London and many other places will observe two minutes of silence at noon GMT today for the victims of last week’s bombings. The debate has already begun (see below) about the right political and legal response to the attacks. Besides policy and law, though, Britain and Ireland have suffered long enough from terrorism to have produced literature about it. Below I reproduce a powerful poem from the late James Simmons. It commemorates one of the earliest, and worst, atrocities of the Northern Ireland conflict, the IRA bombing of Claudy town in July of 1972. The circumstances of that event were different from last week’s attacks, but some things were the same. I don’t know of anything else that conveys them nearly as well.

Claudy

for Harry Barton, a song

The Sperrins surround it, the Faughan flows by At each end of Main Street the hills and the sky The small town of Claudy at ease in the sun Last July in the morning, a new day begun.

How peaceful and pretty, if the moment could stop McIlhenny is straightening things in his shop His wife is outside serving petrol and then A child takes a cloth to a big window-pane

And McCloskey is taking the weight off his feet McClelland and Miller are sweeping the street Delivering milk at the Beaufort Hotel Young Temple’s enjoying his first job quite well

And Mrs. McLaughlin is scrubbing her floor Artie Hone’s crossing the street to a door Mrs. Brown, looking around for her cat Goes off up an entry, what’s strange about that?

Not much, but before she comes back to the road The strange car parked outside her house will explode And all of the people I’ve mentioned outside Will be waiting to die, or already have died

An explosion too loud for your eardrums to bear Young children squealing like pigs in the square All faces chalk-white or streaked with bright red And the glass, and the dust, and the terrible dead

For an old lady’s legs are blown off, and the head Of a man’s hanging open, and still he’s not dead He is shrieking for mercy while his son stands and stares And stares, and then suddenly – quick – disappears

And Christ, little Katherine Aiken is dead Mrs. McLaughlin is pierced through the head Meanwhile to Dungiven the killers have gone And they’re finding it hard to get through on the phone.