Read Poems for All Occasions Online
Authors: Mairead Tuohy Duffy
PMany thanks to my grandaughter Michelle for her work on the cover and to Garrett and Steven at Original Wrriting for all their help.
Why the White House should be painted green
Tyranny of Landlords and Penal Laws,
Drove our people from home, abroad.
O’Briens and Murphys,O’Neills, Mc’Quaids,
Maguires, O’Sullivans , the Celtic Race.
Late eighteen hundred, they left their homes
In Coffin ships to distant shores,
Some landed in the U.S.A
And built their homes with pride and dare.
From New York fair to San Francisco,
From Seattle to New Orleans,
Those Irishmen built railroads, canals
But as soldiers, the best e’er seen.
Who signed the Declaration?,
Offspring from the Emerald Isle,
Who founded the American Navy
John Barry a Wexford guy.
How many American Presidents
Have blood from our Celtic Race,
They have kept their thoughts of Motherland,
Back to Irish homes can trace.
The White House designed by Hoban,
Was honoured, his face on a stamp,
He hailed from “the Marble City”,
Kilkenny, a city with class
But last, but by no means least,
The best wine’s left till last,
They brought their culture and Catholic faith
From the hearths and homes to last..
Forever in the land of hope,
The great old U.S.A.
Much loved by Gaels, at home and abroad,
God rest all who left Queenstown bay.
(from the 9th Century Gaelic) I based this poem on the above.
Three things small sustain this earth,
A thin stream of milk in a pail,
A slender blade of golden corn,
Thread in skilled hand of female.
Three signs of an ill bred person;
Staying too long when you call,
Questions long and tedious,
Staring the rudest of all.
Three signs of plenty in Ireland:
The lowing of a milking cow,
The hum of a smith’s strong hammer
The gentle sound of the plough.
Three laughing stocks in the Old Land,
An angry man, vicious with rage,
A jealous man taunting and teasing,
But the Miser despised always..
Three things ruining our learning;
Forgetfulness in youngsters and aged,
Carelessness clumsy and awkward,
Ignorance without feeling or care.
Three signs of a real wicked person:
Bitterness showing on his face,
Hatred for each fellow human,
Cowardice unknown to us, Gaels.
Three things inspiring the virtue of love,
A smiling, kind,pleasant face,
Gentle soft speech and good manners,
Bring joy, peace and love to each race.
The three rudest people in mankind,
A young chap making fun of the Old,
A strong person jeering a cripple,
Wise men making fun of a fool.
Our forefathers knew in their wisdom,
We are all only actors on stage,
As we care and behave in this world,
So shall we reap Heaven’s Wage.
A FLOURY
I
RISH
S
PUD
Good old potato
was the main food of the Irish,
Maximum yield, this crop could produce,
But great was their grief,
Indeed their worst down fall,
Was the blight and the fungus,
Such mighty bad news.
The “spuds”, as they called them,
Went black and inedible,
People died by the roadside
from hunger and disease,
No rent could they pay
to their cruel English landlords
Who evicted poor tenants
In spite of their pleas.
Soup kitchens were opened,
But the price of this beverage,
Was surrender one’s faith
Or die on the street.
The majority of Catholics
Refused Church of England.
They chose rather to die
Than give up their belief.
Tragedy saved us, millions departed,
Sending home money to relieve
loved ones forlorn,
Those emigrant children
Lifted up their compatriots
Dollars bought food,
And warm Winter Clothes.
So the people of Ireland
Should remember forever
Those gallant young people
Who braved death, wind and wave
To save up their dollars
To support their own kinsfolk,
Saving their dignity from lone Paupers’ graves.
The workhouse, with its cold grey walls,
Peering like a giant sentinel
Engulping male, female, young and old
Into its open claws of rough mortar
Enticing them, too weak to argue;
Their last resort to survive.
Destitute families, segregated,
By age and sex, mother from child,
Child from mother, wife from husband,
Husband from wife, sister from brother.
Thin, tired worn out people,
Those who could, employed for service,
Earning weekly, the menial sum of one and six
To barter for rations of yellow meal and broth,
Thin and tasteless,its salt content
Pierced parched lips, memories
of floury potatoes, now rotten neath
blight's scourge and a foul Winter.
Creating and nurturing fever epidemics
which fattened roadside graves, nearby
Irish farmers slaved to fodder the pockets
Of absentee landlords, whose greed drove
Two million of our youngest and best
in coffin ships,not fit to transport
Bird,animal, not alone human.
Yet most survived to spread their seed
In Australia, new Zealand and fair U.S.A.,
Where today, they proclaim their pride
In Irish blood and Gaelic heritage.
Poverty to new life, island to vast continents
Despair to hope, fresh seed in new pastures
Foul FAMINE THE INSTIGATOR.
Though half a century has passed,
And Christmas time is near.
My memories are as fresh to-day,
In spite of passing years.
The blazing fire of logs and turf,
Red cinders roasting brown,
The sizzling turkey in the pot,
And a pudding dark and round.
Our toys were few, but treasured,
We accepted all with joy,
Home made dolls of rags and wool,
With games for each small boy.
Our Grannies and our Grandads,
We greeted with open arms,
I can almost feel their loving hugs,
Their hearts aglow and warm.
They told us of the Holy Child,
Who was born on Christmas Day,
“It is HIS birthday, Child, you know,”
They said in their gentle way.
The holly and the berry,
From the hedge below the hill,
The lighting candle’s flickering glow,
In dreams I see it still.
Granny told of the little Lord,
With Mary and Joseph brave,
As they fled with fright from Herod,
On a donkey’s back so bare.
We crept into our beds that night,
And watched the stars with care,
Dotting they, the floors of Heaven,
Like gems on a snow white cake.
To day, I close my eyes and dream,
Of my home, now far away,
Memories fair, like pictures float,
And the love we had and shared.
The folks, now gone, are looking down,
On a world, that knows great change,
We had no pomp or riches then,
Yes, Christmas time was great
THEY DREAMED of Ireland’s rugged hills,
Calm response of quiet lakes,
Purple heather in the glens,
Undisturbed the cattle graze.
Yellow furze in bogs and vales,
Lazy sheep rest nearby,
Horses gallop o’er the heath
Bleak and barren the mountain side.
Mother baking round brown Loaves,
Softly shaping with four in hands,
From the haggard poultry sounds
Piglets rolling on mucky sands.
Father with his shirt sleeves rolled
Above his elbows, calm he stands,
Stick in hand his cattle drove,
Into the Jobber’s waiting van.
Memories of long ago,
Loved ones sleep ‘neath Irish soil,
Up above the song birds sing
Like spots adorning the evening sky.