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The Harbour

This harbour was made by art and force.

And called Kingstown and afterwards Dun Laoghaire.

And holds the sea behind its barrier

less than five miles from my house.

 

Lord be with us say the makers of a nation.

Lord look down say the builders of a harbour.

They came and cut a shape out of ocean

and left stone to close around their labour.

 

Officers and their wives promenaded

on this spot once and saw with their own eyes

the opulent horizon and obedient skies

which nine tenths of the law provided.

 

And frigates with thirty-six guns, cruising

the outer edges of influence, could idle

and enter here and catch the tide of

empire and arrogance and the Irish Sea rising

 

and rising through a century of storms

and cormorants and moonlight the whole length of this coast,

while an ocean forgot an empire and the armed

ships under it changed: to slime **** and cold salt and rust.

 

City of shadows and of the gradual

capitulations to the last invader

this is the final one: signed in water

and witnessed in granite and ugly bronze and gun-metal.

 

And by me. I am your citizen: composed of

your fictions, your compromise, I am

a part of your story and its outcome.

And ready to record its contradictions.

e
Written by
Eavan Boland
1944 - / Irish
Lines·Words
28·218
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