When the house is dark and the air
quiet for a minute,
then past the window flits
that winging shape like a burning bird
that shoots back on its track and away
again, springing.
The evening fire
crackles now, the flame slips along the kindling,
the baby flames begin to grasp, they bravely reach,
while the air outside is as clear as water,
and the flying thing is here again, it comes back as if
to a knot that will not loosen, or the small
disturbance in the stream that reveals the snag,
back to that knot whispering in water that shuddered
past my knee, a clutching -
little waves like double quotes -
when the surface of the water glittered like a Christmas tree
and after twenty-one years the hanging glass butterfly
that I bought in the December market slithered away,
lost itself, loosed the knot and fell into its freedom.
(from The Boys of Bluehill by Eiléan Ní Chuilleanáin, Gallery Press, 2015)