yews and woodbine, walls and guelder,
Nettle-deep the faithful rest,
Winding leagues of flowering elder,
Sycamore with ivy dressed,
Ruins in demesnes deserted,
Bog-surrounded bramble-skirted -
Townlands rich or townlands mean as
These, oh, counties of them screen us
In the Kingdom of the West.

Stony seaboard, far and foreign,
Stony hills poured over space,
Stony outcrop of the Burren,
Stones in every fertile place,
Little fields with boulders dotted,
Grey-stone shoulders saffron-spotted,
Stone-walled cabins thatched with reeds,
Where a Stone Age people breeds
The last of Europe's stone age race.

Has it held, the warm June weather?
Draining shallow sea-pools dry,
When we bicycled together
Down the bohreens fuchsia-high.
Till there rose, abrupt and lonely,
A ruined abbey, chancel only,
Lichen-crusted, time-befriended,
Soared the arches, splayed and splendid,
Romanesque against the sky.

There in pinnacled protection,
One extinguished family waits
A Church of Ireland resurrection
By the broken, rusty gates.
Sheepswool, straw and droppings cover,
Graves of spinster, rake and lover,
Whose fantastic mausoleum,
Sings its own seablown Te Deum,
In and out the slipping slates.

Ballintoy 7

2 Comments

  1. Many Cha Cha Michelle

    Only just on topic: you’ve answered a question that has been bugging us since we saw a lovely short film the other day, set in a train station… We wanted to know where the gorgeous building was and I think it actually featured the statue of John Betjeman in your photo! Thanks 🙂

    Like

    1. Lois

      It is the most amazing place… we rendezvoused there for a wedding… but I really want to go back and spend some time looking round because it is a classic of its time… well, a classic of any time!

      Like

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