Grey brick upon brick, | |
Declamatory bronze | |
On sombre pedestals – | |
O'Connell, Grattan, Moore – | |
And the brewery tugs and the swans | 5 |
On the balustraded stream | |
And the bare bones of a fanlight | |
Over a hungry door | |
And the air soft on the cheek | |
And porter running from the taps | 10 |
With a head of yellow cream | |
And Nelson on his pillar | |
Watching his world collapse. | |
This never was my town, | |
I was not born or bred | 15 |
Nor schooled here and she will not | |
Have me alive or dead | |
But yet she holds my mind | |
With her seedy elegance, | |
With her gentle veils of rain | 20 |
And all her ghosts that walk | |
And all that hide behind | |
Her Georgian facades – | |
The catcalls and the pain, | |
The glamour of her squalor, | 25 |
The bravado of her talk. | |
| |
The lights jig in the river | |
With a concertina movement | |
And the sun comes up in the morning | |
Like barley-sugar on the water | 30 |
And the mist on the Wicklow hills | |
Is close, as close | |
As the peasantry were to the landlord, | |
As the Irish to the Anglo-Irish, | |
As the killer is close one moment | 35 |
To the man he kills, | |
Or as the moment itself | |
Is close to the next moment. | |
| |
She is not an Irish town | |
And she is not English, | 40 |
Historic with guns and vermin | |
And the cold renown | |
Of a fragment of Church latin, | |
Of an oratorical phrase. | |
But oh the days are soft, | 45 |
Soft enough to forget | |
The lesson better learnt, | |
The bullet on the wet | |
Streets, the crooked deal, | |
The steel behind the laugh, | 50 |
The Four Courts burnt. | |
| |
Fort of the Dane, | |
Garrison of the Saxon, | |
Augustan capital | |
Of a Gaelic nation, | 55 |
Appropriating all | |
The alien brought, | |
You give me time for thought | |
And by a juggler's trick | |
You poise the toppling hour – | 60 |
O greyness run to flower, | |
Grey stone, grey water, | |
And brick upon grey brick. | |
| |