From the Frontier of Writing

© By Seamus Heaney

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The tightness and the nilness round that space
when the car stops in the road, the troops inspect
its make and number and, as one bends his face

towards your window, you catch sight of more
on a hill beyond, eyeing with intent
down cradled guns that hold you under cover

and everything is pure interrogation
until a rifle motions and you move
with guarded unconcerned acceleration—

a little emptier, a little spent
as always by that quiver in the self,
subjugated, yes, and obedient.

So you drive on to the frontier of writing
where it happens again. The guns on tripods;
the sergeant with his on-off mike repeating

data about you, waiting for the squawk
of clearance; the marksman training down
out of the sun upon you like a hawk.

And suddenly you’re through, arraigned yet freed,
as if you’d passed from behind a waterfall
on the black current of a tarmac road

past armour-plated vehicles, out between
the posted soldiers flowing and receding
like tree shadows into the polished windscreen.

© Seamus Heaney, permissons Faber & Faber Ltd.

Seamus Heaney here draws on a common experience of people living through the Troubles, of being stopped and questioned by soldiers, to describe the unease of being treated with suspicion and enduring it quietly.

Further Infomation

YEAR PUBLISHED

1987

YEAR WRITTEN

1987