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aaron-1
Northern Irish PhD, 8 years at Queen's University Belfast.
Travelling through the dark, a sudden peal of light dressing the east in red and gold and, just as sudden, the hills bright with her hair.
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Nov 30, 2013
Nov 30, 2013 at 6:35 AM UTC
Sunrise
Unbending, in the sense that she was arthritic in both hands and hips. And upright, in the sense that she kept her secrets in the eye between blasts of truth-telling, leaving her free to work while others slept. Yet resigned, in the end, to a projection of life on the television screen: steeping slowly for silent hours in memories incessant as the drizzling rain. I loved her from the day she died. She was a sermon to an empty church. She was an impromptu bunch of chrysanthemums. She was an end to an unfair fight. She was a mother burying a child. She was a glass of sherry to the new year. She was an old bible, full of voided words.
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Nov 22, 2013
Nov 22, 2013 at 3:04 PM UTC
Death of an Ulsterwoman
In that retreat you doled out half your life, beyond the noise that engulfed the world, you cultivated silence wild as the nest of your hair. Edith, terminal daughter, reticent as a bird, you perched in a chair that time we came to see you at the sanitarium, my Grandmother chirpy with reminiscence about the girl who kept her at home, starting a line now come to rest in me. A biscuit-tin from our last visit keeps up-ending on the floor beside me, turning out a voice crying words that stung: "you must force the spoon or she'll swallow her tongue."
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Nov 22, 2013
Nov 22, 2013 at 12:55 PM UTC
Edith