Home > Author > Louis MacNeice >

" Why do we like being Irish? Partly because
It gives us a hold on the sentimental English
As members of a world that never was,
Baptised with fairy water;
And partly because Ireland is small enough
To be still thought of with a family feeling,
And because the waves are rough
That split her from a more commercial culture;
And because one feels that here at least one can
Do local work which is not at the world's mercy
And that on this tiny stage with luck a man
Might see the end of one particular action.
It is self-deception of course;
There is no immunity in this island either;
A cart that is drawn by somebody else's horse
And carrying goods to somebody else's market.
The bombs in the turnip sack, the sniper from the roof,
Griffith, Connolly, Collins, where have they brought us?
Ourselves alone! Let the round tower stand aloof
In a world of bursting mortar!
Let the school-children fumble their sums
In a half-dead language;
Let the censor be busy on the books; pull down the
Georgian slums;
Let the games be played in Gaelic.
Let them grow beet-sugar; let them build
A factory in every hamlet;
Let them pigeon-hole the souls of the killed
Into sheep and goats, patriots and traitors.
And the North, where I was a boy,
Is still the North, veneered with the grime of Glasgow,
Thousands of men whom nobody will employ
Standing at the corners, coughing. "

Louis MacNeice


Image for Quotes

Louis MacNeice quote : Why do we like being Irish? Partly because<br />It gives us a hold on the sentimental English<br />As members of a world that never was,<br />Baptised with fairy water;<br />And partly because Ireland is small enough<br />To be still thought of with a family feeling,<br />And because the waves are rough<br />That split her from a more commercial culture;<br />And because one feels that here at least one can<br />Do local work which is not at the world's mercy<br />And that on this tiny stage with luck a man<br />Might see the end of one particular action.<br />It is self-deception of course;<br />There is no immunity in this island either;<br />A cart that is drawn by somebody else's horse<br />And carrying goods to somebody else's market.<br />The bombs in the turnip sack, the sniper from the roof,<br />Griffith, Connolly, Collins, where have they brought us?<br />Ourselves alone! Let the round tower stand aloof<br />In a world of bursting mortar!<br />Let the school-children fumble their sums<br />In a half-dead language;<br />Let the censor be busy on the books; pull down the<br /> Georgian slums;<br />Let the games be played in Gaelic.<br />Let them grow beet-sugar; let them build<br />A factory in every hamlet;<br />Let them pigeon-hole the souls of the killed<br />Into sheep and goats, patriots and traitors.<br />And the North, where I was a boy,<br />Is still the North, veneered with the grime of Glasgow,<br />Thousands of men whom nobody will employ<br />Standing at the corners, coughing.