The Informer Poem by John F. McCullagh

The Informer



The great man lies dead in his bullet riddled clothes.
The ambush was more successful than De Valera dared suppose.
Michael Collins was a traitor to Republican ideals.
His treaty gave over to the Brits one fourth of our green fields.
Everyone thought me his friend. I was always by his side.
Yet I knew enough to stay away on this day he died.
When he fired on the Inns of Court I decided he'd go down..
Though some may say he was a Saint, once safely in the ground.
They say that he fought bravely, though surrounded with long odds.
A proper, fitting sacrifice to lay before our gods.
Nations must be born in blood if they are ever to be free.
Free of allegiance to a Crown and capped with Liberty

Wednesday, August 13, 2014
Topic(s) of this poem: Murder
POET'S NOTES ABOUT THE POEM
An unnamed anti treaty informer muses on his role in the ambush and assassination of Michael Collins
COMMENTS OF THE POEM
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