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Overview

A voice representing someone taking part in the describes the events leading up to the Battle of Vinegar Hill on 21 June 1798.

The speaker shows how ill-equipped the rebels - or - were. The British military were powerful in comparison.

The fear of the Irish citizens - everyone from the priest to the tramp - is portrayed. Thereby demonstrating how no one was safe from British violence.

The rebels were mostly farmers, described as having nothing but barley in their pockets to eat and inadequate farming implements to fight with. The poem shows how vulnerable they were against the well-armed ranks of the British forces .

The brutal defeat of the rebels is shown in the "hillside" which "blushed" with the huge quantities of blood spilled.

The casual way the British bury the dead rebels "without shroud or coffin" highlights the lack of respect they had, even for the dead.

The poem ends with the barley sprouting from the grave of the dead men due to the buried barley they had in their coat pockets. The barley is a symbol of the rebel spirit that could not be killed, unlike the bodies of the rebels themselves.