From    the Republic of Conscience 
  by Seamus Heaney
  When    I landed in the republic of conscience
  it was so noiseless when the engines stopped
  I could hear a curlew high above the runway.
  At immigration, the clerk was an old man
  who produced a wallet from his homespun coat
  and showed me a photograph of my grandfather.
  The woman in customs asked me to declare
  the words of our traditional cures and charms
  to heal dumbness and avert the evil eye.
  No porters. No interpreter. No taxi.
  You carried your own burden and very soon
  your symptoms of creeping privilege disappeared.
  Fog is a dreaded omen there but lightning
  spells universal good and parents hang
  swaddled infants in trees during thunderstorms.
  Salt is their precious mineral. And seashells
  are held to the ear during births and funerals.
  The base of all inks and pigments is seawater.
  Their sacred symbol is a stylized boat.
  The sail is an ear, the mast a sloping pen,
  the hull a mouth-shape, the keel an open eye.
  At their inauguration, public leaders
  must swear to uphold unwritten law and weep
  to atone for their presumption to hold office –
  and to affirm their faith that all life sprang
  from salt in tears which the sky-god wept
  after he dreamt his solitude was endless.
  I came back from that frugal republic
  with my two arms the one length, the customs
  woman having insisted my allowance was myself.
  The old man rose and gazed into my face
  and said that was official recognition
  that I was now a dual citizen.
  He therefore desired me when I got home
  to consider myself a representative
  and to speak on their behalf in my own tongue.
  Their embassies, he said, were everywhere
  but operated independently
  and no ambassador would ever be relieved.
"From the Republic of Conscience," from Opened Ground: Selected Poems 1966-1996 by Seamus Heaney. Copyright © 1998 by Seamus Heaney. Reprinted by permission of Farrar, Straus and Giroux, LLC.

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