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Tomás Ó Cárthaigh


About myself
Irish writer.


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My website is www.writingsinrhyme.com

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Published on WritersToYou

Let the Bells Peal
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2010
Poetry, 300 words
 Read online...
Comments...
The ongoing debate between tradition al Irish and the Atheist Ireland movement about the playing of the Angelus on the national broadcaster R.T.E. inspired this defense of the tradition from me.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rHlaXOmjC-4


"Cat in the Kitchen": Satire on US Iraq withrawal
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2010
Poetry, 300 words
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Comments...
The US operation in Iraq was like putting a cat out of a kitchen as he may cause damage, and causing more damage themselves in the process. Obamas grand announcement is no solace to those who lost their lives, homes and loved ones in the Iraq Civil War, and who continue to do so to this day.

See the video on YouTube
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q2z15g5AQm4

Add me on Facebook
http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1068146849

See my website
http://www.writingsinrhyme.com
A few new poems from Tomás
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2010
Poetry, 600 words
 Read online...
Comments... (2)
Add me on Facebook:
http://facebook.com/profile.php?id=1068146849&v=wall

Website: http://writingsinrhyme.com

Here are in this posting two poems, one written while in Prague and the other is about walking in Dublin. Alos, in the footer of the note are links to other poems of mine on my site you may like.

Feel free to add me on Facebook - see links above.


Thought I: A Poem
for Her I’ll Write
=============================
Thought I: a poem I’ll write
For her every day,
Though never loved was she by I
My feelings for her I’d show.
But my feelings I did hide
Was I right not to let them be shown
A friend I was to her like many
Of my love she has not known.

http://writingsinrhyme.com/Lady_of_the_Sweetest_Smile/Thought_I_For_Her_A_Poem_I_Will_Write.html

Sailing Neath the
Charles Bridge
===============================
Such history flows beneath this bridge
And all that have walked on it
So many pass its statues walk
And think so little of it.

Germans, Russians and the Slav
Have at times been masters here
And yet none was ever master
So from history it does appear
http://writingsinrhyme.com/Poetry/Sailing_Neath_the_Charles_Bridge.html

Sign the Guestbook
http://writingsinrhyme.com/SiteMap/Guestbook.html



Keeping Time Throughout the Ages
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2009
Poetry, 300 words
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Comments...

The Astronomical Clock is a must see if ever one is in Prague.



Of legends many, it was the cutting edge of technology in It’s day, for which its designer paid with his eyesight.




=========== THE POEM ==================





It was in its time a wonder

Which people flocked to see

And the figures they danced as the clock it rang

In the heart of Prague city.






For the Corncrakes Sake and Mankinds
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2010
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments...
The corncrake has been saved more or less by efforts of the "Save the Corncrake" movement in Ireland, and the RSPB in the UK. The bird, its distinctive sound once common, is now only in a few hinterlands, one of the main ones in the callowlands around Banagher in County Offaly, and down into Lusmagh and also Meelick and Clonfert in neighbouring Galway, where the overflows of the River Shannon created the callowland so suitable to its habitiat.

A series of initiatives, coupled with grants, caused changes to the way farmers done thier farming to take account fo the needs of the corncrake, and numbers are stabilising.

The poem asks, if we made the same efforts to accommodate our fellow man as we do for a bird whose song is not nice, feathers are not useful, and cannot be eaten, would the world not be a better place?

The poetry video...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lETjQBK2cwQ
Far from Kiltartans Poor He Died
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2010
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments...
William Butler Yeats poems in memory of Major Willaim Robert Gregory celebrate him as an Irish airman, not giving the fact that he was a lover
of the empire and stood against everything the poor of Kiltartan loved or wanted.

See the video on YouTube:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5WJaBvEvNuY
Gods Ministers Abused His Trust
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2010
Poetry, 300 words
 Read online...
Comments...
The child abuse scandal in Ireland rolls on and on as it does throughout the world. It is something beyond the Catholic Church, we have seen in education and sports as well. What is sickening most is the way it was covered up, and how normal youths were condemned for natural love - OK, sins of the flesh but it is good to be human - and girls who got with child from that had their names blackened by society who knew full well the excesses of members of the church and hid them for fear of causing scandal.

They are as bad as those who did the wrong.

The second thing that sickens me is the churches defense that one who committs such acts is ill, and so is not criminally responsible. I do not accept that, or the thinking that canon law is on equal footing or superior to state law. Christ himself said "Give to Ceaser what belongs to him, and to God what is God’s". Gods court comes after life, during life it is the courts of man.

Why were the preists not defrocked, and handed over to the authorities? It happened to a few who fell in normal and natural love with women, to whom it should not have happened.

The other end is the element who attach themselves to the argument who wish to destroy at any cost the Church, and religion as a whole. I feel they will get the same come uppance, for using the victims as a theological football.
Modern Venus
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2010
Poetry, 200 words
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Comments...
"Modern Venus" is a poem based on a picture from an artist from RedBubble.com

A Son She Bore Onto The World
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2010
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments...
An Easter poem...seeing the crucifixion from the point of view of the mother who lost her son, an angle not often explored in the Arts.
I Had No Time / Alien Hails Taxi & others
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2010
Poetry, 300 words
 Read online...
Comments... (2)
A few video poems for you to enjoy...
How the Clan Eoghanacht Got Their Name
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2010
Poetry, 300 words
 Read online...
Comments... (1)
Is your name Carty, Mc Carthy, O’ Sullivan, O’Driscoll, Mc Donough, or MacGillicuddy?

If so you are of the Clan Eoghanacht, and though from Irish, you are not of the Eireann, but from a Gaulish tribe that arrived later...

This is the story how your clan got their name!
Poets Express, July 11th, 2009
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2009
Poetry, 300 words
 Read online...
Comments... (1)
Read more at my website


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Readings from the Poets Express poetry festival in Bantry in Co. Cork, Ireland on July 11th last.
"Tower of Vrsac" - a VideoPoem from T. Ó Cárthaigh
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2009
Poetry, 300 words
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Comments...
"Tower of Vrsac"

==================

The tower stands ruined
Looks down on the town below
No eyes or windows

Where once there was there
Cold eyes of Turkish soldiers
Looked on Romania...
Saying Hello to the Sun
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2009
Poetry, 200 words
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Comments...
You should always say hello to the sun when you wake...




See me on Facebook

My Fan Page


My Group
Give God Thanks As You See The Sun Low in the Sky
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2009
Poetry, 200 words
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Comments... (1)
Give Thanks To God When You See The Sun Low in the Sky

-------------------

A poem montage by Tomás Ó Carthaigh

From the website www/writingsinrhyme.com



Tomás Ó Cárthaighs website
This World is Gods Playground
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2009
Poetry, 100 words
 Read online...
Comments...
A video poem from my website that is part of a new series...
The Natives Shall Walk Again
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2009
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments...
A quotation of a modern prophesy of a Native American seen online inspired the following poems
The Growing Wind Hints at Death
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2009
Poetry, 100 words
 Read online...
Comments... (1)
The Growing Wind Hints at Death
----------------------------------

A growing wind gusting
The Romany see with a sense of fear
For it is a belief of theirs
That when wind is strong, death is near.
So next time the wind is gusting
And you are standing there
Think of the sick and dying
And for them say a prayer...
Kosovos Gyspies kids still dying of lead poisoning
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2009
Debate, 500 words
 Read online...
Comments... (1)
Here is a reproduction of Paul Polanskys speech to the EU in Brussells last November giving the current staus of the Roma IDP’s..




Read his website
(Wild West) The Gunslinger Speaks of the Shooting
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2009
Poetry, 150 words
 Read online...
Comments... (1)
Latest in the Wild West Series... a gunslinger shoots an opponent who comes back when he thought he had killed him before...
There Are Times When Clowns Cry Not Tears of Joy
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2009
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments...
Even clowns cry....
Isreal or Hames: Which is the Worst?
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2008
Debate, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (2)
Which is the worst, I ask, Isreal or Hamas?
A few new Haikus
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2008
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments...
If haikus are your thing, you may enjoy these from Tomás Ó Cárthaigh







Visit the website & say hello!!!
"Time Has Passed"
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2008
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (2)
This is the new poem I have written, and I will be posting one a week for your enjoyment. More will be on my official website.

Writings In Rhyme - Poems by Tomás Ó Cárthaigh
Some Seasonal Ghost Stories from North Longford
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2008
Poetry, 1000 words
 Read online...
Comments...
Here are some seasonal poems for Halloween, all true, as told by my family from North Longford...
An Cailin Bocht Marbh - The Katy French Story
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2008
Biography, 500 words
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Comments...
Kathy French was an Irish model and local celebrety and died of a cocaine overdose in December last year, to a Dianaesque outporing of grief in the media.



It was a mere two or three weeks after two young men from a working class estate in Waterford died of the same causes, to no great hoo-haw from the media, showing the hypocracy of the reporting TV and newspapers.



While I myself had no great sympathy for the young men, though I of course do for their families - I feel the same about Kathy French - she brought it on herself, and did not warrant the hysterical reaction in the press.

My Website


My blog... come on over and have a read....
Postponing the Pondering of "How"
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2008
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (2)
This is a work in progress, and is the first draft... explring how drink helps us forget for the moment our problems...
Letter to Roberta
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2008
Poetry, 300 words
 Read online...
Comments... (4)
The latest poem in the Stanzas to Roberta series, and also an entry to the "Letter Poem" contest on the Guardian.co.uk pake of poet Kate Clanchy.

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Read more at my website
To Eat Without Saying Grace
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2008
Poetry, 300 words
 Read online...
Comments... (1)
Inspired by lines from a poem by the Irish poet James Orr. Never heard of him? Google his name and the word 2poetry".
Kosovo Tragedy: UNMIK Scandal, and another Poem
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2008
Poetry, 400 words
 Read online...
Comments... (1)
Many will be aware of the poems about the Romanys of Kosovo, and some have emailed me privatly to ask for progress. The present situation is still grave: just arrived is the latest info which I give here, along with my latest hastily written tragically inspired poem.
The Unseen Shadow *
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2008
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (2)
Take of a ghose who haunts a building unknown to its inhabitants, told from one of them who know of her existence,and the story behind her haunting.
"Old Peggy and the Gunfights"
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2008
Poetry, 250 words
 Read online...
Comments... (2)
The latest of my Wild West poems. Old Peggy is woken twice in the still night by the sharp sound of gunfire...
Lady Godiva the Good
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2008
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (3)
The Sory of Lady Godiva and Peeping Tom. It wasnt me... honest!!! ;-)
On Sighting Sandy Row
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2008
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments...
Sandy Row in Belfast is the heart of the Loyalist paramilitaries, and I was passing there for the first time last Saturday, which inspired this poem written in the Standard Habbie format made famous by Robbie Burns.
She Was A Dandelion Seed In The Wind
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2008
Poetry, 150 words
 Read online...
Comments... (3)
The latest Stanza to Roberta...



Once upon a time in a garden

There was a seed that the wind blew

Dancing, like a ballerina in the air

Up and down and round it threw...


Read more at my website
Open Sky and Shining Sun
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2008
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (4)
Poem on Kosovo in Englsih with Italian translation by Alice Bracci.
"Ten Ducklings and Three Men"
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2008
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (2)
Tony Kahn, a Boston DJ, told of a story how a ducks loss of all her chicks led him to meet and bond with the rough people from quite literally the wrong side of the road.
For Sale A Soul and A Body Whole
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2008
Poetry, 400 words
 Read online...
Comments... (2)
A poem about the oldest profession... and how it damages societry and all connected with it.
A Haiku For Iraq
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2008
Poetry, 100 words
 Read online...
Comments... (1)
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Haiku For Iraq
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Once reigned beauty
Then a king and then despot
Today fear rules


...........................
More poems and haikus at http://www.writingsinrhyme.com
Aphrodite ag Snámh ::: Aphrodite Swimming
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (2)
Aphrodite ag Snámh / Aphrodite Swimming

=======================

A poem abour a beautiful girl I once saw swimming...

Poem in Irish and English
Smile of a Passing Stranger
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2008
Poetry, 150 words
 Read online...
Comments... (4)
A short poem about a passing girl who smiled at me one day...
"I Hear A Song In Silence"
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2008
Poetry, 250 words
 Read online...
Comments... (4)
Angels sang... but they made no sound... hope you lot all like it!!!

Read more and sign the guestbook
PardonMe-Pardon Moi
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Humor and Satire, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (2)
Tried to publish this under French, but the site keeps tripping out.
Pardon Moi - Pardon Me
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Humor and Satire, 250 words
 Read online...
Comments...
Poem in French with English version. Man pinches bum of not too impressed lady...
Pardon Moi / Pardon Me
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Poetry, 250 words
 Read online...
Comments...
Small poem in French with English version. Advise please as to errors.
Dreams of De Valera
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (4)
A poem in Irish and English about the shattered dreams of Eamonn de Valera. English version at bottom.
From But Dust We Are
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (8)
We are but from dust...
The Simpsons Movie Review
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Other, 300 words
 Read online...
Comments... (3)
As a Simpsons fanatic... how did the small screen heros fare on the Silver Screen?

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Feel free to forward on, but please keep this notice.
Poetry by Tomas O’ Carthaigh, 2007
http://www.writingsinrhyme.com
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Three Haikus and BabelClub info.
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Other, 150 words
 Read online...
Comments... (2)
Three new Haikus from Tomas O’ Carthaigh, as well as info on the new BabelClub Wiki, a useful resource for writers.
All Is Perfect Neath the Lovers Moon
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Poetry, 250 words
 Read online...
Comments... (2)
This is a poem set in the last few centuries that tells of a lovers murder and its result.

Ive been adulterating WTY with WritersCafe and 8hop.com for the past few months, but I intend to return to old faithful (WTY) more often, and catch up on the writings of old friends.

My most recent work is posted on WritersCafe at http://www.writerscafe.org/profile/TomasOCarthaigh and I’ll publish a selection on WTY.com

Hell, its good to be back!!!
Geister
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (2)
Actually in German, but that was not on the list...

Mit klirrenden Ketten und schrillen Schreien
Obwohl nur ein flüchtiger Anblick
Suchen sie uns und unsere Träume heim
Diese Geschöpfe der Nacht...
"Cá bhfuil siad Anois" Where Are They Now
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (2)
Where are they now, the sons of Erin... a poem I wrote in Irish with Englaih translation. Posted in English section as there is no Irish section.
How I Became a Writer: Introduction
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Biography, 500 words
 Read online...
Comments... (1)
As well as writing here, I contribute to http://www.WritersCafe.org, and in replying to one of their forums I wrote this, and thought it might make a nice topic for WTY.

This is how I started into writing: what is your story? Tell your story by commenting on this one.

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Visit my website at Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Poetry, 500 words
 Read online...
Comments... (1)
"Smile When Walking Among Strangers" is a poem reflecting on the need for positive thinking on meeting someone new, the title poem ststes we do not need harsh pilgramages to be good people, and in "The Last Refuge of the Desperate" a defense is put up for the writers of poetry. I hope you like there!


"Yearn Not For Yesterday@ and other poems.
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Poetry, 500 words
 Read online...
Comments... (1)
A short collection of poems, varying from the Bosnian war to mice in restaurants to writers block. Tell me what you lot think!
I A Slave, I A Child
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (2)
Today, in West Africa, many children still work in slavery. This is a poem from the view of one of those child slaves.

The Rain Keeps Coming on Down (The Tramp in the To
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (1)
A tramp reflects that though he has no home, the house he squats in is officially the biggest house in town, allbeit a ruin. Its taking looking on the bright side to extremes! :-)

----------------------------------

PS: Its good to see WTY back on the go again! Well done Max!

Quickly, Come, Run... The Sky Is Falling...
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (1)
The eco scares bore me to death, I think by eggageration they are killing more support than they are gaining. The carbon tax idea is just a way to sell something for nothing, or sell nothing as something. Who’se paying? You and I, the gullible taxpayer.

Proof its bad? George Bush supports it now! :-)

Earth Day my Arse! (excuze moi francaise!)
"Sinners at a Seance" and other poems.
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Poetry, 400 words
 Read online...
Comments... (5)
Always a fan of Yeats, the only disturbing thing I found about him was his dabbling in the occult for inspiration in his writing, whereas simple reflection in his faith would have sufficed. While not a great person for Church, on occasion I do reflect, as is seen by the faith based poems I sometimes publish here. For me that is my faith, and that is suffice.
The Ballad of Hells Lake
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Poetry, 300 words
 Read online...
Comments... (1)
Loch Hourne in Scotland has a tale of ghost dogs who haunt an island on the Loch, to the detriment of anyone who lands there...

If ghost stories are your thing, you’ll like this one!
Hound For Iraq
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Poetry, 350 words
 Read online...
Comments... (3)
Those familiar with Irish mythology will know the story of Finn Mc Cool Fionn Mac Cumhaill), who killed a dog that attacked him, and vowed to replace the loss to the owner, giving himself the name of Cu Cullain, or hound of Cullain. When America destroyed Saddam, they did not take a duty of protection for Iraq, but let it slide into the civil war we see today. George Bush is no Fionn Mac Cumhaill.
The Hungry Grass
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments...
Africa is the mainstay in the news for famine, but this poem tells of an Irish supernatural phenomenon where the dead from the Great Famine allegedgy left a legacy behind them for those who would walk where they fell...

This tory always makes my skin creep when I hear it, and I hope my efforts in rhyme has a similar effect on you!
"Words Written While Waiting at Dublin Airport"
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (4)
Waiting for time to slowly go by in Dublin Airport, my plane is at 07.55 am for Prestwick... so being a writer I turn to writing to pass the time!
"Cricket to an Irishman"
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (8)
While Ireland is not known for cricket today, it was not always so, we used to be very good at it indeed. However the Gaelic revival set back the sport somewhat for 100 years or so, but today all sports co-exist together.

I still prefer Hurling though! :-)
"It’s Just Not Cricket"
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Poetry, 280 words
 Read online...
Comments... (7)
“Setting Your Players On Fire Is Just Not Cricket”
.- Headline from “The Star”, of Monday, March 19th, 2007 , after reports came in of cricket fans in Pakistan burning effigies of the team and coach on St. Patrick’s Day, after their loss to Ireland.

Subsequent revelations of the murder of their team coach throw this poem into an eerie light, as I had not known of it when I wrote the poem, just that he had died. Seen as a Gentleman’s game, we could not understand how Pakistan could be such sore losers.
"Foreworks from Heaven" and Other Poems
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (4)
A few poem that I hope readers will enjoy on God, Faith and Life. I write and when I do it is often to give meaning to life, and I hope others find a little something in my words to make sense for them or give them a little hope.
"The Ballad of the Turn of Luck"
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Poetry, 250 words
 Read online...
Comments... (1)
Inspiring tale for those out of work and who look to have little prospects... On October 22nd 1995, an unemployed man Vince Kearney in Cobh, Co. Cork, Ireland had three children, and had a leaking roof in his house. Prospects for work was bleak, and he was getting the usual pressure to find work that did not exist for him. He got the ultimate revenge on the condecending dole clerks when he won the lotto, purchased the local dole office, rose the rent, and got them evicted! The dole office was the old office of the White Star ine, and he opened a theme bar in it that is still there.

I wrote the poem as I heard it, no doubt there are a few embeellishements alonng the way! Its the ultimate good luck story!
"She Loved Not Him Who Her Father Chose"
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Poetry, 250 words
 Read online...
Comments... (5)
Love against the odds will transcend death, as is told in this tragic poem, where a girl is forbidden to love the man she does, and is to marry a man of her fathers choosing.

Hope it doesnt make you cry!!!
Big Eyes Blinking Blankly
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (1)
What will happen if Europe loses the good times, and war occurs again? maybe we will need the help of Africa in times to come.

The Islamic confrontation shows a real danger of the tables being turned in the world.
"Sitting There Saying Nothing"
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Poetry, 300 words
 Read online...
Comments... (3)
Ghost poem number two of three tells of how my father swears he saw ghosts at a cousins farm he inherited...
"Dead Souls And Black Dogs"
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Poetry, 500 words
 Read online...
Comments... (2)
Ghost story lovers will love this story - its true, honest! - of an old woman who died in Longford some years back, whose soul, or that of the devil formed the form of a black dog on her death... and walked out the door! Hope that sends a chill up your spines...
"Goddess of Weather"
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Poetry, 300 words
 Read online...
Comments... (2)
A pagan dweels on the moods of the Weather Goddess, and ponders the consequenses of adapting our God, doubting it will solve the drought problem and war in his area, that they may get worse instead of better. There must be a little pagan within me that inspires lines like these!!! :-)
"Some Dream Dreams or Dream of Nothing"
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (4)
Writing is my vice as a poet... others have theirs...
"An Angel In Eden Shed a Tear"
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Poetry, 250 words
 Read online...
Comments...
An angel witnesses Adam and Eves expulsion from heaven...
Remebering Dreams Now Past
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Poetry, 250 words
 Read online...
Comments... (4)
An aged farmer sees the broken dreams which he worked hard for come to little as he waits on death.
"Culture from a Cigarette Packet" and other Poems
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Poetry, 500 words
 Read online...
Comments... (2)

While Passing Time, I Try To Write

Quiet Hours Passing Slowly

Culture from a Cigarette Packet

A three poem collection I hope youll like, the first being on the subject of writers block again. the second wishing away the hours at work, and the third tells of discovering Burns at (maybe appropiate considering his name ) the front of a Sweet Afton cigarette box when I was very very young, which stunned me, and spawned by devotion to the man as a writer.





Tell me what you think, even if it is that you think Im mad!!


Beauty in Bounty Is A Woman
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Poetry, 200 words
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Comments... (7)
"Her ’prentice han’ she tried on man
And then she made the lasses-O"
- Robert Burns
"Green Grows the Rashes"

Burns writes that God is a woman, who as an apprentice made man, and when having smoothed out the mistakes, created perfection in womankind.
"Shall Another Read My Words"
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Poetry, 150 words
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Comments... (3)
Every writer wants to think of their work being read in 100 years, this verse explores those feelings for me.
"Days Gone And To Come"
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Poetry, 150 words
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Comments... (1)
Remember, how you find life may not be as good or as bad as another...
"The Crying Sky"
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Poetry, 100 words
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Comments... (1)
What is pleasent for one is terrible for another...
"Stars Twinkling, Unseen, Behind Cloud"
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Poetry, 100 words
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Comments...
If the sky was always cloudy it would be wasy to believe that the srtars did not exist. So it is in life...
"Dancers Move Upon the Stage"
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Poetry, 200 words
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Comments... (2)
==========================

Dancers Move Upon the Stage

==========================



The Dancer moves upon the stage

All eyes on her look down

Some with joy at her movement

Others over technicalities frown...



Its a pity we cant see the beauty in the ugly, as opposed to the ugly in the beauty...
A little too cryptic? Read on!!!
" A Glass in the Hand"
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Poetry, 100 words
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Comments... (2)
If only we could learn from the errors of others, never mind our own errors, the world would be SO much better for all... dont you agree?
A Prayer of Thanks Tonight Let Me Say
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Poetry, 60 words
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Comments... (1)
A prayer poem to atone for only praying when in need. Maybe you might like to say it as you go to sleep?
All Are Dead - First Address to Robert Burns
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Poetry, 200 words
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Comments... (2)
“For Lords or Kings I dinnae mourn
E’en let them die, for that they’re born”
- Robert Burns
“Elegy on the Year 1798”

"All are dead, both great and small men
Never to be known or heard of again
And all shall rise in turn when
The time it comes for man to be judged..."

"I Am Awake, As Others Lie Asleep"
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Poetry, 180 words
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Comments... (3)
Working he night shift is a great time to scribble a few lines, and here is one noting the passing of time as I wait for the coming morning...
"His Hand in the Wound Had Been"
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Poetry, 120 words
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Comments... (1)
It is good to have faith, yet we cannot aford to believe all we hear.
The World Is Gripped by Hatred
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Poetry, 100 words
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Comments... (1)
Hatred in the world will never be defeated unless we all do our little bit to defeat it. We cant change the world, but we can change our little bit of it.
1st Impressions Count: Words From Across the World
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Other, 200 words
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Comments... (3)

DevEdit NX Demo




First Impressions Count: Words from Across the World



 Im sure all will agree with me when I congratulate Scott Savage and all who helped with the creation of this anthology, and having seen the preview on Lulu.com


"Verses on Big Folk and Little Folk"
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Poetry, 150 words
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Comments... (3)
Who says if little folk exist they fight like we do? These verses explore this theory!
"A Sinners Plea"
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Poetry, 100 words
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Comments...
Plea of a mere sinner... :-) !!!
"Tore Down by God, Who Was Angered by Man"
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Poetry, 100 words
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Comments...
Our strive for one perfect united religion I think only serves to anger God, who shows his displeasure by allowing all of our sectarian conflicts.
"The Great Mc Gonagle!"
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Poetry, 200 words
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Comments... (2)
What is probably (intentionally! :-)) my worst poem ever, I write in the style of the unfortunate William Topaz Mc Gonagle, and recount the story of his eventful life.

Said to be the worst poet in history, one remarked tongue in cheek "Shakespeare wrote nothing like this!"

You can read his life story on the Wikipedia. He was satirized on the Goon show and by Spike Milligan, among others.

Is there anyone in America like him?
"Christmas Eve 2006"
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Poetry, 100 words
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Comments...
While woprking Christmas Eve I write these lines to pass the time at 1am on Xmas Eve morning. Can you remember what you were up to at 01.00h GMT?

FYI: RTA means road traffic accident
A Rose is Still a Rose When Not in Bloom
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Poetry, 200 words
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Comments... (1)
Poeple cannot always be smiling, the same as a flower is not always in bloom. This does not make the person horrible, the same as the rose is still a flower. Remember that the next time someone who is normally nice is dour or bites your head off... they are still that lovely person you knew, just not today!
"I Often Think... If God is Islamic"
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Poetry, 250 words
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Comments... (3)
Wars of religion will be shown to be stupid if God is none of ours but another instead, and all are gone to Hell for not believing in the right one reguardless of personal virtue. Should that be so, I will rue all my missed chances, and while as Catholic I use Islamic as the "other" faith, it could be replaced by pagan or whatever.
"Silence is Gods Lullaby"
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Poetry, 150 words
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Comments... (3)
Ever wonder what God sounds like when He sings a lullaby? Ever think silence could be it?
"Dark Hills and Dark Nights Foreboding"
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Poetry, 200 words
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Comments...
Slothful I like to sleep as opposed to walk mountains to relax... while I may die from a heart attack, it wont be from climbing a mountain I cant manage!
"The Ballad of Old Clonbroney"
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Poetry, 350 words
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Comments... (4)
The story of a man who met a headless horseman when calling on a neighbour after moving into the area.
Apperantly this is actually true, the miller he was calling on was an uncle of mine who lived in Clonbroney, where an old road led up to a disused cemetry, and a new road now led to the village. The old road partly made the lane to his house and mill that used to be on the side of the old road, but the road was blocked of at the rear, where both sides had grown in to form one hedgegrow that went up the fiends to the old cemetry.

The poem is to be edited later to make sure the information is correct, but this is the first draft. I hope you all like it, I probably should have published it at Halloween, only for the fact it was not written then!


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The Ballad of Old Clonbroney

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One night dark walking along

A lane onto its end,

A neighbour walked up to a house

To call upon a friend.

"First Ode to Wordsworth"
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Poetry, 150 words
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Comments... (2)
*/ Early writings of Wordsworth were libreatarian and reactionary in nature, full of the the joys of life, to which he signed his name "Will Wordsworth".

However, a change in the tone and subject matter arrived in the second period of his life, and on these more socially standard works he wrote his name in the more formal "William Wordsworth", by which we know him today.

This poem is inspired by a "Readers Digest" article from 1970 that explores his work and asks why as to the change in the name and tone of works from Wordsworth.
"Broken Hearts and Broken Dreams..."
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Poetry, 200 words
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Comments... (1)
Why do songs of heartache make great lovesongs?
Wisdom, its said, Comes with Age
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Poetry, 100 words
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Comments... (2)
If wisdom comes with age, why is mankind so dumb?
"He Who Walks Among Thorns"
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Poetry, 100 words
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Comments... (1)
An african proverb states:
"A man does not walk among thorns,
unless fleeing from a snake
or pursueing one"
"In Darkness Crept Shadows Dark"
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Poetry, 200 words
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Comments... (5)
A description of a nightmare... but was it really a nightmare?
"Rain Beats At My Window"
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Poetry, 100 words
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Comments... (3)
What we say, do and write is a refletion on ourselves...
"This Rainy Night Where Is She?"
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Poetry, 300 words
 Read online...
Comments... (1)
Another stanza for the lovely Roberta...



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This Rainy Night Where Is She?

========================================



This rainy night where is she?

Is she in Dublin town...

Racing along O’ Connell Street,

As the rain comes thundering down...

"My Mind Is Wrapped In Stillness Deep"
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Poetry, 500 words
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Comments... (2)
In the dudk/dawn world of half sleep is when I get the ideas to write, but often they are lost before I get to write them down. This is a humerous look at this dilemma!
"Click Click goes the Keyboard"
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Poetry, 300 words
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Comments... (1)
Once again I write on the topic of the joys and pains of being a writer...
He Shall Be Humbled, He Who Is Proud
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Poetry, 150 words
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Comments... (2)
The most humble will get to be proud, and the proud man shall look to be the fool...
With Passing Time Is Lost Forever
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Poetry, 100 words
 Read online...
Comments... (1)
Short poem urging to make your peace while we have the chance.
"The Atheist and the Thief"
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Poetry, 500 words
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Comments... (5)
Ever notice in life how the bad are good and the good can be bad? This poem explores one aspect of this, and explains Gods enduring grace, which often perplexes man!
"Brave Wallace Lies Neath Weeping Skys"
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Poetry, 300 words
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Comments... (2)
Keeping the Scottish theme going with a poem about the sacrifice of Wallace, and lamenting how in freedom should it be obtained, England will still have her claws in Scotland.
A Ghost Sails by Scotlands Isles
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2007
Poetry, 200 words
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Comments... (1)
A poem about Bonnie Prince Charlies ghost visiting Scotland.
At the Turning of the Year 2007
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 200 words
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Comments... (6)
Short few verses that need a little editing, focusing on the so called progress of 2006 in Iraq and Europe.

Just me bitching a bit!
Bubbeling Pots and Broomsticks
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 100 words
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Comments... (2)
First few stanzas from a poem I started over Halloween and hope to develop into a chioldrens poem / book.

A little out of season but I hope you like it!
May Blessings Be This Christmas Time
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 100 words
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Comments... (2)
===============================
May Blessings Be This Christmas Time
===============================

A Xmas wish for all at WTY.com




May blessing be upon your kin,

As Eve it turns to Christmas day,
May God, your heart dwell within,

And give you comfort when to him you pray.

Where Theres an If
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 300 words
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Comments... (2)
++++++++++++++++++

Where Theres an If

++++++++++++++++++



If I were a rich man I would do good

And the world a better place make,

Not to seek glory to say I am great,

But for doing goods sake.
She Who I Loved and Never Did
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 200 words
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Comments... (5)

Frequent readers of my writings will be familiar with the poems on one muse, the lovely Roberta, who hrough me being faint of heart did not win the fair lady. This is another of the "Stanzas to Ronerta"




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She Who I Loved and Never Did

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Ive not cast my eyes upon her,

For many months and years

And of joy and of pain,

She has caused me no tears,

She who I loved and yet never did,

As I thought it could never be,

She who I may never see again...

I wonder how is she?


Words of a Writer on the Folly of Fools
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 250 words
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Comments... (2)
I’ve been quiet of late - too much work, too little play makes Tom a bad (tempered?!) writer! - this is a poem written to get me back into the groove!
Be a Bard Like a Bird
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 150 words
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Comments... (2)
Why we should sing through our troubles...
A Dream Is Held Close To The Heart
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 200 words
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Comments... (5)

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

A Dream Is Held Close To The Heart

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::



A dream is held close to the heart,

And sometimes never shown,

How great a waste when that dream,

Is never acted on or known...


Mystic Men of Ancient Days
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 200 words
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Comments... (5)
Never a fan of paganism or Wiccca, reading Michael Mc Graths work put a new slant on it for me. As a Christian, I never will support it and am skeptical of it, but still...
Listen to Tomas O’ Carthaigh read his poetry!
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Other, 200 words
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Comments...







You can listen to Tomas O’ Carthaigh
read his poetry featured on the website
www.WritingsInRhyme.com
and taken from the book of the same name.


The book and CD can be purchased
from the
webstore
at Lulu
, subject to availability.


*
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *





A
Cat and I


Worry
Not


The
Muses Cafe


Lady
of the Sweetest Smile


Let
Me Not Be A Cloud


Rynaghs
Church Bell


The
Blind Mans Answer


The
Snowflake


Address
to my Feathered Friend


If
A Man Has Not His Dreams


Hail!
The Lord Shall Be


I
Ask My God


*
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *


www.WritingsInRhyme.com


Buy
the Books and CD!




The World Is Dying
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 100 words
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Comments... (5)
As the end of the world is nigh as we know it according to the ecologists in our ranks... I opt for a more lassiez faire approach.
The Doors
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 100 words
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Comments... (7)
No, not a tribute to the band, but a quick few lines to remind people that those who leave themselves open tend to get hurt, and we have inbuilt mechanicanisms against it.

So remeber to close your door to the world, and only open it to those thats good.
Only Now... But Better Late Than Never
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 200 words
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Comments... (2)
Those who follow my Roma poetry will be delighted to hear that finally, six years on the Roma camps are being moved.

Paul Polanskys KRRF are still on site working with the remainder.

However, there is talk of new refugees retuning from Serbia to the camps... to repeat the mistake all over again.

UNMIK arrogantly claim only 1 has died of lead poisoning, as records are badly kept it’ll be hard proving to the world it was 27.

Here is some links...

http://www.unmikonline.org/dpi/pressrelease.nsf/0/892FE8EF4502EF61C12570F1002E4BF9/$FILE/pr1474.pdf

http://kosovareport.blogspot.com/2006/01/unmik-starts-moving-kosovo-roma-to.html

I’ll keep updates as I find them...
Be There Peace
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 100 words
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Comments... (9)
Looking at the world, I ask will there ever be peace, and this poem catches my answer. Do you agree?

::: Be there peace and no more fighting,
::: Let there no more conflict to be,
::: May all men live in merriment,
::: And of our wars be free...
Let Us, as Friends, Not Be Silent
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 200 words
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Comments... (6)
In the end, we will remember not the words of our enemies, but the silence of our friends.
Martin Luther King Jr.

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Our silence is worse than others shouts,
For when our friends they assaid,
By word or by deed they’re assaulted
We aid when to speak out we fail...

---------------------------------

A piece of advice so apt in these times of silence over the Roma of Kosovo.

Show your voice by emailing this to your local paper, MP etc., and sign our petition!

http://www.kosovoroma.com

http://www.celtichosting.com/kosovoroma
Too Little Time To See The World
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 150 words
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Comments... (6)
Ever feel there is just to little time to see the world?
But What About You?
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 300 words
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Comments... (4)
The Roma of the Mitrovica camps are still suffering the
effects of the lead poisoning, and reading through "UNleaded Blood"
by Paul POlansky, I came upon the touching words of a woman
Ferdana, who though she was losing her family slowly, still had
the grace to tell Polansky she worried the reporters and aid
workers who flew in and flew out would suffer from the lead too.
Such compassion for others in the face of such adversity... my
prayer tonight and today is let me have the grace of Ferdana...

http://www.celtichosting.com/kosovoroma
http://www.kosovoroma.com
http://www.paulpolansky.com
Innocents
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 200 words
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Comments... (1)
What about hose who were really innocent in the Kosovo campaign, my friends the Roma refugees?

Paul Polansky and his charity are still working with them, and little is improving, and UNMIK and UNHCR are doing little as usual, and making a big fuss about the little they are doing.

http://www.PaulPolansky.com
Snakes All Around Us
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 500 words
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Comments... (3)
Readers of these pages from Ireland will be familiar with Fr Brian Darcys "A Little Bit of Religion" column in the Sunday Word, and Irish sunday newspaper. In the October 1 2006 edition, Fr Brian quotes a tale told by Native American actor Iron Eyes Cody. While he tells it to warn of the dangers of drink and drugs, I feel it can equally apply for those who go into personal or business relationships that are dodgy from the start with their eyes open. In summary, be wary of all who offer false promises be aware of the reality behind them.
Too Many Chocolates
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 250 words
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Comments... (2)
This poem is inspired by the words of Bono as recounted by Mick Wall in his book "Bono". Bobo was tored of churning out more of the same music, while it was good it still was boring for him. "... we (U2) were growing disillusioned with the pap, the wallpaer (music) and the gloss. Its as if someone has eat too many chocolates ... suddenly they’re beginning to feel ill as they look at all the papers around the room." The lesson I see from this is that over indulgence in life or a part of it, leads us to feel sick of life, or tired of it, and it may be this that leads us to be so unhappy causing our social problems, while those who really have life hard appreciate it when things become good if only for a while, and so are happy and smiling.
Let There Be Joy
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 200 words
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Comments... (1)
This is a small hymn calloing on people to rejoice in their troubles and in the name of God, as He is there to help us through our troubles. Inspired by a piece on one of those American God channells I’ve got on the sattellite television!!
Is God one or Three?
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 200 words
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Comments... (5)
Is Gods trinity true or false... or does it matter?
The Prisoner
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 150 words
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Comments... (7)
The first section from a new poem of the wild west series, where an Indian prisonmer awaits execution for something he never done.

What it is Ive to decide yet... that’ll be the next section!

Hope you like it!
Equally Wise and Foolish Are We
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 200 words
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Comments... (5)
Before God we are all equally wise - and equally foolish.
====================
Albert Einstein

The immortal words of Albert Einstien, that I hope to pay tribute to in verse!
Begin in Delight, and End in Wisdom
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 200 words
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Comments... (9)
This quotation from Frost, while about an ideal template for a poem, struck me as an ideal template for life. Often those despised at birth, die in folly, in youth, thier lives not making a metaphirical poem.

A poem begins in delight and ends in wisdom.
- Robert Frost

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Begin in Delight, and End in Wisdom
=================================

To begin in delight and end in wisdom,
Is the aim of every man,
So it was throughout the years
Right from when time began...
Let Hate In My Heart Not Be
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 250 words
 Read online...
Comments... (9)
============================
Let Hate In My Heart Not Be
============================

Let not hate in my heart be,
When I think of a foe,
Or tell of a wrong that to me was done,
Lately, or a while ago...
I Too Am Human
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 100 words
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Comments... (3)
A short poem stating our faults...
It Was An Age
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (7)
===========================================
It Was An Age
===========================================

It was an age when few would speak,
And less would even try,
Reform and equality to seek
For fear that they would die...
As I Slouch Upon my Chair
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 200 words
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Comments... (7)
I work as a security guard, and often use idle hours on my watch to write...

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As I Slouch Upon my Chair
=====================================

As I slouch upon my chair,
And into the space before me I stare
As if what before me was not there
I slowly pass the night...
A World Without Dreamers Cannot Be
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 100 words
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Comments... (2)
A World Without Dreamers Cannot Be...

Anoher short poem praising dreamers...
Adored by All
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 150 words
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Comments... (6)
A short poem for one adored by all and despised by none, if such a being can exist?
From Another World
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 200 words
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Comments... (15)
Its true, we scare aliens...



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From Another World
===========================================

From another world they look on us,
To visit us they wont try,
For they all fear disaster,
And that they will die...
Of An Angels Grace, Are We Worthy?
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 200 words
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Comments... (3)
Another poem for the crawthumpers among you...


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Of An Angels Grace, Are We Worthy?
===========================================

Of an angels grace, are we worthy,
We who bathe in sin
And wallow in the baths of selfishness
Never letting God in
Never admitting God to our hearts,
Where for Himself He made a place
But we block Him from His home,
And in our sin see no disgrace...

Eve
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 300 words
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Comments... (5)
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
Eve
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

-

I

In the eyes of Eve was not Evil
But a desire of love for to know,
And the act of Adam was not bad
The act of Love to show.
Nor was the eyes of woman evil
That hold love in their hearts within,
Nor evil are the lusts of men:
Evil are those who call it sin...


................................................
Taken from the website http://www.WritingsInRhyme.com

Feel free to forward, but leave this message intact.



King Bily and the Pope
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 200 words
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Comments... (2)
For info on the inspiration of t his poem to show the irony of the anti-Catholic usage of the Boyne commemorations (the Pope actually supported King Billy) read the article below which I reproduce from Mark Davenport of the BBC.

==============

It sits in a side room at the back of the disused Senate Chamber inside Stormont’s Parliament Buildings. The painting depicts King William III’s arrival in Ireland

A monumental canvas apparently depicting the arrival of King William III in Ireland in the 1690s, it was purchased by the old Northern Ireland government back in March 1933. But the controversial work of art was vandalised soon afterwards and has not been on public display for more than 20 years. Now some say the time has come to hang it somewhere more prominent. Buying the picture, thought to be the work of William of Orange’s court artist Pieter van der Muelen, cost the old Stormont government £209 and four shillings. Unionist MPs cheered when they heard of its acquisition. But those cheers gave way to bewilderment when the canvas was unveiled. There in the foreground is a figure which looks like King Billy on his white charger. But floating above him on a cloud is someone who appears to be Pope Innocent XI, apparently blessing his ally as he makes his way towards the Battle of the Boyne. A figure believed to be Pope Innocent XI
appears to bless William III

For those who celebrate the victory of the Protestant King William over the Catholic King James this may be an inconvenient reminder of the facts of 17th century great power politics. But the Ulster Museum’s Keeper of History, Trevor Parkhill, explains that "there is a well documented record that the Pope had a ’Te Deum’ sung in the Vatican on hearing the outcome of the Battle of the Boyne". "As Stalin would have said, they were objective allies in the 1690s against the Sun King Louis XIV who was at that time the most dominant authority in power in Europe," he added. Back in the 1930s some couldn’t stomach that kind of talk. In May 1933 a group of visitors from the Scottish Protestant League were touring Parliament Buildings when they came face to face with King Billy and the Pope. Art attack An enraged Glasgow councillor, Charles Forester, threw red paint over Innocent XI. His companion Mary Ratcliffe slashed the canvas with a knife. Both were
arrested and fined £65 when they appeared in court in Downpatrick. The painting was restored for a cost of £32 and 10 shillings. The authorities at Stormont decided it would be a wise move to shift it to a less exposed spot. Its precise whereabouts inside Parliament Buildings were unknown from 1936 until 1975 when the picture was moved to the Belfast Public Record Office. It went on public display there until 1983 when it was returned to the speaker’s office at Stormont. Art experts dispute whether the painting is the work of Pieter van der Meulen and whether the subject really is King William of Orange. Public display But the attack on the canvas has made it part of Stormont folklore. Damian McCarney, who writes for Daily Ireland and the Andersonstown News recently had a private viewing. In his opinion, "a reproduction of it doesn’t do it justice". "Whenever you first encounter the painting you are awe struck by the size of this epic tale
unfolding in front of you," he said. "So in a visual sense it deserves to be displayed. "But I believe the story behind it will capture the imagination of a lot of people as well. "Here’s a painting which attracted controversy and was attacked for no justifiable reason. "I think a lot of people can respond to that. It has echoes of the sectarian past and now we’re coming to a more tolerant period in history now is the time for it to be restored to its rightful place in the southern corridors of the Stormont assembly."

To Be, Or Not To Be A Bee
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (7)
To be a bee... a tongue in piece poem I hope you’ll like!

================================
To Be, Or Not To Be A Bee
================================

What a horrid life it seems to me,
To be the drone, a male bee,
Who lives for love and lust alone
For it hes bred, fed and grown...

Calm Be, Though the World Seems Mad
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 250 words
 Read online...
Comments... (1)
Dont panic, though things are looking bad...


=============================
Calm Be, Though the World Seems Mad
=============================

Calm be, though the world seems mad,
As if on the eve of doom,
In other lands things happen bad,
And war it seems to loom,
It looks so bad as its at our door,
Other times was far away,
It could be ignored before
It cannot be today...
The Apple of Eden
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 100 words
 Read online...
Comments... (2)
Poem dedicated to the Apple of Eden

Fruit of a tree that begot sin
And led poor Adam astray...

To read the poem "Eve", which is a good bit longer, go to http://www.WritingsInRhyme.com and tell me if you like it in the guestbook.

Click on "New Writings" link on the homepage.
Crying Spirit of the Night
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 250 words
 Read online...
Comments... (5)
The banshee, not a scary as shes said to be!
================================
Crying Spirit of the Night
================================

The crying in the bight grew faint
As to listen for it I slow,
And there looks to be nothing now
Where there was a woman a while ago.
But then upon again walking
Beneath awindow stands
Crying, as she brushes her hair,
With a comb in age gnarled hands...
What I See Before Me
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (3)
Short poem on how our emotions shape how we find situations.

================================
What I See Before Me
================================What I see before me as I look around,
At where there is nobody and nothing
I see peace, I see heaven, in the tranquility,
As a chorus of songbirds start to sing...
I Cant Remember What I Chose to Forget
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (7)
How many times do people, especially drunks, tend to forget when it suits?

A short verse for these folks.
Scots: Beaten but not Defeated.
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (10)
Song for Scotland... beaten but not defeated, biding its time until the day dawns to strike for freedom!
On Times Passing, My Mind I’ve Cast
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 300 words
 Read online...
Comments... (4)
Poem on the theme of the pasing of time, in a similar vein to the poem "To Have Again the Days of Youth"... but a little deeper.

Soon to be added to the website www.WritingsInRhyme.com - check it out!
On Suns Setting at the End of The Day
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 250 words
 Read online...
Comments... (2)
As you sleep, ponder this poem...
To Have Again the Days of Youth
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (4)
Even though your young... do you ever get the feeling life is passing you by? This poem reflects on that feeling.
What Ails Ye Now? (First Ode to Robert Burns)
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 300 words
 Read online...
Comments... (6)
Inspired by the opening lines to a Burns poem "Epistle to a Tailor" (I think!) which are ’what ails you now, you lousy bitches?’...

A classic line, and my favourite piece by Burns. This ode to Burns is inspired by the line and poem.

==========================
What Ails Ye Now? (First Ode to Robert Burns)
==========================

"What ails ye now?" Words from your pen,
When you in the heat of anger basked
And boiled as you in retort wrote
And the lousy bitches you asked:
Those who about others things say,
And down upon who look
Would well be told the story
Of "Throw the First Stone" from the Good Book...
Should I Again Her Smile Not See
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 250 words
 Read online...
Comments... (1)
Us men too are suckers for love... ==========================
Should I Again Her Smile Not See
==========================

Should I again her smile not see,
Blessed was I to be,
To have known, and fond have grown,
Oh her and her company.
And though lover we never were,
As much because I was not bold,
Her memory will always be
In my heart, and of be told.
A Thought for Israel
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (8)
The excesses of Isreal in Lebanon is all the worse considering the pain they endured throughout time.

The story of the man let of the loan who then percecutes those who owe him money springs to mind...

:::::::::::::::::

I wish that when my eyes I open,/
A better day sometime will see,/
Through my actions or those of others,/
A better time for all will be...
In Times of Despair I Ask My God
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (10)
This needs a little work, but here it is so far, typos and all!

========================
In Times of Despair I Ask My God
========================

In times of despair I ask my God,
Lord what will I do,
And thee my God, though nothing you say,
Reply: "I’ll look after you."

And I, the sinner, when times are good,
As not "What will I do"
Proceed to go my sinful way,
And though my sins anger you...
Crazed Beats Echo Into The Night
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 250 words
 Read online...
Comments... (7)
For those who despair at the musical tastes of our youth... I though only 29 often depair too.

Am I officially getting old?

::::::::::::::::::::::::::

Crazed beats echo into the night/
A couple passing shake their heads: say its not right/
Crazy music, adored by crazy kids/
Lets, keep moving... one to the other bids...
Should You An Idea Hold
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 100 words
 Read online...
Comments... (2)
Never give up on an ide, though it sound crazy...

One of my shorter poems. Hope you like it...
To Grow In Love Is What God Asks
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (8)
To be small, apperantly is to be Godly...

More poems on the website www.WritingsInRhyme.com - check it out and sign the guestbook!
Born of Lonliness Are The Arts
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 250 words
 Read online...
Comments... (9)
I reald a quotation that said "creativity is born of lonliness", and while in times of dark moods indeed creatitivity can be a release... it is not the only time of creativity.

For me, creativity is a celebration of life... a day gone by without a verse written is a bad one for me.

Maybe I am crazy... ?

Check out the redesigned website http://www.WritingsInRhyme.com - the new design should be easier on the eye.

Some unpublished writings will be added in the coming days.
In a Bog of Brown, A Message From God?
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 300 words
 Read online...
Comments... (5)
While myself sympathethic to the Palestinian cause, the recent conflict was shown in a new light with recent events: a discovery of a 1000 year old book open at a page asking Gods help agaianst those trying to wipe out Israel...

::: "Book found open

Painstakingly copied in Latin script, it was found open to a page describing Psalm 83, in which God hears complaints of other nations’ attempts to wipe out the name of Israel.

Wallace described the book’s binding and cover as "leather velum, very thick wallet in appearance." It could take months of study just to identify the safest way to pry open the pages without damaging them, he said.
":::

More on http://www.cbc.ca/story/arts/national/2006/07/25/bog-book.html

What do you lot think of this? Am I crazy or is this just too much of a coincidence? Was there really a message from God in an Irish bog?
Once There Dwelt A Scotsman
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 500 words
 Read online...
Comments... (6)
=================================================
Once There Dwelt A Scotsman
=================================================

Once there lived a Scotsman
Whose years nobody knew
Who was seen by all in town
And known by very few.
For men, for loners such as he
Were left that way... alone...
Scorn and pity and indifference
By the townspeople to him was shown.

On Open Hills I Have Walked
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 300 words
 Read online...
Comments... (3)
=================================================
On Open Hills I Have Walked
=================================================

On open hills I have walked
And from their summitts to view I stood
All that nature before me spread
As many others often would.
But I. not looking, often saw,
Only what was physically there,
Not the hopes and dreams and fears,
Of those that there dwelt, and did not care...
To the Recently Deceased
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2003
Poetry, 300 words
 Read online...
Comments... (10)
The Angels they are calling, and you, you cannot stay
When the angels of the Lord beckon, we all must obey
Happier you will be, back where you are from
Now is your time, someday mine will come.
And when my day does arrive, and whemn my time is near,
I hope I can face the world without a hint of fear...
Nothing to Write Upon Today.
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 150 words
 Read online...
Comments... (7)
Another short poem on writers block!

http://www.WritingsInRhyme.com

http://www.Lulu.com/Cartyweb
Lament for Erin
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 400 words
 Read online...
Comments... (6)
Verse lamenting the passive acceptance of partition, the brutalification of the RIRA campaign, and the growing power of larger ststaes over Ireland through the EU.

=================

Lament for Erin, thou art not free/
The Saxon of old has six counties of thee/
Wo to the day, aye, and woe be to the hour/
When your suns surrendered your freedom and unity for their power./

Lament for Erin, and the tears she shed/
Lament for her history, and her patriot dead,/
Lament for the crimes comitted in her name,/
Lament for those who on her cause brought shame./

Jimmy Johnstone Celtic Supporters Club
http://www.JimmyJohnstoneCSC.com

Say hail hail while your passing!


Prime Contact With Another World - Stanza One
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (7)
Here is a story in rhyme of earthlings of the future finding a new world.

..............................
On the stars rotation between its fifteen suns/
The interstellar spaceship set its speed,/
And eyes from our world on another one looked down,/
Some with hope, and more with evil greed...
Can I See If I Look in the Distance?
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 250 words
 Read online...
Comments... (8)
A quick verse about desiring to see (or know) what is hidden from me, though it may not be good for me.

A poem on a common trait of life!

More on the website http://www.WritingsInRhyme.com from my new book Passing By Our Planet

The book can be previewed and purchased at http://www.LuLu.com/cartyweb
"A Fool, By Dreams Lives His Life" and Other Poems
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 500 words
 Read online...
Comments... (4)


==============================================
A Fool, By Dreams, He Lives His Life
==============================================

A fool, by dreams, he lives his life
And wonders why nothing comes true
Little he tries, as his life away he dreams
And he only has lost opportunities to rue...
Gods Love For All Knows No Bounds
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 250 words
 Read online...
Comments... (6)
Gods love for all knows no bounds,
Like the universe has no walls,
The greatest sinner, and the greatest saint,
Both, as his sons, he calls.

For he who made them as they are,
Are a reflection of how they are made,
And as so, are a reflection of God himself,
And to be themselves, are not afraid...

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

Another poem on faith... see the reworked website at http://www.WritersToYou.com

Sign the guestbook while you are there!

The new book in prepublish status is available from http://www.lulu.com/cartyweb

See "Passing By Our Planet" in the shop area.
Smiling We Cannot Always Be
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (8)
Looking into the sunset, I see little
But the death of the day
I today am not a dreamer...
And I cannot think any other way.
For on my mind the day already has ended
And the darkness of the night has begun...
"Natures Great and Natures Kind" and Other Poems
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 400 words
 Read online...
Comments... (3)
Calm As The Sea Unstirred By Wind
----------------------------------------------
Describing emotions during a walk.

Of the End, We Shall Be Spared
--------------------------------------
The prophesies of St Malachy predict Ireland will be destroyed 7 years before Armageddon, to spare us the horrors of the Last Day. So when it happens... you got a maximum of 7 years!

We, Ungrateful Sinners, Thank Our Lord
-----------------------------------------------
Poem saying sinners who ackknowledge they are so, truly thank God in prayer, while those who may not sin as much, may not be so sincere in prayer.

This Island Was Walked By Men
---------------------------------------
Poem rueing the loss of Irelands true heros, and lamenting the shouts of the charlatans of today.


"City of Ships of the Seven Seas" & Other Poems
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 400 words
 Read online...
Comments... (5)
Another few poems I’ve written recently, inpired by travel and and by trying to have some hope for the future.

http://www.WritingsInRhyme.com
http://www.PassingByOurPlanet.pro.ie
He Palys on the Pitch of Heaven
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 300 words
 Read online...
Comments... (5)
Tribute to Jinky Johnstone: a Celtic legend. Now playing the pitches of heaven.

Needs a little rework.

http://www.JimmyJohnstoneCSC.com
Rose, flower of Earthly Love
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (3)
Seeing as everyone else is writing on flowers, Ill join the act. In the most Robert Burns macho type of way of course...

================

It is, the flower, I suppose
That lovers give, called the rose,
Red to pink is its hue,
Some grow in white too...
When God gave love for us to see
This flower, that love was to be,
So when a rose to you is given...
On Scotlands Fair Shores There Are Many Maidens
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (6)
Poem on Scotland being such a fair land. (You can tell Ive just been on holiday!)

Check out a preview of my new book Passing By Our Planet on http://www.Celtichosting.com/PassingByOurPlanet

Email me and tell me what you think!
A Selection of Short Poems on All Topics
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 500 words
 Read online...
Comments... (4)
Here is a short selection of poetry on all topics which I hope you find interesting.

This mini collection features poetry from my forthcoming book which will be available through Lulu.com called "Passing By Our Planet".

If you could tell me which ones you like, and a selection of them will make it into the book.


An Ear Always Listning For A Prayer
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (5)
If we dont ask God to help us, how can we expect help?
How Can He Be, A God We Cannot See?
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 300 words
 Read online...
Comments... (6)
Asking how an invisible God can exist... can you not see Him? Needs some reworking, written in a hurry.
Open All Windows and Let the Gales Through
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 180 words
 Read online...
Comments... (6)
We assosiate closed windows with wartmth and good, and a closed mouth as the same, staying out of others business though we know but fail to warn another of something set to befall them.

By speaking you may get grief, and by keeping quiet you get none, but if you get grief, at least you allowed someone to deal with what was coming.

Hence the heat and cold in the poem, and the air is the freedom of conscience after warning those who initially were ungrateful for the warning.

Maybe a little complex... but I hope you all like it anyway.

==========================
Feel free to forward to a friend.

http://www.WritingsInRhyme.com
"I, A Sinner" and other Short Poems of Faith
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 500 words
 Read online...
Comments... (6)
A few short verses of faith, that someone somewhere may find helpful in life.

Feel free to forward to friends and family.

Extract from "I, A Sinner"
..........................................
I, a sinner, preach of God
And what of us he asks
And give judgement of clergys guidance
And attempt to do thier tasks
And the word of God himself
I commit the heretic crime
To interprit scripture to you,
And to do so in rhyme.
........................................




http://www.WritingsInRhyme.com
http://www.PassingByOurPlanet.pro.ie
Crawl With The Creatures of the Earth
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 150 words
 Read online...
Comments... (7)
Those familiar with the story of Eden will know why snakes slither today... make sure your tongue does not anger God and make him smite you to slither like the snake tomorrow!
Anti War Poems: Soft Touch of the Wind
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 500 words
 Read online...
Comments... (2)
Here I include three poems in one article on an anti war theme, describing the nature of war, the horror of war, and a poem on the Roma, over 1000 of which faught in the Wehrmacht before being demobbed, rounded up and gassed.


Soft Touch of the Wind
.................................
Soft Touch of the Wind tells of the enviromment destroyed by war, but how beauty can prevade even in the horror of war.

Flames of Hell Engulf the Dead
.................................................
This poem shows how, though decimated, the environment... and also our spirit, survives the horrors of war.

A Thousand Souls Faught for the Fatherland
..................................................................
They faught for Germany, in Belguim, France and Poland. Then they were demobbed due to their blood and race, rounded up and gassed. Who were they? My old friends, the Roma.

A side of history that has never been told, and the Wehrmacht has never apologised to Romany soldiers.

******************************
I look forward to your comments on the poems, and tell me where they can be improved.


They By Their God In Prayer Kneel
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (5)
God knows us whole, and a false confession will be seen and discarded, no matter how much you pray.
The Lord Looks Down On Sinners
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (9)
It is not all lost, even when we have sinned to a great degree. God is the source of all forgiveness, all hope, and in us will not lose face.

A thought for us as we approach Easter, and celebrate the resurection of the Lord.

Feel free to send to your friends, or someone who needs reassurance that all is not lost, though it seems bleak for them because of their actions.

=======================
Feel free to send this to whoever
you like, just leave this notice in it.

(c) Tomas O’ Carthaigh
http://www.WritingsInRhyme.com
http://www.PassingByOurPlanet.pro.ie
=======================

The Devil Is A Clever Chap
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (10)
Tongue in cheek look at the Devil and God pitting their wits against each other... showing that he who does and cares least gets most.

Needs a little editing, but off the tp of my head I said Id write it down anyway.

::: The devil is a clever chap
::: Asks non to worship at all
::: Sits back and little does
::: And watches souls to his trap fall...
Crazy Chiefs Predictions
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 600 words
 Read online...
Comments... (4)
===============================
Crazy Chiefs Predictions
===============================

Our salvation will be a mushroom
Which we should not be near
At the time it reaps its crop on the land
So we should never fear
The ocean on the whiteman
That pours over the plains from Hell
For of the Future Ive had a vision
And this to all I tell...

Latest in the Wild West series, especially for Scott. And no, Ive not been on the mushrooms when I wrote this!

It is a vision, where the Crazy Chief sees the nuclear bomb destroying America, but cannot call it what it is, and so talks of the famous cloud as being a mushroom.

Needless to say, as will be shown in the following poems, he is not heeded by the Braves who think hes really gone off the wall this time...

By the way... for all my American readers... I hope this never happens...
As They Look Down Upon The Land
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 450 words
 Read online...
Comments... (5)
What would Connolly and Larkin think of the Ireland of today?

As they look down upon the land
For which their lives were shed,
What do they think of the mess we’ve made:
Those brave soldiers: Irelands dead?

Greed and capitalism
Remains our national shame
Larkin and Connoly would be at home:
Our morals and their world were the same.
Some Things Never Change
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 300 words
 Read online...
Comments... (4)
Short poem on lovers who’re looked down on because they are from different races. All thats changed it seems is that the chains are gone, the heart itself is in slavery still.
The Gateway of the Dead
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 400 words
 Read online...
Comments... (5)
A little chiller poem to get you going! Be wary at the breaking of Dawn and Dusk!
Let Us Not Kill Our World Through Pride
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (3)
As Iran and USA face each other off, the consequences could be a global killer: all through a battle of pride.

Nukes are not toys.
Those Who Say They Please the Lord, are Condemned
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (1)
Do not say you are a Good christian, even a good man: God may not think so... and he will tell you when the time comes!
Can We Help Ourselves If We Lose Faith?
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (2)
When we see the evil in the world, sometimes I ask myself: is there a God at all. These few lines explore this theme.
Ghandi: Indias Inspiration to Ireland.
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 300 words
 Read online...
Comments... (3)
Dublins riots yesterday brings the pont home agin of how Ghandi toppled the empire by peaceful means, and maybe us in Ireland could learn from his example.


Ghandi has always been an Icon for Ireland and the Irish, and this poem is dedicated to our Indian friends on WTY.com



=======================
Feel free to send this to whoever
you like, just leave this notice in it.

(c) Tomas O’ Carthaigh
http://www.WritingsInRhyme.com
http://www.PassingByOurPlanet.pro.ie
=======================

Lord, Guide Us In The Days To Come
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 400 words
 Read online...
Comments... (3)
Another poem offering a prayer for guidance from the Lord... A sample from the poem is below:

::: Lord, guide us in the days to come
::: We know not what lies ahead...
::: Wheather we’ll be alive to see
::: Whats to come, or if we’ll be dead...

::: Lord, nudge us when we say whats wrong
::: To each other when we fight,
::: For we may not be alive to try
::: To apologise and put things right...

=======================
Feel free to send this to whoever
you like, just leave this notice in it.

(c) Tomas O’ Carthaigh
http://www.WritingsInRhyme.com
http://www.PassingByOurPlanet.pro.ie
=======================
A Day Like Today
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (3)
A thought for today, for those who cant wait to see tomorrow, and also for those who dread to think of another days dawn!

A Day Like Today
.....................................


A day like today is many things to many men,
Some cant wait for tomorrow, some dont want to see again,
For some good and some bad, some by paths they did not choose,
Some carved from themselves whether they win or they lose.
God above is our guide, but we realise not he is near,
Because we do not listen, his voice we cannot hear,
God talks in a whisper, lost in a crowd,
If we refuse to listen: why should he shout loud?



=======================
Feel free to send this to whoever
you like, just leave this notice in it.

(c) Tomas O’ Carthaigh
www.WritingsInRhyme.com
www.PassingByOurPlanet.pro.ie
=======================
The Singing Bird Gives Thanks
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (9)
Nature always thanks the Lord for its existence, the only false prayers are the ones we mumble during our "worship" services.
Why Should He Listen, The Burdened Lord?
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 300 words
 Read online...
Comments... (5)
Poem that asks why does God bother with us at all with all the hassle we give him and the disrespect we show to him.
And So I Sit and Think a Bit
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 250 words
 Read online...
Comments... (5)
I suffered another bout of writers block a few ights ago, having nothing else to do bar write, and so as usual I strung together a verse about it.

Hopefully you’ll like it, and agree with its sentiment!
Life is INDEED a washing machine!
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Debate, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (6)
In reply to Michelle Amelias piece "Life is a Washing Machine".

Im agreeing with her for a change!

Tell me what you lot think!
The Birds Dont Seem to Sleep Anymore
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 300 words
 Read online...
Comments... (4)
At the moment, I work in security, and I noticed birds singing at midnight and two and three in the moring.

Is it the lights of our 24/7 world keep them awake, or are they imbibing the spilled pools of liquer from broken bottles and litereally "singing" the night away?
A Voice That Cuts through Time
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Anna Lindh, 300 words
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A poem for our Swedish readers, seeing as none are in English on Anna Lindh.

May God rest her soul.
Thank The Lord In Your Needful Hour
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (4)
We all have our crosses to bear, few in their pain realise God is helping us bear them.

Another piece where the title is nearly longer than the poem!
He Who Calls The Lords Name
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 250 words
 Read online...
Comments... (3)
He who calls the Lords name
In a silent vocal prayer
In trust of God that He listens
To all no matter where…

Have faith in God is the basic message of this piece. Reguardless of the structure of your belief, God looks on all as his children, or his sheep, as it is put in the Bible.

Sometimes he will not answer our prayers, as it can be for our better good, as excelently protrayed in the Garth Brooks song "Sometimes I Thank God For Unanswered Prayers".
A Cry, Silent In The Night
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (6)
God is always with us, whether or not we are aware of the fact. A little spiritual poem to acknowledge the fact.

Hope you like it!
The Most Horrible Sight to a Man in this World...
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 350 words
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Comments... (4)
"The Most Horrible Sight to a Man in this World Is the Beauty of a Lady’s Smile"

What? I hear you say... here is a poem with a twist at the end! Tell me what you lot think...

As they say, beauty is in the eye of the beholder!
Paul Polansky Sat in My Kitchen
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 300 words
 Read online...
Comments... (3)
Regulars will know of my poetry on the Roma, and this is the latest of that genre.

Paul Polansky works with Roma refugees in Mitrovica, Kosov, and previosly in Nis, Serbia and the Czech Republic, where he uncovered and highlighted the Lety concentration camp.

To me, he has been an inspiration, and on Christmas Day, he and Lubo Zubak visited my humble flat, where we talked of his work, poetry in general, and everything else in life.

This poem is about that surreal day, and I urge everyone to give him as much support as you can, especially in publicity for the work he does, that the UN should be doing.
And There, On A Place Called Calvary
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 250 words
 Read online...
Comments... (1)
Sometimes, it is worth asking, when we look at the world today, did Christ die in vain?
He Who is Watched by the Unseen God
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 300 words
 Read online...
Comments... (4)
All beware, though you do not see God, he sees you, though he does not help you directly, he sees when you flounder because you fail to try.

Those who’ve lost faith but have tried can take heart that God has seen that, and though great is your sin, when great is your sorrow and attept to do right by yourself, you will benefit from the grace of the Unseen but Merciful God.

First fire and Brimstone sermon from me for 2006. Repent ye sinners or God will format your hard disks! >:->
A Gift From God
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 200 words
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Comments... (4)
A poem for Ava and Mike for their baby.
Prière Pour 2006
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments...
Nouvelle année heureuse à tous aux auteurs à toi. C’est ma première traduction de mes poésies à une autre langue. Si vous pourriez me dire des erreurs et les éditer, je des crédits d’inclide de volonté pour mêmes en publications officielles.
Can a Hand Outstretched be Trusted?
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2006
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (5)
A common gesture is a hand offered in friendship, but can it always be trusted?
Prayer for 2006
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (10)
Let this rhyme by our new year resolution for 2006. Feel free to email it to who ever and spread the message.
Ireland, is it but a Notion?
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 300 words
 Read online...
Comments... (2)
Another gloomy but optimistic poem designd to raise the national spirit...


::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

Ireland, is it but a Notion?
Ireland... is it but a notion
Of a land that never was...
But in the dreams of our dreamers...
Who had those dreams because...
The reality of no land
Was for them too much to bear...
And so where there was no land...
They imagined one for themselves there...
The Beauty of the Bar
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 300 words
 Read online...
Comments... (3)
The Wild West series continues introducing a lady of the night who worked in the ocal saloon... until one day she just - disappeared!
Looking for the Lord
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (5)
Looking for faith and a closeness to God can leave you feeling cold if you look in a church, the supposed Home of God.

If He does not live in your heart, he will not be with you in a church.

A thought for Christmas.
The Fool and Mr Cool
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 400 words
 Read online...
Comments... (4)
Another twist in rhyme questioning someones perceptions of another, which often turns out to be how others see us.
Ring Loud The Bell
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 300 words
 Read online...
Comments... (3)
Poem telling of a nations mourning for the loss of its spirit, soul and faith.

It needs a little work, as usual...

**************

Ring Loud the Bell for my lost soul
In whom my children take no pride...
Who see no sense in patriotism
Tore my soul from inside...
All Gods Children Share His Love
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 250 words
 Read online...
Comments... (5)
God loves all, but most dont know Him. Was Calvary in vain when we look at the world today?
Finally the World Hears
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (4)
Those who follow this site will know my writings on the Roma in general and the Kosovo situation in particular.

I am glad to report that Amnesty International has been aware of the case, and has been running a small scale capaign on it over the past few months.

Paul Polansky of KRRF had a news conference in Berlin about the topic, and his documentary about the crisi won a film contest in Skopje, Macedonia recently too.

If you could, forward this on to your local senator, MP, be you in India, Ireland, America, UK or wherever, and ask them to campaign to get the camps moved.

My minisite on http://www.KosovoRoma.now.nu has a petition you can sign for the camps to be moved to a safer location: head on over and sign it please!
A Cry for Help
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 100 words
 Read online...
Comments... (3)
Ever felt like a captured rabbit? Life is sometimes just like that.
Judgement Day
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (4)
Another poem warning of the dangers of Judgement Day for all!
In Lust with a Lady
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 100 words
 Read online...
Comments... (4)
Lust at first sight, we’ve all felt it sometime...
God Calls Me George
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 400 words
 Read online...
Comments... (3)
I nearly choked yesterday when watching Bush on telly on a programme about the middle east peace process. He told Abbas of Palestine, there would be a Palestinian state, because God said to him "George, there should be a Palestinian state".

He got rid of Iraq
The Hopeful Arrival
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 400 words
 Read online...
Comments... (5)
A stranger rides to town on horseback, olny to find everyone dead. Hes spent all his money getting there and cant afford to go back. Hes now isolated in the big bad world, things can only go up from here...

Another poem from the Wild West series. Hope you enjoy it Scott!
Amnesty my Arse!
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 300 words
 Read online...
Comments... (3)
I was at an Amnesty Ireland march about environmental activists in Mexico, and the conversation after made strange hearing... its OK to worry about Mexico, but they were not really interested in Kosovo Roma, refugees should not be let in, etc., etc.

I hasten to add that this was the minority, but it still showed the movement in a strange light.

Charity begins at home, Kosovo is our Mexico.

Sorry for the profanity in the name and the poem!
God and Satan are Planters in Your Garden
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 350 words
 Read online...
Comments... (3)
Damnation alert once more,with a sermon in rhyme I think even the great Calvanist preachers of olden times would be proud of.

Tell me what you lot think?

Counter poem to "God the Gardner", showing a contrasting angle. Have a read over and tell me does it work the way I think it does.
A Halloween Scare
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 300 words
 Read online...
Comments... (5)
Ever been scared at Halloween? Maybe you should be... maybe after reading this you will be...
Pylons and People
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 250 words
 Read online...
Comments... (3)
On seeing pylons in a field while flying to Scotland lately, I thought they looked rather pretty, like webs on sticks coming from the ground.

Normally thinking such as ugly, it struck me that we often think the same of people, particularily races.

A lot of people look down on blacks or gypsies as being poor, vulgar and criminal, but on cultral festivals we look and see how "pretty" they are.

Maybe it points our how ugly our hearts are.

Maybe the altitude just got to my brain?
Look to the Sky
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 250 words
 Read online...
Comments... (4)
Poem asking is our wonder of aliens normal, and did the red indians of times past before the whiteman wonder would anything come from the east from where there seemed to be no life or land?

It needs working on, but this is the draft form.
Paths Crossed by Fate
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (11)
Who said God was a beggar? Who said he wasn’t?

Does this beggar belief?

The second and last poem Im publishing today.
Alone Among Many
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (2)
Thefirst of two poems Ipublish today, this is a snapshot of a person lost in a crowd, alone in a city of strangers.

Written after spotting such a guy in town, darting around traffic as if they were mere obstacles, not things being driven by people.

Poring rain, the drivers looked at him insimilar vein of thought.
Hail the Lord Watches Down
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (6)
Another peom of Godly damnation!
Tears of A Boy
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 300 words
 Read online...
Comments... (3)
A quick follow up to "Tears of A Girl", surmising what would happen if the chap turns up when the girl has gone.

Thanks for telling me Ive still got my street cred Scott, and thanks Ava for your in depth analyisis of the last poem.

I hope you emjoy this one as much.
Tears Of A Girl
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 300 words
 Read online...
Comments... (5)
Written about the tears of a girl I passed one night who was sobbing, and being the sad romantic at heart I am I wrote this poem about her.

I’ve just lost all my street cred, havn’t I?
The Stranger in the Saloon
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 400 words
 Read online...
Comments... (4)
Another installment from my Wild West series, telling of a stranger who comes to a hostile reception in the local saloon...

Was it a case of pistols at midnight...?
Let Us A Prayer For America Say
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 300 words
 Read online...
Comments... (9)
Fight for right not for profit, is a maxim America neverlives up to. Another political rant in rhyme... maybe it’ll scare GWB into doing Gods will - or is that just too much to hope for?
Walking Home At Midnight
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (6)
Poem describing the feeling of invading the peace of the night while walking home in the near perfect silence...
Passing By Our Planet
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (5)
A quick summary oif creation and our possible end, of course, in verse!

Hop on over tomy website formore poems, and sign my guestbook.
Moon: Guardian of the Sun
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 300 words
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Comments... (5)
A Greek inspired tale of how the moon keeps eyes on the oceans to stop them quenching the sun at night time, thereby saving life on earth from the enemy, the Cold.

A little poetic fantasy.
The Shadowy Door
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (6)
An analogy is drawn between those who poke their nose into other peoples lives giving false advice, and a passer by seeing a empty shadowed doorway hed love to look inside. Unknown to him, a cripple watches, who’d love to walk like him and share his world.

Sorry if its a little cryptic, it needs a workover.
The Circle of Time
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 250 words
 Read online...
Comments... (7)
Time just seems to go on in circles... this sonnett explores the theme.
Word in your Ear
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 100 words
 Read online...
Comments... (5)
More wisdom from my pen...
Faraway Green Fields
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 250 words
 Read online...
Comments... (4)
Poem telling of a mans desire to see faraway fields which seem greener...
Lead through Life
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (6)
Poem on the plight of the Roma refugees of Kosovo, inspired by RFF article earlier.
A Poem A Day
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (6)
If an apple a day keeps the doctor away, I reccomend a poem a day to keep the shrink away...

Am I right, or have I totally lost it?
Piseogs
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 350 words
 Read online...
Comments... (6)
Ever felt you were guided, as if by a departed family member, or guardian angel? Ever had a sense you were a place before - felt eerily at home or warmed to someone for no good reason?

While we deny all things supernatural, what is more superstitious than our belief in Heavan and Hell, the blind faith that is the core of our most basic beliefs and morals?

"Piseog" is a Irish Gaelic term for superstition or false belief.
Noble Horse
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 300 words
 Read online...
Comments... (5)
Another from the Wild West series, telling of the bond between the Native, and the Horse.
Smile
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (5)
Dont care about your teeth,
Be they crooked or not clean,
Every where you go,
Let your SMILE be seen!

Sermon for today from the Gospel according to St (or demon?) O’ Carthaigh!
Whos the Blind One?
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (11)
Simple things are only spectacular to those with little to do...

For Scott, who demanded another poem!
What Is It?
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (3)
Poem for impatient people who always want more, who are never happy with what theyve got...
To Be A Writer
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (7)
Once more suffering writers bloc, I decide to share my pain with fellow writers.

Maybe its due to the hammering I got from Michele in the War of the Words with the Women!!!
A Shot in the Dark
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 500 words
 Read online...
Comments... (3)
The next poem in my Wild West series of poems, tells of a man shot, suspected by the outlaw called "The Deputy", and the posse that are put together to chase him...
A Fable for Fellows
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 350 words
 Read online...
Comments... (6)
A fable in rhyme warning us fellows not to take our women for granted... for one day we may find them gone...

Now, you ask the question... does the preacher live by his own commands?

In Clinton speak... I did not have relations with that woman!
In Reply to the Reply to Whose World Is It Anyway?
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 400 words
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Comments... (10)
The next rhymic shot over the bow from the male camp, led by Captain O’ Carthaigh... as he rallys his merry men in the Trafalgar of the Sexes!

And... as we wait for Michelles Amelias dealdy rhymic reply, we keep our head low to doge the plates, mugs, knives and kitchen sinks of rhyme shes going to throw at us and put us in our place!
Whose World Is It Anyway?
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 300 words
 Read online...
Comments... (8)
One of the vexing questions is answered, as always, in Rhyme by the Guru O’ Carthaigh.
Words of the Wise
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 300 words
 Read online...
Comments... (4)
Say nothing rather than quote others words...
Dancing Leaves
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 300 words
 Read online...
Comments... (4)
Dead leaves at autumn are but waste... but a good gust of wind can bring a life back to them... as if they were dancers in a one off routine...

An autumnal thought... (I know its only summer - Ill probably write a summer poem when the snow falls in January!).

I like this little poem: what to you lot at WTY.com think?
Hold You Close To Your Heart
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 150 words
 Read online...
Comments... (4)
A little prayer poem to brighten your evening - or is it morning in America?
Welcome to the Other Side
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (2)
The other side of town... the rough end, inabited by the great unwashed - a dangerous area - the poor streets.

As long as we think in this mindset and do nothing, Christs words will be true: "There will always be the Poor".
Talk and Talk
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (2)
A little sermon on watching what we say, as the devil is in our words as much as the Lord.

The Gospel according to Tom!!!!
The Eleventh Commandment
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (5)
Short poem on the hypocricy of religions that side with imperialsit states, preach one thing, and bless the process of doing the opposite.

The one example in the piece is how Irelands Catholic bishops blessed the Blueshirt column sialing to Spain to fight for Franco in the Spanish Civil War.

Do not steal...
Do not kill...
Love thy neighbour...

Until we tell you otherwise!
The Lost Raindancer
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 250 words
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Comments... (5)
Enduring another rainshower, I came across the mad notion that we must have a Native American raindancer lost in Ireland who is blind and cannot see the rain... madly dancing so that we’ll get more!

I need to get out more... what do you lot think?
Rainy Street in Glasgow
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 500 words
 Read online...
Comments... (3)
Poem telling of visisting Glasgow the night of Celtic taking the 2004 title by beating Kilmarnock, where the Kilmarnock fans were well behaved, and one lone Celtic fan stood shouting insults... telling Huns to go home....

Hun is a deragatory term for a Scot or Englishman... they were at home... he, my fellow Irishman was the foriegor.

Often these so called ’republicans’ vote for the most moderate party of all Fine Gael, who do not believe in Irish reunification at all, but attact a lot of right wing bigots, bieng the motherparty of the old Blueshirt movement.
What Will It Take?
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 300 words
 Read online...
Comments... (3)
With a mind on Iraq, where America expands its Middle East economic empire by toppling regimes without allowing the locals to benefit, I write this poem.

When the good guys are as currupt as NATO, and the only ones who win as their asslikers and the corporations, it is no wonder people stand with such feriosity behind despot regimes.

In Serbia, America, Farnce and the UK invaded Kosovo to prevent ethnic clensing - the practice that allowed them empires and killed off nations from the American Natives to the Cornish, Welsh, Breton and Irish.

They just gave it another name: plantation and colonisation.
Pompeii
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 400 words
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Comments... (4)
Poem dwelling on the fear of the residents of Pompeii when the volcanoe erupted.
Spirits of Evil in A Darkened Time
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 400 words
 Read online...
Comments... (3)
Inspired by a Marylin Manonesque lyric on this site, I wrote an analysys in rhyme of HOW can Satanists exist today?

Is it them who are evil, or are we the ones guilty as we dont teach and lead by example, thereby giving them a faith to believe in.
How the Legend Began
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 500 words
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Robert Service was one of my lifes inspirations, and a selection of my poetry has been written in his style.

My first poem "Dance of the Redman" is from this series, and this poem tells of an outlaw who once was deputy to the Sheriff, fell foul of the law and ended up on the run.

I hope you all like it, and its not too long. A few more (longer by far!) will be posted online in the coming weeks.

Keep your eyes peeled: bandits and outlaws and crazy injuns will soon inhabit these pages!!!!
The Lovers
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 400 words
 Read online...
Comments... (5)
You know those ever so public show offs who tell the world their in love, and just keep pawing at each other and piss everybody off?

Ever notice how they seldom last the distance?

Ever notice how the quiet ones seem to make it, with no fuss?

Love seems to be like the story of the hare and the tortoise in Aesops fable.

Theres hope for the slowest of us yet!
To Be A Clown
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 300 words
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Comments... (6)
It would be better to be a clown than a businessman, I say. Maybe thats why I’m broke but happy!
A Laugh is Good For Soul
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 250 words
 Read online...
Comments... (4)
I should have been a preacher! Yet another pulpitical piece saying laughter is good as long as the subject is not mocked.

In a word - dont be Roy Chubby Brown.
A Morning New
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 250 words
 Read online...
Comments... (5)
Another peom asking to praise God and be full of hope with a new day!
Irelands Future
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 500 words
 Read online...
Comments... (3)
A fire and brimstone call to arms for the Irish to unite and fight to get the UK from our country.

A call for a real army... no balaclavas, and under the treaty of 1922, the Irish government cannot act on behalf of the irish in Ulster, which is why the British Army is up there.

The current Good Friday Agreement copper fastens partition, and the ironic thing is that a better proposal of a 9 county All Ulster plebcite was offered by PIRA leadership in the late 1970’s, and the UK were interested, but Adams and Magennis and Co shot it down and forced a change of leadership in the early 80’s.

Fiftenn more years of war later... and they got even less!
Writers Block
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 300 words
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Comments... (5)
Suffering writers block once agin, I decided to put it into rhyme. Hopefully the brain will start working again soon.
Judging by the slowness of the site in new works Im not alone!
A Time for Surprises
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (4)
A quick verse urging all to embrace tomorrow with eager anticipation!
Life is What You Make It
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 250 words
 Read online...
Comments... (9)
Make sure you spend your life doing what for you is good: not for someone else.

Do as Scott did, throw in the towel and become a locksmith, take that chance on life: you’ve only got the one!
A Kind Of Madness
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (4)
A short reflection on global attitudes of the West towards Islam since 9/11
The Fields of Vojodina
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 400 words
 Read online...
Comments... (4)
I have just returned home from Serbia, where I have spent an enjoyable week among friends with whom I’ve worked.

Most are veterans of the three Yugoslav wars, and the area they are in is 70% Serb, and 30% others.

Romania, Croatia and Hungary are all sponsoring sepretest activity among local minorities, and its shaping up to be a very bloody war if conflict does start.

I hope God looks down and guides these people and sees them through these troubled times.
The Sleeping Beauty and the Sorry Prince
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 300 words
 Read online...
Comments... (5)
A warning to all men to never kiss pretty princesses no matter how long they are sleeping!
As Time Passes By
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 250 words
 Read online...
Comments... (5)
As we wonder why the world changes, and can we cope, this poem advises yet again to turn our thoughts and prayers to God himself, who will not see us wrong.

Taken from the sequel to the book "Writings in Rhyme", which will be published in time for the Christmas market.

My new website www.writingsinrhyme.com is also live - check it out and sign my new guest book.

God bless you all.
The Nazi Pope
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (9)
How can an ex-Nazi end up as a Pope?

Could Benedict 16 be the anti-christ Pope predicted by St Malachy and Nostradamus?
The Craft of the Few
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (6)
Poem outlining the ’craft of the few’, namely poetry, which can bring solace to an upset heart, or tell a tale of times gone by.

Dedicated to all of thewriters of the world, especially all of you in Writers to You.
Epitaphs 1 to 4
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Humor and Satire, 250 words
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Comments... (3)
The immortal words on Yeats’ headstone "Cast a cold eye/On Life and Death/Horseman Pass By" inspired me to write a few epitaphs of mu own.

Here are the first four.

Anyone else tried writing funny ones?
Roma Again Are On The Run
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 500 words
 Read online...
Comments... (2)
In this election year in the UK, the Roma are the hot topic, with both the Labour and Concervative parties brining in containment laws and using propaganda against Gypsies in a similar fashion to the anti-gypsy legislation in prewar Wiemar Germany.

To solve the crises while in power, the progressive Tory leader John Major - who laid the foundation for the peace process in Ireland with the Downling Street Declaration - suggested buying the land for their camps, holding in in common, and moving to their own purpose built sites.

However, as the poem tells. this was refused, and the Roma face a very scary and all to familiar situation.

In a Europe where borders are opened to let all travel freely, those who travel for a living find they are the only ones who cannot.
Rynaghs Church Bell
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2003
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (4)
I grew up beside two churches, and the RC bell always rang on the hour, at the angelous, for masses, etc, and it drove me mad when trying to sleep.

However, when it broke and did not work, I missed it!
Elegy on a Soccer Loving Pope
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 250 words
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Comments... (1)
Pope John Paul died today, and in his memory this poem was written, making a play on his love of soccer to save our souls from the temptations in life (the pitch).

In reality, its up to us to save our own souls.

Say a prayer for his soul anyway.
The One Man Circus
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2000
Poetry, 400 words
 Read online...
Comments... (7)
Poem on the difficulty in writing poetry, inspired by Yeats’ writings where he complained that ’circus animals’ ie: inspirations for writings, would not dance for him.

Affected the same way, I pondered should I write on the more simpler pieces, and then I may not find it as difficult to write.

Have others been there?
Tell Them In Sparta
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2000
Poetry, 300 words
 Read online...
Comments... (3)
Poem discussing the attitudes of soldiers, their families and the people who send them to war.
The Bridge O’er The River
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 1997
Poetry, 250 words
 Read online...
Comments... (7)
Poem comtemplating on the beauties of a river and the tragedies it hides.
First Ode to W.B. Yeats
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2003
Poetry, 300 words
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Comments... (2)
Yeats was an inspiration to the author, and this poem dwells on his unrequited love with the beautiful Maud Gonne, who he lost to the revolutionary Sean Mc Bride.

It asks, was his private loss a nations gain in that it inspired such beautiful poetry.

For those unaware of Yeats, Gonne and Mc Bride, Yeats was an Irish poet, Mc Bride a revolutionary, who took differing sides in the Irish Civil War of 1922, and Yeats muse, a radical herself, sided with her lover, Mc Bride.
The Swastika on the Stone
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 300 words
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Comments... (2)
This poem was inspired by the tale told in a poem of Paul Polanskys book "Sarahs People".

The book features stories of the Roma cleaning up a cemetry in Nis, in Serbia, where they are camped.

The poem told of one kid, who was caught drawing, of all things - a swastika on a gravestone of the Jewish cemetry.

He was admonished: and replied that he did not know of the history of the attempted extermination of his people by the Nazis.

He just saw some skins draw it on a wall.

He, like most of the Roma youth born since the fall of Communism, is illiterate, and ignorant of the history of his people, and this poem aims to draw attention to that.

It is the last in a series of three poems written on the Roma, the other two published here are "The Gas Van" about the holocaust itself, and "The Roma", about the attitude and lifetyle of the Roma people.

All are in my new book "Writings in Rhyme".
The Banshee
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 1000 words
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Comments... (3)
The real Irish banshee is a small old woman, combing her hair while "keening" for a soul about to depart to the afterlife.

It is not the sceptre of the movies.

This poem is about one who sees the banshee, and asks and ponders on her origions, exploring each, and yet failing to come to a conclusion.

The belief in Ireland is / was that the Banshee followed certian families of noble blood: that is of the old Gaelic Cheiftans, but only of the major clans.
The Gas Van
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 300 words
 Read online...
Comments... (3)
This is the second of a series of three poems on the Roma, and tells the sory of mobile gas chambers that were used against Roma and Gypsy in some of the smaller concentration camps in World War 2, and before.

Nazi collaborator regimes such as the Arrowcrossmen of Hungary, Vichy France, Slovakia, Coatia, etc., sent Roma to these camps for extermination.

The next and last poem tells of the Roma today, and will be published soon.

All are taken from my new book "Writings in Rhyme", of which Version 0.35 of the First Edition is now lonline at http://www.lulu.com/cartyweb for purchase.

Thanks to all for your kind comments: and be sure to raise these issues with your congressman or MP or TD about the plight of these forgotton people.

God bless.
The Roma
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 300 words
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Comments... (4)
Poem dedicated to the Roma, who are the forgotton victims of the Holocaust, afforded little more than a footnote in the history books.

Today, alas, the discrimination continues, and in Kosovo, Albanian KLA militia regularly attack Roma and Sinti and NATO turns a blind eye.
The Dance of the Red Man
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 500 words
 Read online...
Comments... (4)
Poem from the series of poems on Native American Indians which I have written, which addresses the experience of the native american through their own eyes.

The poetry and recitations of Robert Service such as the Dan Mc Grew stories and suchlike are the inspiration behind this series, which will be published here in the coming weeks.


Trust in God
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 150 words
 Read online...
Comments... (7)
Words of hope for those whose life can be a struggle.
Words on a Mouse (And a Cat!)
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 250 words
 Read online...
Comments... (2)
A return to the more feel good wry poetry that I write, probably a good change to the rather moralistic publishings of late!

Take a read and comment to tell me what you think!
The Mocker
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (2)
Poem on how to overcome mockers.
Man
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2004
Poetry, 100 words
 Read online...
Comments... (2)
Short verse questioning mans contribution to life on this planet, and asking are we really civilised in light of this?

Also, the website has been updated to include a guestbook, so head on over to http://www.toc.pro.ie and sign it to say you were there!

To be honest, more of my poetry is on this website than my own!

The book "Writings in Rhyme" will be published through www.Lulu.com towards the end of March.
Who Am I (In this world?)
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 150 words
 Read online...
Comments... (2)
Sonnett asking the question many have asked since the beginning of time... and invoking Gods guidance so we can be what we should be.
God the Gardner
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 1996
Poetry, 600 words
 Read online...
Comments... (1)
When we lose someone or something... we often ask as to why... and what sort of a God lets this happen.

A parallell is drawn with a flower strewn garden at autumn time, where the flowers are dying to the dismay of the gardner who is but human, and cannot understand why those of beauty die, while the ugly weeds are always in flower.

Read the poem and say what you think.
The Puppetteer
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2003
Poetry, 438 words
 Read online...
Comments... (2)
The puppetteer tells the story of watching a puppettshow and how it made the author think of a parrallell with the relationship between God and man.
Spooks
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 220 words
 Read online...
Comments... (4)
Should we fear the things that go bump in the dark: or should we be more wary of the living than the dead?
Man Is But A Pawn of God
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 250 words
 Read online...
Comments... (2)
Not too optimistic a piece calling to question the motivation of a God who sometimes seems to use mankind as pawns.
Guardian Angel
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2005
Poetry, 150 words
 Read online...
Comments... (1)
Ever felt as if something was guiding you through a difficult time? Some call them angels, some call them God... here is a verse dedicated to them.
Modern Art
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2004
Poetry, 150 words
 Read online...
Comments... (4)
Short verse urging us to see things through others eyes, to see beyond our prejeduces. This can be applied to life as well as the art that provides the verses subject.
Non Plus Ultra
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 1994
Poetry, 250 words
 Read online...
Comments... (1)
When the White Man beieved that the world was flat, it was a safer place for the Red Man. When the White Man found out that there was life and a world beyond the horizon, his knowledge brought death, mayhem and near extinction to an ancient race.
Worry Not
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2004
Poetry, 250 words
 Read online...
Comments... (3)
Learn from today, and let it die tomorrow, and worry not of whats to come. Advice for a maddening world.
Address to my Feathered Friend
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 1997
Poetry, 100 words
 Read online...
Comments... (10)
Simple sonnett on viewing a bird through a window, on pondering why the bird, while welcoming the breadcrumbs thrown by man, always flies when man draws near.
A Rhyme about Poetry
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 1999
Poetry, 50 words
 Read online...
Comments... (4)
A simple ditty on writing poetry...
The Flame
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 1997
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments...
Objective look at the beauty of a flame: and asking the question is the dancing flame really subject to the breeze, as opposed to a dancer in its own right?
Polish Joke about Cows in Trees and Flying Hammers
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2004
Humor and Satire, 200 words
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Comments...
Polish humour has never been a force on the comedy scene, and maybe this joke explains it!
The Snowflake
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 1997
Poetry, 200 words
 Read online...
Comments... (2)
Nature has for us many surprises, and yet with all this variety, everything is so similar to be not of much note.
Lady of the Sweetest Smile
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2004
Poetry, 100 words
 Read online...
Comments... (3)
To Roberta... need I say more?
The Muses Cafe
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2001
Poetry, 300 words
 Read online...
Comments... (1)
The author contemplates the future of his work and success, and what inspiration he will rpovide to the world and future writers on viewing pictures of past poets with their writings on the walls of the Muses Cafe in Easons of O’Connell St, Dublin
The Pearly Gates
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2002
Poetry, 600 words
 Read online...
Comments... (5)
A whimsical look at the afterlife, with an alternative vision of how things may work out!


Verses on Economics
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2002
Poetry, 1000 words
 Read online...
Comments... (5)
A new Communist Manifesto: this time in Rhyme!
And then there was two
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2004
Poetry, 100 words
 Read online...
Comments...
As Adam was kicked out of eden, we ask, was that not the plan?
Lament For Iraq, Woe to Tommorrow
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2004
Poetry, 300 words
 Read online...
Comments... (1)
Sure Saddams ousting is good, but what replaces him may prove to be far worse.

Lament for Iraq, and Woe to Tommorrow!
The Closed Door
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2004
Poetry, 400 words
 Read online...
Comments...
Life offers us choices, options and problems, and how we deal with them often bears on their effect on us.

We can ignore, baulk from, or explore these problems, options and opportunitites as represented by the closed door.

A closed door is not always locked, even if hard opened, it may be merely blocked...
The Story of the Slave
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2004
Poetry, 500 words
 Read online...
Comments... (1)
After watching a documentary of the television about slavery, as a tribute to the endurance of the slaves, and to the slaves themselves, this poem was written.

The poem is writen from the viewpoint of the slave, in this case a woman who dreams of having a child as a master, who would be easy to look after, a comapritive life of luxury.



The horses eyes illustrates how low a person is brought to when subjected to slavery, and why it should not be allowed to happen again in the civilised world.



We have to remember that slavery is still current in West Africa, and we as nations of the developed world should do all we can to stamp it out.



Locally at home, the personal services industry has trapped many vunerable young women in the trade, and all must be dome to free them from this hell.


A New Dawn
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2004
Poetry, 56 words
 Read online...
Comments... (3)
A new beginning? Or just the same as before?
New Year, Old Year
Tomás Ó Cárthaigh, 2004
Poetry, 89 words
 Read online...
Comments... (3)
The world and its ills are of our making, and this poem illustrats this fact in a rather morbid and pentecostal wording!

        




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