Navigated to "The Rainstick" - Seamus Heaney

"The Rainstick" - Seamus Heaney

Aug 10, 2021
11 mins

Episode Description

Today we will take a look at "The Rainstick" by Seamus Heaney. 


Bio: Seamus Heaney is widely recognized as one of the major poets of the 20th century. A native of Northern Ireland, Heaney was raised in County Derry, and later lived for many years in Dublin. He was the author of over 20 volumes of poetry and criticism, and edited several widely used anthologies. He won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1995 "for works of lyrical beauty and ethical depth, which exalt everyday miracles and the living past." Heaney taught at Harvard University (1985-2006) and served as the Oxford Professor of Poetry (1989-1994). He died in 2013.

https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poets/seamus-heaney


"The Rainstick" by Seamus Heaney.

Upend the rainstick and what happens next
Is a music that you never would have known
To listen for. In a cactus stalk


Downpour, sluice-rush, spillage and backwash
Come flowing through. You stand there like a pipe
Being played by water, you shake it again lightly


And diminuendo runs through all its scales
Like a gutter stopping trickling. And now here comes
A sprinkle of drops out of the freshened leaves,


Then subtle little wets off grass and daisies;
Then glitter-drizzle, almost-breaths of air.
Upend the stick again. What happens next


Is undiminished for having happened once.
Twice, ten, a thousand times before.
Who cares if the music that transpires


Is the fall of grit or dry seeds through a cactus?
You are like a rich man entering heaven
Through the ear of a shower. Listen now again.


https://newrepublic.com/article/114546/seamus-heaney-rainstick

See all episodes