Eavan Boland
Mise Eire
MISE EIRE

I won’t go back to it –

my nation displaced
into old dactyls
oaths made
by the animal tallows
of the candle –

land of the Gulf Stream,
the small farm,
the scalded memory,
the songs,
that bandage up the history,
the words
that make a rhythm of the crime

where time is time past.
A palsy of regrets.
No. I won’t go back.
My roots are brutal:

I am the woman -
a sloven’s mix
of silk at the wrists,
a sort of dove-strut
in the precincts of the garrison -
who practices
the quick frictions,
the rictus of delight
and gets cambric for it,
rice colored silk.

I am the woman
in the gansy-coat
on board the Mary Belle,
in the huddling cold,

holding a half-dead baby to her
as the wind shifts east
and north over the dirty
water of the wharf

mingling the immigrant
guttural with the vowels
of homesickness who neither
knows nor cares that

a new language
is a kind of scar
and heals after awhile
into a possible imitation
of what went before