Whiskey Business Poem by John F. McCullagh

Whiskey Business



Elizabeth, the virgin Queen, left vacant the English throne.
Her Scottish Stuart cousin came and claimed it for his own.
Two nations with one monarchy joined in the Union Jack.
The Scottish lost their nationhood and now they want it back.
Saint Andrews' Flag of Bonnie Blue will have to be unfurled
if Scotland votes to take its place among nations in the world.
Quebecois and Basques today are eagerly looking on
to see if Scots will vote to tell the English to be gone.
Hadrian's Wall will, once more, mark where their dominion ends.
Remove your subs from Scapa Flow; your lease is at an end.
There still remains a problem which, just now, occurs to me.
If the English take their Pound with them, what is our currency?
It's true we're rich with North Sea oil and better off than Spain.
Yet how do we do business if the Sterling won't remain.
We need a new "Gold" standard based upon the single malt!
Who needs pounds when we have ounces stored in barrels and in vaults?
So pour me a "MacCallan" on the day the rent comes due.
Hand me a glenfiddich and I'll purvey food to you..
Our creditors will be well pleased with hints of bog and peat.
We won't dilute our currency as Scots men drink it neat.

Thursday, September 18, 2014
Topic(s) of this poem: Politics
POET'S NOTES ABOUT THE POEM
The vote for Scottish independence
COMMENTS OF THE POEM
Michael Morgan 18 September 2014

Here, here; and Belfast the same.

0 0 Reply
READ THIS POEM IN OTHER LANGUAGES
Close
Error Success