North Bull Island





On what I believe was my third day in Ireland, already having indulged in the  much anticipated full Irish breakfast and been warmly welcomed by the Dempseys,  I went for a walk on my own down at North Bull Island off of Raheny, Dublin. It was about a 20 minute walk to the beach area, and a long wind-blown stretch to the water, passing mud flats, salt marshes, and dunes veiled by thick layers of straw, cobwebbed hair. The beach was fairly vacant on my end, just some dog walkers, strollers and a few cars parked in a rectangular area close to the road. 


To the south, the blue-indigo smoke of clouds was slowly winding down, swallowing up the red and white striped chimney stacks from the Dublin powerplant. In front of the powerplant, dancing under amber spotlights of a refugee sun were a group of kites, occasionally keeling back from the wind's mid-section punches. (There may have been a kite-flyer on my end of the beach as well, I can't recall; kite-flying and wind-surfing seem to be fairly popular in this area.) 


I walked away from this and headed north, towards the cliffs of Howth and the beach was so wide and stretched-out before me that the desire was to propel myself forward in a sort of mid-air tumbling. (It's an unbelievable feeling, really, not having to  weave through a crowd for a change.) Despite what my heart tells me though, I don't possess supernatural powers, so I walked, and I walked, filling my pockets with unbroken scallops and plum-colored mussels, a willing capture in the belly of a giant artist.







displaced branch, stretching over the hills of Howth.  Photo by Colin.

The North Bull Island Nature Reserve stretches across the towns of Contarf, Raheny, and Kilbarrack. It is known for its flora (particularly the prickly marram grass that covers the dunes, which I made the mistake of walking through), fauna, and bird-life. Up to 5,000 ducks, 3,000 geese and 30,000 waders can be found roosting on the island in the winter. The area itself was born about 200 years ago, first as a sandbank formed by the tides and later developing into a true island when the harbor walls were built for the Dublin Port. It continues to increase in width. For a descriptive map of the island and its  wildlife, click here.



Hundreds of birds taking off, en route to the shore.

The day before as I was walking the same stretch, despite an abusive cold wind, my first impulse was to take my shoes off and walk along the the coast, torturing my feet in the cold Dublin Bay. I felt my blood turn to ice, but withstanded it for longer than was comfortable, until my feet were heavy and tingly numb, and the cold sand was a thawing comfort. What is this masochistic desire to be battered by the elements? The wind biting my face. The sky spitting it's icy rain on my bare head (which it did quite often during my stay...). The clouds clustering in my chest.




Carrying on a tradition of eccentricity. Photo by Colin.

Nearly five years ago, the first time I visited Ireland, I took a trip along the Western coast in a tiny Fiat and one thing most poignantly sticks out in my memory--awed as I was by the battered castles and the 500-shades of green grass and hills, I just wanted to get out of the car and walk through it,  saturating myself in dampness, rolling down and climbing up the dampness. 

From what I have read on walkers, walking and theories on both, this is, simply put, most likely a way to claim ownership of surroundings, to carve out a trail, to leave a mark. Fair enough. And baring the extremities, well, from barefoot pilgrims to eccentric artists (or just eccentrics...), that's nothing new. Right here in Ireland, zealots climb Croagh Patrick shoeless to suffer in honor of the mountain's patron saint, and then there's Peace Pilgrim who just checked out of mainstream life to walk for her namesake (peace), and Werner Herzog, an artist of extremities, who trekked 500 kilometers in the depth of winter from Munich to Paris to ensure that friend and fellow film maker Lotte Eisner would not die. And there are thousands of others, I am sure, who have at some point attempted or at least desired to heighten their experience and belief of a place or concept through physical sensation.


But whatever it is driving me (and them)--possession, depression, a primordial instinct to become "one" with nature (however far that desire might take one), the desire to just feel alive after moping about in a cube/office/apartment/ bar/ classroom/ library/kitchen/cyberworld for most of the day's hours--in the end, I am just plain relieved that I felt it and I was there.






Photo by Colin. 



Tread Softly, DUB





Sorry for the hiatus, but my last fortnight was spent treading the cobbled streets and damp countryside of Dublin and the surrounding country. If you don't mind, I will dedicate the next several blog posts to Irish excursions and my general musings of the culture. (Or at least my brief glimpse of it.)

A quick highlight. In the picture below, barely visibly on the upper right hand side, on the back of a post card of some sort sits the original, hand-written verse of W.B. Yeat's He Wishes for the Cloths of Heaven. Why the excitement? Aside from this poem being a personal favorite, it was also the inspiration in naming this blog.

Had I the heaven's embroidered cloths,
Enwrought with golden and silver light,
The blue and the dim and the dark cloths
Of night and light and the half-light,

I would spread the cloths under your feet:
But I, being poor, have only my dreams;
I have spread my dreams under your feet;
Tread softly because you tread on my dreams.



From the hand of the poet himself. On display at the National Library of Ireland. 

I am already missing the charcoal smell in the air, the endless twilights, the huge expanse of beach at North Bull Island, the white and black pudding, the bipolar weather, and above all, the family. I must admit, though, during my walk up 5th ave from work this evening, just for about 2 minutes I felt like laughing and sprawling out on the wet sidewalk, inhaling the smell of manure and burnt pretzels in front of Central Park. Maybe it's happiness to be back in the Big Apple? Maybe it's jet lag.

In any case, stay tuned for Dublin treading!




Nighttime shot of Trinity College. 

Halloween Extravaganza




Friday night. A night of pagan spectacle on the hallowed grounds of the world's largest gothic revival cathedral. The Halloween Extravaganza at the Cathedral of Saint John the Divine is the perfect juxtaposition of seemingly heathen behavior in holy land, creating an ambience of awe and mild delinquency for this temporary tresspass of the dead. Though the association makes perfect sense, not all Christian establishments are so quick to embrace their pagan roots. So, what better way to celebrate Hallows Eve than by pushing, or temporarily obliterating, boundaries?

For me, there is no better way. It is a night of imagining. The cathedral's architecture, its dizzying height and dramatic arches, displaces you upon entrance. (You're not in Harlem anymore.) The atmosphere is thick with fog and misty green spotlights. The film (Nosferatu, 1922) induces nostalgia and the spirit of another time, while the silent genre requires some creativity in interpreting plot and character. The Aeolin-skinner Great Organ's  accompaniment to the film is both morbid and threatening, in accordance with the moves of the vampire. Played by Tim Brumfield, the score does, however, have its humorous moments, keeping in tune with the more melodramatic scenes; scenes belonging to that long lost time when expressive acting made up for the lack of total sensory bombardment with which some modern films now provide us.




Screen hovering over the choir where Nosferatu was shown. 
Underneath is the "gateway" of the dead and the living. 


After the screening, loud banging echoed throughout the cathedral. This summoned the ghouls, who passed under a gate at the apse to temporarily transition from purgatorial places to the awaiting audience. Intricate, other-wordly, and walking at the speed of the dead to the continuing sounds of a haunting organ,  demons, skeletons,  even creatures emerging from what seemed like the depths of the sea made their way down the entirety of the choir then into the nave, scattering among the witnesses, toying and frightening.



To the left is a terrifying giant bobbling baby head creature. 











A puppet skeleton was raised midway through the procession and billowed over the trancept, while a giant spider hovered over the cathedral doors, just below the Rose window, threatening the exit. Towards the end of the march, when the last ghoul had passed under the transitional arch, the organ shed its minor chords for a sunnier When the Saints Go Marching In, ending on a less harrowing note.

If you missed the show this year, I hope you will consider attending next year (and ordering your tickets early, it did sell out). The cathedral will again be embracing its Celtic origins for the upcoming holiday season, when it will hold its annual Winter Solstice Concert (Paul Winter's 29th Annual Winter Solstice Celebration.)

But more on that next month. I'm still basking in autumn.



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