Holy tree/bush, Toome, Co. Longford
Co. Longford |
Holy Sites & Wells
A low hawthorn tree near Toome in County Longford carries strips of cloth tied to its branches, a quiet act of devotion that has been repeated, likely by many different hands over many years, until the tree itself became a kind of landmark.
The practice of tying rags, sometimes called clooties, to trees beside holy wells is one of the more persistent folk-religious customs in Ireland, rooted in the belief that leaving something of yourself at a sacred site, cloth torn from clothing worn close to the skin, transfers an ailment or a prayer into the keeping of the place.
The hawthorn here is inseparable from a holy well that lies immediately to its north-west. Holy wells are springs or water sources that acquired sacred associations over centuries, often linked to a local saint or to older, pre-Christian ideas about water as a threshold between the ordinary world and something beyond it. The two elements, tree and well, form a single devotional site, each reinforcing the significance of the other. Hawthorn in particular appears repeatedly in this kind of context across Ireland, perhaps because of its long association in folklore with boundaries and with the otherworld, or simply because a gnarled, low-growing tree beside water offers the kind of atmosphere that invites lingering and leaving something behind.