Come away o human child
/forum/topic/644336/0

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Sean Reidy
Registered: Dec 09, 2005
Total Posts: 1476
Country: Ireland



This image is copyrighted by the owner




Something about these beckoning trees brought to mind these lines from a poem.

Come away, O human child!
To the waters and the wild
With a faery, hand in hand,
For the world's more full of weeping than you can understand

From "The stolen child" by William Butler Yeats


bshamilton
Registered: Aug 28, 2005
Total Posts: 19452
Country: United States

Delightful image, Sean.
Love the compo and color!

Barry



locoalvarez38
Registered: May 02, 2005
Total Posts: 1621
Country: Mexico

Lovely compo Sean. Shoot this image very early in the morning, and you will have a winner

Loco



Bart Carrig
Registered: Nov 12, 2004
Total Posts: 3928
Country: United States

Sean:

Lovely image, sweet composition. As noted, a place well worth visiting again (and again).

Bart



charliec
Registered: Jan 10, 2004
Total Posts: 2283
Country: United States

Lovely image Sean, jut the way I had pictured the "Emerald Isle".



Rosemary R
Registered: Jan 08, 2004
Total Posts: 2613
Country: United States

Wow, Sean, I love both the image and the poem. I did not know it. Thank you.



David Leask
Registered: Nov 19, 2003
Total Posts: 7439
Country: United Kingdom

Nice image and words Sean - great work
David



Sean Reidy
Registered: Dec 09, 2005
Total Posts: 1476
Country: Ireland

bshamilton wrote:
Delightful image, Sean.
Love the compo and color!

Barry


Thanks Barry. I'm glad you enjoyed it. I was amazed by this place. The eery trees and the deserted cottage spoke eloquently of a time long past and a world we cannot know.

A passing cyclist saw me taking photographs and stopped to tell me he once drank tea in that house. He is 50 now and he was ten at the time,so he was summoning up a memory from 40 years past.

He told me that this isolated house, the last for many miles on this mountain road, once gave hospitality to fourteen travelers on the same night. In years gone by, there were many people who wandered the roads of Ireland: the dispossessed, the mad, the lonely and the sad. In those days, instead of therapy, there was wandering. Priests, paupers, and many others wandered the roads for months or years, and sought hospitality where they could find it. This house, on wild stormy nights, on a lonely mountain road, must have heard many knocks on the door in its time.

I wonder if the search for beauty in the landscape is, in its own way, a therapy of sorts. I know that for me landscape photography is balm for the soul as well as a chance to wander.

Sean



Sean Reidy
Registered: Dec 09, 2005
Total Posts: 1476
Country: Ireland

Thanks to Loco, Bart and Charlie for your comments. Rosemary, I'm glad you enjoyed the image and the poem. Just Google the title of the poem and you can read the whole thing, if you like.

Sean



Jimmy D
Registered: Apr 07, 2008
Total Posts: 209
Country: Canada

Sean

Great image and great story, My roots are from Ireland and years ago I visited Ireland on a photography trip and have many fond memories. Seeing your photo's and hearing your words in my head make me long to come back to the Emerald Isle.

Such a beautiful land and friendly people.

Cheers!!

Jim



Sean Reidy
Registered: Dec 09, 2005
Total Posts: 1476
Country: Ireland

Thanks Jim. I'm glad you enjoyed it. I hope you make it back here some day.

Sean



pearlstreet
Registered: Apr 03, 2004
Total Posts: 3944
Country: United States

Wonderful shot, Sean. I find your framing to be perfect. I love that the mossy roots dominate the foreground with much added interest in the top of the photograph.

Sharon



Martin Good
Registered: Mar 16, 2008
Total Posts: 1050
Country: Switzerland

Gura maith agat (Thanks) Sean for a lovely photo and some stirring memories and verse for an expat. Where did you take the shot? I thought it might be in the West but you could just as likely find such a scene in Wicklow.



Sean Reidy
Registered: Dec 09, 2005
Total Posts: 1476
Country: Ireland

pearlstreet wrote:
Wonderful shot, Sean. I find your framing to be perfect. I love that the mossy roots dominate the foreground with much added interest in the top of the photograph.

Sharon


Thanks Sharon. I found the exposed roots extraordinary and tried to make them a strong feature of the shot.

Sean



Sean Reidy
Registered: Dec 09, 2005
Total Posts: 1476
Country: Ireland

Martin Good wrote:
Gura maith agat (Thanks) Sean for a lovely photo and some stirring memories and verse for an expat. Where did you take the shot? I thought it might be in the West but you could just as likely find such a scene in Wicklow.


You are very welcome Martin. The shot was taken in County Kerry. There is a small mountain road that goes from Kilgarvan in south Kerry to Kealkill in County Cork. So this place is just about on the border between the two counties in a very remote mountain pass.

Sean



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