Poem

Moryson's Fancy

Title Moryson's Fancy
Author Paul Muldoon

Instances of Publication

A published appearance of this poem.

Collection/Anthology Year of Publication Medium View Details
Maggot 2011 Print Collection View Details
Publication Instance Details #1806
Collection/Anthology Details
Collection/Anthology Maggot
Date of Publication 2011
Publisher Faber and Faber (UK)
Page Number(s) 21-22
Publication Overview
Translation Is Multilingual Explicit Irish Context? Ekphrasis Has Paratext? Reference to News, Media or Technology
No
No
Yes
No
Yes
No
Details
Human Rights Issues
Irish Context
Languages
Genre Short Lyric
Medium Print Collection
Paratext Text A most horrible spectacle of three children (whereof the eldest was not above ten yeeres old), all eating and gnawing with their teeth the entrails of their mother, upon whose flesh they had fed 20 days past, and having eaten all from the feet upward to the bare bones, roasting it continually by a slow fire, were now come to the eating of her said entrails in like sort roasted, yet not divided from the body, being as yet raw. - Fynes Moryson, An History of Ireland, From the Year 1599 to 1603 (1617)
Notes Implicit reference to a 17th narrative of children eating the body of their mother who has died of hunger (implied). The poem opens with epigraph from Moryson's An History of Ireland (1617), and refers to the war of Boudicca against the Romans in eastern Britain, and the destruction of the cities of Colchester and London.
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