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Famine, The Spirit of Place Programme – Swinford, County Mayo, July 10th ‘15 – a poem by Terry McDonagh, Irish Poet, Playwright and Writer.
I was asked to write a poem on the occasion of the unveiling of the memorial to the victims of the Great Famine in Ireland 1845, ‘46 and ‘47 . It was a time when several millions died or emigrated while those who could have helped went about their business of exporting grain that could have saved countless lives. This poem, FAMINE is my response.

Famine  
The Spirit of Place Programme – Swinford, July 10th ’15
The dead are never far from us
 and, now, in famine, our children
 lie strewn on doorsteps
 or along roadsides and we
 are so far gone, there is
 no chance we will recover
 – even if we did, a
 black stalk lies in waiting
 like a preying cat on a windowsill.
Wit cannot drive suffering away.
 Those potatoes that dug up
 so clean and vibrant in a day,
 diseased and fouled the fields
 in a stream of pus before dawn
and
some landlords cried out,
 we’ll give those peasants
 nothing – for nothing
 is what they’ve earned –
 let them die. We’ll put them
 out on the roads
 to compete with the grain trade
 in a race for great ships.
My family claw side by side
 with snails and grubs
 for the right to die with
 grass and mud between our teeth.
We did attack the drills like
 flocks of crows, hoping
 to get to the food before
 it festered, but the rot beat us
 to the bite – the famine god
 had sickened every stalk
 from the birthplace of
 our farthest ancestor
 to the common grave
 of our youngest child.
That death – untalkative and cold,
 grabbed what it could.
 What remained stayed as it was
 or it was cast aside or overboard.
The lanes we lived up
 were left behind to fall
 into disuse and silence
forgotten
except on occasions
 when communities walk
 the sad walk – to try
 to greet the past face to face.
© Terry McDonagh


