Skip to Content

Top Irish Poem Analysis – Advent, By Patrick Kavanagh

Share this 🍀😍

This week it is number 21 in the top 100 Irish poems list. A great poem by Patrick Kavanagh.

This poem ‘Advent’ is a very religious poem. If you don’t know Advent is a four week period before Christmas, where people would traditionally look at themselves and their actions. Kavanagh feels that experience has corrupted him – he has ‘tested and tasted too much. 

 Enjoy this great poem. 

advent poem

Advent By Patrick Kavanagh 

We have tested and tasted too much, lover-
Through a chink too wide there comes in no wonder.
But here in the Advent-darkened room
Where the dry black bread and the sugarless tea
Of penance will charm back the luxury
Of a child’s soul, we’ll return to Doom
The knowledge we stole but could not use.

And the newness that was in every stale thing
When we looked at it as children: the spirit-shocking
Wonder in a black slanting Ulster hill
Or the prophetic astonishment in the tedious talking
Of an old fool will awake for us and bring
You and me to the yard gate to watch the whins
And the bog-holes, cart-tracks, old stables where Time begins.

O after Christmas we’ll have no need to go searching
For the difference that sets an old phrase burning-
We’ll hear it in the whispered argument of a churning
Or in the streets where the village boys are lurching.
And we’ll hear it among decent men too
Who barrow dung in gardens under trees,
Wherever life pours ordinary plenty.
Won’t we be rich, my love and I, and
God we shall not ask for reason’s payment,
The why of heart-breaking strangeness in dreeping hedges
Nor analyse God’s breath in common statement.
We have thrown into the dust-bin the clay-minted wages
Of pleasure, knowledge and the conscious hour-
And Christ comes with a January flower.

Patrick Kavanagh 1904 – 1967

Share this 🍀😍