Read Poems for All Occasions Online
Authors: Mairead Tuohy Duffy
Humans, young, old agile, aged
Creatures, small and large,
Furry, feathered,wild and tame.
Across the world, peace reigns,
Heedless they of darkened doom,
Muffled cries and broken hearts,
Where torn fingers scrape,
With grit and might,
Their bulging eyes peering,
Ears craning, anxiously awaiting
The smallest sound,
Eyes aglow, a gleam of hope,
Tell tale of someone breathing
Beneath dark rubble far below.
They called it “THE EMERGENCY.”
I was too young to know its meaning,
But I recollect, vividly the scarcity of tea,
And my mother’s friend grating carrots,
As I watched fascinated, one October night.
She dried them slowly in a hot oven,
Which hung over red hot cinders.
The dried fragments of dark yellow carrots,
Substitutes for leaves of a plant grown
In abundance in India, China and Ceylon.
We all sampled the war time beverage.
Like the small boy, who truthfully
Judged the Emperor’s new clothes,
My mother frowned disapproval
When I tasted the new brew and announced
“It still tastes like carrots.”
My mother’s friend looked uncomfortable
I was ordered to bed immediately.
They continued sipping, as if they liked it.
They suffered diarrhoea for two days after,
I was the only one who survived ,
That sure was an emergency.
I saw a film the other night,
Superb acting, based on fact,
Showing British justice,
At its very lowest ebb,
Bare faced liars,
Confining innocent folks
To a prison life of hell,
One old and delicate
Left to die, he the father,
Spirit broken, humiliated,
Separated from the spouse
he loved and longed for.
Even now, Great Britain,
I ask of you to stop and think.
For 800 years, you and yours
Have trodded on our very dignity,
Trying to stifle our Irish spirit,
You have failed dramatically
And will fail.
Instead of foddering hatred,
We can still be friends,
If you glide gently away
From our land, our homeland,
Then and only then can
Our friendship blossom
Into everlasting comradeship.
In the name of all fathers,
God speed that day.
Evil in her diabolical onslaught.
The labours of her tongue rupture
The tender fibres of a sensitive heart
Daughter of Eve, careless, without feeling,
Creator of mental aches,
Sending pangs of psychological dismay
Into the heart’s core, cruel and numb.
Murderer of friendship’s young glow,
Destroyer of every virtue of decency.
Gossiping woman, stop and think,
Your pathway is hell’s open plain
Pause ere you drive another helpless soul
To despair, suicide and death
The aftermath of heartless gossip
Theme of the idle, thief of youth
Bitter, cunning, bitchy,sin of sins
I despise your eloquent disclosures.
I saw my grandfather’s tweed suit,
Waving violently,
Lopsidedly whirling,
Bringing memories
Crowding, twitching,
Memorandum of by gone years.
Warm tears gushed from my eyes,
At the sight
Of that woven grandeur,
Which once adorned
The well built frame
Of Granda in his prime,
Joyfully welcoming
Each beloved grandchild,
Or walking solemnly
Subdued in mourning
In the silent cortege.
Of a friend’s last journey.
To his final resting place.
Such loyalty, he displayed,
His big heart pounding
Neath the tweed suit
His hat of dark grey,
To day, carelessly
Displaying a gaping hole
Protruding dried up hay,
Falling untidily
On the drooping shoulder pads,
From the weighty burden
Of the element’s dust, and rain.
Turning I retreated slowly,
Wiping my burning eyes,
Closing their curtains,
To obliterate the view,
Of a skeleton scarecrow,
Sporting my Granda’s suit,
That windy morning,
My aching brain felt subdued.
She was scared of the graveyard,
They said long boney hands
Pulled you down and buried you
Deep in the grave holes.
One evening, returning from the shops,
She barely looked, as she ran
Past the big iron gate
Which decorated the silent graveyard.
Down the road, a big car passed her by,
And suddenly stopped,
A long hand tried to grasp
Her blue Summer bib.
She ran and ran , and when
she reached the graveyard gate,
She climbed over and fell
With a loud thud.
Inside, she hid in a hole
By the edge of a tall gravestone.
She could hear the car’s driver,
Searching, panting, running.
She felt safe in the grave’s open mouth,
Then he gave up the search,
She could hear the engine starting,
And once more, there was silence.
She ran home and her mother said,
The dead would never harm you,
It’s the living you should fear,
Mother was nearly always right.
No hand tried to grasp her
By the lonely gravestone
Her mother said “Evil sparkles
In the hearts of some men.
Hard to know what she meant
Sally was only ten.
He sang of her beauty
on Raglan road,
Her very posture
sent a warmth
through his spine,
Gliding like a fawn
O’er Autumn leaves aglow,
Man’s pain of love
Silently he pined.
But beauty fades
like Summer roses,
Tall trees decay
and tumble down,
Sweet thoughts remain,
perpetual harvest,
Enhancing love,
no one can ever drown.
Fair the mind,
remembering
youth’s wild passion,
Fickle daydreams
scurrying by,
of all the times
This love can cause
disaster, ignoring
the bending victim
waiting by the stile.
But great the mind,
superior gift,
So God- like
Combining thoughts,
some brilliant,
some unkind,
Sole possession,
nourished in
man’s brain cells,
Yesterday’s dreams,
treasure of
the human mind.
O Mummy dear, I want that toy,
I want it now, or I will cry,
I want it badly, that’s the reason why
I keep on saying, “I want that toy.”
Son, you know I can’t buy that toy,
I would if I could, but I told you why,
Your Dad is idle for two years now,
We have no money to waste on toys,
Like a real good boy,, go play with Roy.
But Mummy Dear, I need that toy,
I’LL cry and cry and sob and sigh
Write to Santa this very night,
He’s rich and kind and he can buy
Whate’er is needed by each good child.
Son, are you deaf or slow or sly,
I said last night I can’t buy that toy
Santa Claus, too, is poor, you know,
My head is aching, my heart is cold,
Go out and play in the Christmas snow.
Peace lay over the vale of renown,
All was still
Over the distant heather brown,
Stood a shady hill,
Beneath its shadow, deep as night
Set a spark of grandeur
To the lake so dim and bright
A happy lark
Sang forth a strain of dreamy melody
A gush of song
Disappeared among the pine trees edge
Peace still lingered on
But oh the scene so lovely
Lay before us,
Entranced, we sat on the wall above
Sweet beauty’s home,
Our very thoughts were lifted from this world
On nature’s wings
Those silent wings of lakes and trees and flowers,
Islands by shady hills,
A breeze of fLoating calmness
Gently passes by
Fills the mind and heart and lungs
With lasting mildness.
Oh! that I could stay
Beside yon lovely valley
O sigh poor heart, was it a dream
Or reverie of gladness
Killarney, home of happiness?
Life, no doubt, is one great puzzle
A shadow falling beneath the sun,
A misty dawn of joys and troubles
Faded clouds, when day is done
Valleys green, haunted realms
Humans tumbling one by one.
Alas! they fly and seek for fortune,
Then, they’re gone, their work undone.
If only man would look up yonder,
To the mighty being, the God of all,
Ah, there he’d fInd content and happiness,
No matter how the raindrops fall
In this great world of doubt and sorrow,
It’s just a trial before the dawn,
Oh humans awaken before the morrow,
Life is like a hunted fawn.
Pointing at a mansion tall, he said;
“Grand people living there,
“Nightly, half intoxicated,
I pass by that garden wall,
aches in my head and legs,
On my way home
from my local
watering hole.
It must be the lady of the house,
Flashes on a glaring light,
to brighten up the road,
So that I can see my way
through the dark of night.
Then when I reach
my cottage home,
All is darkness, .
Dark as clay.
Gone is the light,
The good lady
knows I’m safe
Inside my garden gate
,
I smile, and think
Of what fIne people exist,
caring about chaps like me.
Turning on a light, each night,
so that I can see.”
I listened carefully
but would not dare,
Tell my friend
His lady of the night,
is a new invention,
an alarm light,
set to ignite,
by his own shadowy frame,
Intruding there
neath the beam’s
searching ray.
Loneliness, that ghost like phantom,
Haunting humans, through their lives,
It brings sweet memories of home and kindred,
Replaces joys, with heart throbbing strife.
Tears, like gems, flow slowly over
Rose coloured cheeks, or pale wrinkled brows,
Then sighs are heard, long low sad sobbing,
The phantom lover, once more prowls.
A child in fever, calls its mother,
The baby lambs bleat ere they die,
The lonely sigh of a pining lover,
The distant screech of a seagull’s cry.
Yet in the land of saints and angels,
The phantom ghost ne’er more can strike,
The soul, once more has journeyed homewards,
In peace and joy, fore’er to lie.
Perhaps I’m moody, perhaps I’m odd.
But who is perfect on sea or sod?
Men claim patience, strength and speed,
They need us women through passing years.
Moody is thy name, o woman,
seed of Adam’s rib,
Never feel like being a Robot,
That would make him grin.
Man and woman, boy or girl,
Humans, all alike,
Equal they in spite of difference,
Share the strife in life.
Baby boys all spring from women,
Nourished at their breasts,
Grown up men, like babies craving
For female warm caress.
Balm of troubled souls;
The chirping of birds on a distant tree
Or the rippling sound of a passing stream
Gurgling slowly t
o
join the sea
And lose its glow
Neath shadowed leaves
The Baa -_baa of a fLock of sheep
Cuddling their young
With touches meek
Or the shouts at play
Of little boys
Tossing their toys
Their music is noise
With a rush of wind
Through the nearby leaves
The harmony sweet
A combination of these
Music is a variety of sounds
Blended together
Like gems on a crown
Angelic in nature
Created by God
To be found all places
In sea, sky. and bog.
Marriage of notes, sounds and chords,
Restorer of peace on earth’s troubled sod.
The whistling and chirping of singing birds,
Midst leaves a stirring o’er swinging buds,
Rippling sounds of passing streams,
Gurgling slowly to kiss the sea,
Losing glow neath shadowed trees.
Ripples shining with sparkling glee.
The Baa Baa of a flock of sheep,
Cuddling their young with touches meek,
Or the shouts at play of little boys,
Tossing their toys, their music is noise.
A hasty breeze through the nearby leaves,
The harmony sweet, a combination of these.
Sweet soft music, a variety of sounds
Blended together, like gems on a crown,
Angelic in nature, created by God,
To be found everywhere, in sea, sky and bog.
O
CTOBER 4TH, 1953
The crowd dispersed and scattered
From Arklow’s dancehall bright,