He I see it.
Father Michael Commane
I keep saying that it is the little things in life that are both revealed as the biggest and most vital moments, so we lose a comment, a phrase, a gesture and end up being all the poorest.
Last week, I spoke to a nurse at the hospital where I work. Noeleen McDaid is from Donegal, an actress with an actress and plays guitar. In a past commentary, he talked about an e-book that his guitar organization had just published. curious and I didn’t give him a choice yet to tell me the story.
It is a bath through Covid. One of the singers of the band Nure published a poem entitled Caged Birds through Maya Angelou in his WhatsApp. La most of the band’s members are from Terenure dublin, hence the so-called Nure. WhatsApp publications emerged the concept of the organization Nure Poets Corner WhatsApp. Every Saturday morning, a member of the organization published a poem he enjoyed with an attached introduction. 41 poems have been published on the site. Most of the poets were Irish, but there were also poets from Nigeria. England, the United States, Mexico, Chile and Japan.
Since this undeniable beginning a beautiful eeeebook of poetry and observation has been published, the eeeebook is called NurePoets Corner – Poems 2020-2021, is composed of 24 poems and each of the participants commented on the poem of his choice. At this time part of the eeeebook, members of the organization express their own non-public comments about the poem and what it means to them. It’s an eeeebook where you can dive and go out without any problems. In addition to the poems, there are so many reviews and sight problems that give this eeeebook an exclusive touch.
My nurse friend Noeleen chose Emily Dickinson’s “Hope, ” it’s the feathered thing.
In his advent with the poem, he recalls how much he enjoyed Dickinson’s themes: death, immortality, religion and doubt when he read English for his certificate of completion.
Justin Cunniffe in his observation of Noeleen’s poem alludes to the fact that hope is a quality that is obligatory at this time in Covid’s time and, like any intelligent writing, argues that Dickinson’s poem is as applicable today as it was when the American poet wrote it.
Dickinson, born in 1830 and died in 1886, lived a lonely life after an unmet love affair. This poem was first published in 1891. Alice Shaughnessy writes that when she read Dickinson’s poem, she would now go and read more american poetry. It is Alice’s wish that when we return to the new normality, the bird of the poem “perched on all our souls sings in heaven. In his advent of the book, Peter Coghlan refers to an Irish Times statistic that eavan Boland’s past quoted: “While only 10% of Irish people read poetry, 45% of us write poetry. “
He suggests that there may come a time when the organization publishes an e-book with its own non-public poetry. A wonderful concept and I’ll be ahead of you to read it carefully. In the meantime, this eBook is a gem and congratulations to everyone. everyone involved.