I wake in this city This city that didn't bear me This city that didn't raise me And yet it's this city that i seek to find something of me Not in the pubs or the clubs or the karaoke bars Where revelers conspire to dream and drink to the stars Nor the cafes where poets and artists in a foreign language create. Pass the market stalls where secondhand books and vinyls are stacked like freight It is to the quietened streets of the old town I go Where i long for the walls to speak once more To reveal their hidden histories To help fashion some sense of a man One unknownst to me, my fathers father whose name I share A fine skilled seamster, thus a tailor by trade Not arriving to this city for work on fabrics of nylon and silk But to stitch and sew the flesh of limbs in a paramedic corps Another pawn of the Great War under King George's command Driven only by economic necessity from a penal homeland Not of conscription, politics or some moral conviction at play For the price of neutrality is one that poverty simply refuses to pay Returning home to an Ireland of hostility or silence at best Medals now lying deep in pockets not proudly pinned to chests Irish heroes don't fight in a British war for a King's crown No such stories from father to son shall ever pass down And now, a grainy photograph, three medals for a sons son to take A dog tag that bears my name, a number and RC to depict a faith From a man exiled in his home as a forgotten prisoner of war To honour a legacy i find myself in this city afar Asking the same questions of him as to me Is this city the last place he truly felt free?
*for my grandfather that I never knew and this, his story that is new to me*