Saturday, 4 April 2026

House of Spirits - Prose Poem By Greg Patrick

 






House of Spirits


Prose Poem

By Greg Patrick


 

“Away, come away: Empty your heart of its mortal dream.
The winds awaken, the leaves whirl round, Our cheeks are pale,

our hair is unbound.”- Willam Butler Yeats, Riders of the Sidhe

 

All Hallows Eve cast its dark spell. How far he ventured astray into the rain and mist he

could no longer tell. How long had it been since he was home? Son of Traveler blood

cursed to roam. Across the horizon working the odd job just to earn a few bob.

So many familiar faces now gone once again standing on Erin's greenest shore the

prodigal son.

He just kept aimlessly walking haunted by the echoes of the past talking

past the caravans ignoring their wares and hawking. The road was now dirt.

The wind intensified and he felt out of his element in just a shirt,

returning to his native soil after years of foreign toil.

A gathering storm swallowed the sun. Too many memories here. No energy to run.

He lingered by a lonely pilgrim’s shrine remembering the girl to whom he would have

proposed in the Celtic twilight where proud Cuchulain strode and Samhain eve when

the Dullahan rode its great black stallion that galloped and snorted as the faer people

on the old standing stones cavorted. He remembered the stories by the peat fireside

confronting Samhain even when the Sidhe warrior don bright helms to ride seeking to

steal a mortal bride yet he knew true monsters bore a human face. Here in the remote

stretch of the Burren sought solitude from the urban race.

How long had it been since a drunk driver took his love losing faith in a God above?

He returned from Australia to his native soil weary from the loneliness of foreign of

work and toil.

He stood aloof and shunned at her wake, not touching a drop of drink or a crumb of

cake. He stepped into the night, exhaling a steaming sigh. Why of all people was it her

that had to die? He walked out to nowhere under a brooding angry Irish sky.

The punishingly chill wind swept his soul with a ghostly singer's voice

and caress as he envisioned his Maeve when he first saw her in a green dress.

He remembered when they last kissed as he was enveloped in a wave of mist.

He thought of their last night together dancing with her eyes outshining the stars as

she graced the floor in a feis dress. He closed he shivered at the mist's ghostly caress

where night falls even as legends rise. His breath steams as he sighs

feeling like a scribe with no tribe. The muse left with her curse to utter no song.

He did not compose lyrics in so long. The muse eluded him as he shivered in the

raven's shadow of mourning. Yet he dared love Maeve despite the gods all but

screaming a silent warning.

Dark clouds swallowed the moon. He tried to raise his spirits by singing the

rising of the moon yet thunder roared, drowning out his tune.

He shook in the rain memories slithering like electric eels through his brain.

As he was immersed in shockingly cold rain, he thought he could see her,

his Maeve calling to him. His life's delight and pain. She seemed hailed in shimmering

iridescence as he staggered towards that radiant presence. The dream cut as deep

as a sacrificial dagger. He clutched his heart and began to stagger.

“Maeve!” he called out in vain, his lost love in sight hailed in cold tears of rain.

He staggered blinded by the rain that roared like a passing train.

Then music reached his ears. Yes, it was. “The Rising of the Moon” he hears.

A village and a pub in this lonely windswept place where he thought to disappear

without a trace. A world away from the urban race.

He passed from the storm-swept night to one of the music, song and fire burning bright.

It felt eerily wrong as if he were a wayward mortal as if he crossed into the sidhe realm

through an Elvish portal.

He lingered at the threshold haggard shivering, and cold eyes haunted by stories

untold.

He tried to find a lonely place by the warmth of the hearth to brood offering a polite nod

to the patrons not wanting to be rude.

Yet he looked into eyes as green as meadows of dream not seen her like since losing

Maeve to the banshee's scream.

He stood up only to swept away into a dance, a reel closing his eyes into his partner’s

embrace. The music grew louder and more wild. He went from feeling as old as the

hills to giggling like a child.

He was drawn into the depths of her Celtic sea green eyes as if lost in a trance

on a night where old wounds ached in the cold feeling as empty as a man whose soul

was sold.

Red lips like reopened wounds as the stranger girl whispered a song in his ear as his

eyes shed a tear he felt the sensation of falling then flying.

“Am I alive then or dying?”

His dreams passed like a shadow in the night amid red leaves falling.

He awoke not in a lonely room but groggy and disorientated sheltering

under the slab of an ancient lord's tomb.

"I shall arise and go now is that not what you said Mr. Yeats?”

Time once more to stand and challenge the fates.

 

 





Greg Patrick - A dual citizen of Ireland and the states, Greg Patrick is an Irish/Armenian traveller poet and the son of a Navy enlisted man. He is also a former Humanitarian aid worker who worked with great horses for years and loves the wilds of Connemara and Galway in the rain where he's written many stories. Greg spent his youth in the South Pacific and Europe and currently resides in Galway, Ireland and sometimes the states.

 

 

 

 


No comments:

Post a Comment