Object Lessons
“I began to watch places with an interest so exact it might have
been memory. There was that street corner, with the small newsagent
which sold copies of the Irish Independent and honeycomb toffee in
summer. I could imagine myself there, a child of nine, buying
peppermints and walking back down by the canal, the lock brown and
splintered as ever, and boys diving from it.
It became a powerful
impulse, a slow intense reconstruction of a childhood which had never
happened. A fragrance or a trick of light was enough. Or a house I
entered which I wanted not just to appreciate but to remember, and then I
would begin.”
―
Eavan Boland,
Object Lessons: The Life of the Woman and the Poet in Our Time
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