To Scotland on the Occasion of the Vote for Independence
on September 18, 2014
If I were in Ireland three hundred years ago
I would be hedge schooled in militant
I would speak emigrant
I would despise the English empire
with the passion of a poet
whose hands have been cut off
in an age of illumined manuscripts
or whose tongue has been cut out
in an age of epic recitation
or whose dick–home address of Muses Rising–
has been cut off in any epoch
A pox on epoch! A pox on’t indeed!
If I were in Ireland two hundred years ago
I would tell the story of Saint Kevin
and the dirty bird and the one about Yeats
dimpling in the Dory and the one about Pangar Ban
dimmed dun from sooted emigration
Ireland is a factory of memories
it churns them out all lunar year long
its songsmog infectious
to ancestor-deprived miscreants
like me whose forebears fled
the sloggy bog of sicke-sog
vowing on their dead Da’s grave
never to return
until the English empire
like a cart of bloody offal
upends itself into the Irish Sea
But if you were to look for me three years hence
you would be wise to look in Ireland
in Dublin near the quay I will be
bottling up those miscreant memory scents
tinned within a knight’s blue-black armor
of mussel shells as black-blue as the hair
of Paul Muldoon’s own true love
when she wears a pileus of raven wings
a wild goose after three centuries flown back
steadfast will you find me
and steadfast I’ll remain
until the sun goes down for good
and everyone everywhere all over the world
bottles up their soulscents and comes home