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francis-duggan
Irish I have been penning stuff since 1973 have written up to nine thousand individual pieces which can be seen on various online poetry sites, I was born and raised in Millstreet Co Cork Ireland and I have been living in Victoria Australia for the past twenty three years.
It's cold in Duhallow this morning and the fields that were green yesterday Lay chilled to the frost that the night brought a cover of silvery gray And the little dunnock on bare hedgerow too cold and too hungry to sing On **** branch he perch sad and silent the hardship that January can bring. The robins and sparrows by back door like beggars they wait to be fed In hope that when breakfast is eaten the housewife might throw out some bread With no thought for song or for nesting their battle is to stay alive How many will live to see April the Winter so hard to survive? The first heavy snows of the Winter have fallen on the higher ground On Clara, Shrone and Caherbarnagh the hills are so white all around The blackbird and thrush on the bare branch their feathers fluffed against the chill And hare has come down to the lowland there's nothing to eat on the hill. But I can remember the bright days when sun shone on the leafy tree And robins and thrushes and finches piped in the woods of Knocknagree And to her nest on barn rafters the sparrow brought feathers and hay And out on the dandelion meadow the pipit sang all through the day. Young calves and young lambs in green pastures were full of the frolics of Spring And joy too had come to the river the song of the dipper did ring And moorhen was out with her babies and she chirped loud if human was near Her first lesson to them survival to teach them the meaning of fear. It's cold in Duhallow this morning the thrush silent on the bare tree And gray on the fields and the hedgerows and gray over all Knocknagree But I can remember the bright days when nesting birds piped all the day And hedgerows and woodlands and meadows smelt sweet with the blossoms of May.
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Aug 10, 2010
Aug 10, 2010 at 6:42 PM UTC
A January Morning In Knocknagree
It's cold in Duhallow this morning and the fields that were green yesterday Lay chilled to the frost that the night brought a cover of silvery gray And the little dunnock on bare hedgerow too cold and too hungry to sing On **** branch he perch sad and silent the hardship that January can bring. The robins and sparrows by back door like beggars they wait to be fed In hope that when breakfast is eaten the housewife might throw out some bread With no thought for song or for nesting their battle is to stay alive How many will live to see April the Winter so hard to survive? The first heavy snows of the Winter have fallen on the higher ground On Clara, Shrone and Caherbarnagh the hills are so white all around The blackbird and thrush on the bare branch their feathers fluffed against the chill And hare has come down to the lowland there's nothing to eat on the hill. But I can remember the bright days when sun shone on the leafy tree And robins and thrushes and finches piped in the woods of Knocknagree And to her nest on barn rafters the sparrow brought feathers and hay And out on the dandelion meadow the pipit sang all through the day. Young calves and young lambs in green pastures were full of the frolics of Spring And joy too had come to the river the song of the dipper did ring And moorhen was out with her babies and she chirped loud if human was near Her first lesson to them survival to teach them the meaning of fear. It's cold in Duhallow this morning the thrush silent on the bare tree And gray on the fields and the hedgerows and gray over all Knocknagree But I can remember the bright days when nesting birds piped all the day And hedgerows and woodlands and meadows smelt sweet with the blossoms of May.
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Like a beautiful pink camellia that's how you appear to me That bloom in chilly August on it's dark green mother tree So bright and fresh and pretty in the wintery wind and rain That's how you've always looked to me and that's how you will remain. The beautiful camellia flower that blooms fresh and young today In two or three weeks if that long will have gone into decay For flowers have such a brief span they quickly fade away But in sixty years of living your beauty with you stay. I feel privileged and grateful for to have you as a friend And I will love you and respect you until my life will end You are warm and kind hearted and well loved and well known And it's due to you and to you only that into a better person I have grown. You are wise and quite intelligent and beautiful to behold And you don't have a gray hair on your head and you never will grow old And on your sixtieth birthday you still look beautiful to me Like the young and pretty pink flower on the green camellia tree.
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Aug 10, 2010
Aug 10, 2010 at 6:25 PM UTC
Like A Beautiful Pink Camellia
Those happy Morris dancers make for a happy sight They wear bright scarlet ribbons and their shirts and trousers white, They clash their sticks whilst dancing and you hear the timbers ring Though 'twould seem that Morris dancing is not a female thing. I've never seen a female Morris dancer I stand corrected if I'm wrong It has it's roots in England and to England it belong And I hope that Morris dancing will not go the way of rhyme That in a changing World it won't lose out to time. They brought their culture with them from England far away A culture perhaps fading like many of the old cultures are today With the old dances of Europe I see a link somewhere And sad to hear that Morris dancers are now becoming rare. At the Dandenong Ranges festival east of Melbourne they perform every year And after in the ***** tent they laugh as they drink their beer, They brought a thing of beauty when they brought their dancing here And to those marvellous Morris dancers let us raise our glass of cheer. Morris dancing vary from English Village to Village or so I have been told Though the times they are a changing and fading are the ways of old But those marvellous Morris dancers may they dance forever more In the sunshine of Australia far from England's rainy shore.
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Aug 10, 2010
Aug 10, 2010 at 6:17 PM UTC
Those Marvellous Morris Dancers
His Grandparents were Romany people from his maternal side In Countries of Eastern Europe they travelled far and wide But the most basic human right their right to life of them even denied In Belzec Concentration camp where a million people died. I never knew my maternal Grandparents with sadness he recall Due to circumstance of birth and their way of life misfortune them did befall My gift of music such a marvellous gift to them I feel I owe In Belzec Concentration Camp they were murdered decades ago. A tall and handsome man in his early thirties with wavy raven hair With the marvellous gift of music a great accordion player In silence we sat and drank our beer as we listened to him play The beautiful old gipsy tunes from Countries far away. That all things do come to an end in some cases a lie In Belzec Concentration camp the gipsy music did not die But that the gift of music does live on should not come as a surprise Something that those who commit crimes against humanity seem to fail to realize. He played at the pub on passing through him I never more may see But the beauty of his music will live in my memory His maternal Grandparents who died at Belzec their lives were not in vain Their music in their Grandchild has come to life again.
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Aug 10, 2010
Aug 10, 2010 at 6:09 PM UTC
In Belzec Concentration Camp
Perhaps she is one who is not free of guile But she is one who has such a beautiful smile And a beautiful smile carries one a long way It does more for one than words can ever say, No doubt she's not perfect we all have our flaws The feline who often purrs is known to use her claws But a smile from a stranger just in passing by Can bring to your day a small flutter of joy, On my cares and worries I did silently brood As I walked down the street in an out of sorts mood But a beautiful smile and a warm hello From a lovely young woman one I did not know Helped for to bring a little joy to my day For the best things in life we do not need to pay.
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Apr 25, 2010
Apr 25, 2010 at 6:02 PM UTC
A Beautiful Smile
She sees things of beauty in all that she see And what's beautiful to her seems ugly to me What to her is a flower to me is a **** We do seem so different so different indeed. The window of her soul is open to light She always seems happy and bubbly and bright And her type of person a pleasure to know For beauty goes with her where-ever she go. Of those who are different good things she does say And for to help out others she goes out of her way She helps out the homeless and those in dire poverty I do not know of anyone as great as she. And sad to think her type are becoming more rare For the poor and downtrodden she genuinely does care To the most worthy causes her work free time she devote Yet she is not seen as one worthy of note. A beautiful person with a heart of gold And surely her story deserves to be told Not proud of her beauty and free of conceit And people like her one does not often meet.
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Apr 25, 2010
Apr 25, 2010 at 5:57 PM UTC
A Beautiful Person With A Heart Of Gold
In the blue sky just a few specks of gray In the evening of a beautiful day Though last night it rained and more rain on the way And that more rain is needed 'twould be fair to say On a gum tree in the park the white backed magpie sing He sings all year round from the Summer to Spring But in late Winter and Spring he even sings at night So nice to hear him piping in the moonlight Spring it is with us and Summer is near And beautiful weather for the time of year Such beauty the poets and the artists inspire Of talking of Nature could one ever tire Her green of September Mother Nature wear And the perfumes of blossoms in the evening air.
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Apr 25, 2010
Apr 25, 2010 at 5:54 PM UTC
A Beautiful Day
It's Friday evening from life's cares we'll have a brief leave taking And lets go to the Basy Pub for hour of merry making In confines of the Settlers Bar the voice of mirth is ringing And Pete Atkinson from Dublin Town an Irish song is singing. The Mckelvey men father and son are talking of horse racing They know the horses inside out from form and race card tracing Has Vo rogue gone over the hill, can Horlicks race to glory Can Almaarad come bouncing back and go down in history? Phil Cronin go back down the years he flick back through life pages To friends he knew in Millstreet Town he has not seen for ages Big Jerry Shea and Mister O, James Manley hale and hearty And Johnny Sing from Millview Lane the life of every party. Brave Harry the brave English man the one as tough as leather You'll only see that man in shorts no matter what the weather A man of elephantine strength yet gentle and kind hearted And he has taken life's hardest blow since his son this world departed. Big **** Kissane the Kerry man he doesn't like Maggie Thatcher And he feels that for Union bashing that few in history could match her Still he won't go back to Kenmare to weather wet and hazy He'd much prefer Mt Evelyn it's nearer to the Baysy. **** Kelleher and Phil Schofield well into greyhound breeding They talk of how greyhounds should be schooled and for them proper feeding Two greyhound trainers and of late their reputations growing And Millstreet Town keep racing on when others dogs are slowing. Vin Schofield a Manchester Man he does love Man United And every time United win he feel proud and delighted But United not doing well of late of late they're not impressing And this too much for him to take he find it all depressing. Galway's Matt Duggan and Westmeath's Sean Fay the hurling game debating On the first sunday of September who will be celebrating Can Westmeath make the big break through or will Galway flags be waving Or will Tipperary still be champs their reputation saving? And Marty Kerins from Mayo a good and happy fellow I've never met him in bad mood I've always found him mellow He love the Bayswater Hotel he say there is none better And to be kept from Settlers Bar he'd have to be in fetter. And **** O Shea from Dublin his friends are in the many And he doesn't have one enemy and he doesn't deserve any He's given homes to Homeless souls and he's easily moved to pity And good a man as ever came to live in this great City. The amazing J D Ellis his name and fame keep spreading And he has bounced back from the floor and for the top he's heading Still he is easily stirred up and Garry Carter does the stirring And el tigre he begins to growl the cat's no longer purring. It's friday evening from life's cares we'll have a brief leave taking And where better than the Basy Pub for hour of merry making In Confines of the Settlers Bar the voice of mirth is ringing And Pete Atkinson from Dublin Town an Irish song is singing.
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Apr 25, 2010
Apr 25, 2010 at 5:50 PM UTC
A Ballad Of The Bayswater Hotel
It's Friday evening from life's cares we'll have a brief leave taking And lets go to the Basy Pub for hour of merry making In confines of the Settlers Bar the voice of mirth is ringing And Pete Atkinson from Dublin Town an Irish song is singing. The Mckelvey men father and son are talking of horse racing They know the horses inside out from form and race card tracing Has Vo rogue gone over the hill, can Horlicks race to glory Can Almaarad come bouncing back and go down in history? Phil Cronin go back down the years he flick back through life pages To friends he knew in Millstreet Town he has not seen for ages Big Jerry Shea and Mister O, James Manley hale and hearty And Johnny Sing from Millview Lane the life of every party. Brave Harry the brave English man the one as tough as leather You'll only see that man in shorts no matter what the weather A man of elephantine strength yet gentle and kind hearted And he has taken life's hardest blow since his son this world departed. Big **** Kissane the Kerry man he doesn't like Maggie Thatcher And he feels that for Union bashing that few in history could match her Still he won't go back to Kenmare to weather wet and hazy He'd much prefer Mt Evelyn it's nearer to the Baysy. **** Kelleher and Phil Schofield well into greyhound breeding They talk of how greyhounds should be schooled and for them proper feeding Two greyhound trainers and of late their reputations growing And Millstreet Town keep racing on when others dogs are slowing. Vin Schofield a Manchester Man he does love Man United And every time United win he feel proud and delighted But United not doing well of late of late they're not impressing And this too much for him to take he find it all depressing. Galway's Matt Duggan and Westmeath's Sean Fay the hurling game debating On the first sunday of September who will be celebrating Can Westmeath make the big break through or will Galway flags be waving Or will Tipperary still be champs their reputation saving? And Marty Kerins from Mayo a good and happy fellow I've never met him in bad mood I've always found him mellow He love the Bayswater Hotel he say there is none better And to be kept from Settlers Bar he'd have to be in fetter. And **** O Shea from Dublin his friends are in the many And he doesn't have one enemy and he doesn't deserve any He's given homes to Homeless souls and he's easily moved to pity And good a man as ever came to live in this great City. The amazing J D Ellis his name and fame keep spreading And he has bounced back from the floor and for the top he's heading Still he is easily stirred up and Garry Carter does the stirring And el tigre he begins to growl the cat's no longer purring. It's friday evening from life's cares we'll have a brief leave taking And where better than the Basy Pub for hour of merry making In Confines of the Settlers Bar the voice of mirth is ringing And Pete Atkinson from Dublin Town an Irish song is singing.
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Perhaps the greatest tennis player the World has ever seen She had won nine Grand Slam tournaments before she was nineteen Till her marvellous tennis career was prematurely ended in such a tragic way Thrown from her horse her foot was crushed that's life as some might say. The marvellous Maureen Connolly the greatest tennis player of her time Her great career had ended long before she had reached her prime Nine grand slams as a teenager her record may never be beat She won every grand slam tournament in which she did compete. The greats of present day tennis we hear so much about Though 'tis not on their greatness we ever cast a doubt But of nine Grand Slams as a teenager none of them can boast To the late Maureen Connolly we ought to drink a toast. Great tennis players like the Seasons they come and then they go But there was only one Maureen Connolly the legendary 'Little Mo' Nine Grand Slams as a teenager believe it if you may The champion amongst champions her record stands today.
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Apr 25, 2010
Apr 25, 2010 at 5:41 PM UTC
Maureen Connolly
Have you ever been so lonely that you felt quite close to tears And your thoughts went racing backwards to the happy by gone years To the days when you were twenty, fit and sprightly and care free And no challenge seemed too daunting you'd try climb the highest tree? . Have you ever felt nostalgic and your thoughts went far away To the school yard in the lunch hour where you used to romp and play With your school friends from the old days have you wondered where are they Have they too grown slow and settled do they show their years in grey? . Have you ever been in a bar room on a night out with the boys Felt the lilt of drunk man's laughter an intrusive sort of noise And a sudden rush of sadness bring the teardrops to your eyes And you go off to the toilet where your feelings you disguise. And back home you think about it in the peace and in the quiet Whilst the others were so happy I felt down a bit tonight And you feel you'd one too many and you blame it on the beer But you've often drunk more liquor and tonight your thoughts were clear. Have you ever at house party asked yourself what brought me here And you feel obliged to linger though you'd like to disappear And the people seem so friendly but you still feel out of place And you get the strangest feeling your's is not a welcome face? . Have you ever on the train home after working hard all day Felt your effort has been wasted and at home you ought to stay Whilst the boss drives new mercedes you must struggle all the way And about that man you work for you don't have good word to say? . Have you ever felt your best friend really not your friend at all Why he often pass your house by and he seldom ever call Except when he is after something and for him there is some gain And though he claim you are his best friend in your heart the doubt remain? . Have you ever been in the company of a humorous sort of bloke And there were peals of laughter when he cracked a funny joke But the punch line seemed to slip you it went way above your head And you were left to wonder why they laughed at what he'd said? . Have you ever watched a young man kiss his girlfriend on the street And you thought him a bit cheeky felt he ought be more discreet But you silently were wishing he were you and you were he And your feelings on the matter only sprung from jealousy? . Did you ever meet young lady and she smiled and looked your way And your ego felt inflated she had helped to make your day Till you realized much later for you she could never fall She was just a friendly stranger and no feelings there at all? . All these sort of situations you will meet along life's way And this game of life and living is no easy game to play In a simple situation a great challenge we can see And this thing called human feelings is too big a thing for me.
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Apr 25, 2010
Apr 25, 2010 at 5:35 PM UTC
Have You Ever
Have you ever been so lonely that you felt quite close to tears And your thoughts went racing backwards to the happy by gone years To the days when you were twenty, fit and sprightly and care free And no challenge seemed too daunting you'd try climb the highest tree? . Have you ever felt nostalgic and your thoughts went far away To the school yard in the lunch hour where you used to romp and play With your school friends from the old days have you wondered where are they Have they too grown slow and settled do they show their years in grey? . Have you ever been in a bar room on a night out with the boys Felt the lilt of drunk man's laughter an intrusive sort of noise And a sudden rush of sadness bring the teardrops to your eyes And you go off to the toilet where your feelings you disguise. And back home you think about it in the peace and in the quiet Whilst the others were so happy I felt down a bit tonight And you feel you'd one too many and you blame it on the beer But you've often drunk more liquor and tonight your thoughts were clear. Have you ever at house party asked yourself what brought me here And you feel obliged to linger though you'd like to disappear And the people seem so friendly but you still feel out of place And you get the strangest feeling your's is not a welcome face? . Have you ever on the train home after working hard all day Felt your effort has been wasted and at home you ought to stay Whilst the boss drives new mercedes you must struggle all the way And about that man you work for you don't have good word to say? . Have you ever felt your best friend really not your friend at all Why he often pass your house by and he seldom ever call Except when he is after something and for him there is some gain And though he claim you are his best friend in your heart the doubt remain? . Have you ever been in the company of a humorous sort of bloke And there were peals of laughter when he cracked a funny joke But the punch line seemed to slip you it went way above your head And you were left to wonder why they laughed at what he'd said? . Have you ever watched a young man kiss his girlfriend on the street And you thought him a bit cheeky felt he ought be more discreet But you silently were wishing he were you and you were he And your feelings on the matter only sprung from jealousy? . Did you ever meet young lady and she smiled and looked your way And your ego felt inflated she had helped to make your day Till you realized much later for you she could never fall She was just a friendly stranger and no feelings there at all? . All these sort of situations you will meet along life's way And this game of life and living is no easy game to play In a simple situation a great challenge we can see And this thing called human feelings is too big a thing for me.
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