After watching 'The Sacred Wonders of Britain (BBC2 in the UK), when Neil Oliver visited the graveyard of the kings, a resting place for more than forty kings, possibly, but by no means certainly, including Shakespeare's Macbeth and his victim Duncan I was reminded of a further IONA poem I had written a while ago.
IONA: Reilig Odrhain
What
could possibly bring
this Isle of Hy
to the eye
of a single king?
Let alone
near seven times seven!
Could be it is
by God's good grace
for His Wild Goose
a resting place.
Did they
for this reason believe,
through Columcille’s weave,
they might leave
this earth
closer to Heaven?
Iona from Fionnphort at the
South Western tip of The Isle of Mull
Other Iona poems on this blog can be found at IONA: A special place in the Cosmos
IONA: Bethlehem of the Isles
IONA: The Hermit's Cell
IONA: The Nunnery; on the ministry of women and justice
IONA: Oran's Chapel, Late Evening
IONA: The Pilgrim Way
IONA: The Hermit's Cell
IONA: The Nunnery; on the ministry of women and justice
IONA: Oran's Chapel, Late Evening
IONA: The Pilgrim Way