By Robinson Jeffers
The old pagan burials, uninscribed rock,
Secret-keeping mounds,
Have shed the feeble delusions that built them,
They stand inhumanly
Clean and massive; they have lost their priests.
But the cross-bearing stones
Still foot corruption, and their faces carved
With hopes and terrors
At length too savagely annulled to be left
Even ridiculous.
Long-suffering saints, flamelike aspirers,
You have won your reward:
You sleep now as easily as any dead murderer
Or worn-out lecher.
To have found your faith a liar is no thorn
In the narrow beds,
Nor laughter of unfriends nor rumor of the ruinous
Churches will reach you.
As at Clonmacnoise I saw them all ruined,
And at Cong, at Glendalough,
At Monasterboice; and at Kilrnacduagh
All ruined, all roofless
But the great cyclopean-stoned spire
That leans toward its fall.
A place perfectly abandoned of life,
Except that we heard
One old horse neighing across the stone hedges
In the flooded fields.
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After a morning of laundry, the only excitement of my Monday was an ophthalmologist appointment. None of my post-glaucoma surgery follow-ups has really been reassuring; he hasn't found anything obviously wrong, but each time there's been something weird enough that he wants me back in 4-6 weeks to see if it's changed, and this time it's something that might essentially be an eye pimple or might be something more ominous, which he can't tell without a more complicated scan that he doesn't want to do unless it grows, so they're going to look at it again in a month.
Otherwise, I walked to the beach, I watched some more Derry Girls with Cheryl, I watched the end of the Ravens victory over the Buccaneers, and now we're watching the season premiere of What We Do in the Shadows, which I have missed. Here are some photos from Monasterboice in County Louth, a monastery founded around the year 521, though the earliest surviving buildings -- the high crosses and round tower -- date from the 10th century, when it was occupied by Vikings, and whose graveyard has victims of the Great Famine and people who died in the past decade:
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