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Here are some new poems and links to videos of poetry from Tomás Ó Cárthaigh |
There Are No More Horses Here Once horses trotted ambled and gamboled As children in rags so plain Begged for pennies and bread In sunshine and in rain Sometimes knowing success More times in vain. Today cars sleek roll by And no horses between these houses trot And wagon wheels are replaced by rubber The horses are forgot It is as if they were never there The dogs take in the scene the horses spot And a cat ambles by, the least of all As its ancestors did long before As its young and their young will When cars themselves are no more Twin constants of life: Cats slinking on streets And waves lapping the shore... Bones in the Sun Only dust now they are The dust to which we will all return In our time, when it is up Under the desert sun they burn Bleached white, some are from skulls More from legs or arms Some were rich and more were poor Townspeople, and more from farms... Murdered, but its not genocide To mention it it is a crime No, not victims of Nazi Germany These are from another time These are victims of the Turks And their Islamic allies, the Kurds Victims of a massacre That causes me to fail to find words... Killed by starvation and marching Not for them the decency of gas Save a lucky few killed in a cave All died and buried without a mass When Hitler was asked about reaction To the holocaust and those who died "Who remembers the Armenians" Were the words with which he replied... And in today, our age of reason I fail to understand how We tolerate the affront of Turkey And to deny we allow This genocide of the Armenians In the year 1915 Had it not occured, was stopped The Holocaust might not have been... Hatred in the Heart of Olde England They bought the land, we understand With hard cash fair and square But as they are not English folk They cannot build their own park there On land that they themselves own As a blockade blocks the load Of supplies for drainage and ancillary works So they don't camp on the road For their town is picturesque In the heart of Old England The truth's if your not white, English, Protestant Your skin they cannot stand. They will go to church on Sunday Pompous righteous and proud And boast how successful they are How they gypsies were not allowed To build a PROPER park, on land THEY own By proper English folk And as I read the comments of one I thought how it was for racism a cloak I live in an English house That for some hundreds of years did stand Built by Irish hands for English folk Upon stolen land. And the people dispossessed by Cromwell And to Connaught could not go And have walked the roads years since The same hatred's they know. England is equal they say for all As long as your white British and Protestant Then you enjoy every right. But should you not be so, alas No rights is there for you To be as bold to BUY your land! What a thing for a gypsy to do! You cannot camp upon the road The locals don't like the stranger Your children are running wild And are a source of danger. You are the least of Gods children And for you they do not care They wish you did not exist Were not among them, were elsewhere They glory of the beauty of England But hate is in their heart Pretty houses hide hateful minds Keen THEM from ME apart! |