Mammy had a cauldron of stories, And Mammy never lied; Strange tales about the living, Still touched by those who've died.
She spoke of a friend who read the leafs: When babies died, she heard banshees; She foresaw the cornice collapse, Saved me when I was three. She whispered these tales Through pressed lips, Would pause to sip her tea.
Seers told her of her one-legged mother Standing guard at the foot of her bed, Long after she was dead.
One prophet spoke of an open door, A one-way trip to a foreign shore, And agonies she'd bend to endure.
For me, these stories rang so true, For mothers wouldn't lie to you; Yet Father said she was a sinner, Spinning yarns against God's will. That's not the story in Bethany, Or the fairy homes beneath the hills.
Are there ghosts under our beds, In the closets in our heads; Hovering over marked graveyards, Abandoned houses and Tarot Cards?
When the unknown night tore at me, I'd been told I could pray To the Father, Son and Holy Ghost: Now they're the ones I fear the most, They're the stories she often chose.
And some would say, for this I'll roast. Any good ghost stories out there? Mammy: An Irish mother. Father: the man in the collar.