New Faces of Belfast
It’s 1972, the year the Ambassador finally
closes, the theater’s cathedral arches rigid
in the fall’s afternoon gloom, asphalt a small
galaxy of shattered glass and graffiti duct-
working walls, and What’s New Pussycat?
still sparkles on the marquee—as if
the world’s a many-roomed mansion split
between paisley and pinstripe, a bacchanal
and carnival that will not last the night—
but there is this question of the new faces
that appeared overnight smeared on plywood
sheeting locking in the construction site
next door, these new faces of Belfast,
wanted posters like promos for a film yet
to come starring Murphy and the leaders
of the Shankill Butchers horse-brushed
to the wall with a glue of broken glass
to separate the blood from a man’s hands
should he try and pull them from the wall;
these faces tell a story that will take years
to finish, a story called abduction and extremity,
a story called hard man and kneecapper,
a story called trouble. Many will die wearing
shirts of their own blood when they’ve heard it,
but today we know what we know and
it is little. Today the marquee’s lights trickle
on merrily and the eyes of the posters mark
dark knots in the wood. Today jackdaws
lift their gray hoods above the roofline
and night lies down along the Falls Road.
“New Faces of Belfast” was first published in AGNI.