Ireland's boom is in full swing.
Rows of numbers, set in a cloudless blue
computer background, prove the point.
Executives lop miles off journeys
since the ring-roads opened, one hand
free to dial a client on the mobile.
Outside new antique pubs, young consultants
- well-toned women, gel-slick men -
drain long-necked bottles of imported beer.
Lip-glossed cigarettes are poised
at coy angles, a black bra strap
slides strategically from a Rocha top.
Talk of tax-exempted town-house lettings
is muffled by rap music blasted
from a passing four-wheel drive.
The old live on, wait out their stay
of execution in small granny flats,
thrifty thin-lipped men, grim pious wives . . .
Sudden as an impulse holiday , the wind
has changed direction, strewing a whiff
of barbeque fuel across summer lawns.
Tonight, the babe on the short-term
contract from the German parent
will partner you at the sponsors' concert.
Time now, however, for the lunch-break
orders to be faxed. Make yours hummus
on black olive bread. An Evian.