Saturday, November 29, 2008

Let Me Feel It Again

Let Me Feel It Again


Oh, take me back to where it all began
Down the road from St Johns Tower
Where Sarsfield sits atop his mount
One can feel his elegant power
St Johns school around the corner
Where the nuns demanded attention
They were just as tough as the brothers
And they loved to dish out detention

St. Johns Cathedral was majestic
And every seat was taken
Even down each isle and at the back
The rosary beads were shaken
It was hard to believe as you looked around
At some of the people you see there
Some were there to be seen by all
And many had their minds elsewhere

Outside the church door were collectors
Seated at the table to welcome you in
And you dropped your pennies or a little more
If you didn’t, it would be a sin
There was also a collection inside
They pushed the basket under your nose
For the weekly envelope they sent you
That’s how one side of life goes

The parishioners all around the town
Were poor but they didn’t show it
They managed to get along on what they had
Helping each other out, when they could do it
Then the good times came as technology grew
When the business world came into the towns
Now here am I, an ocean away,
With memories, of our ups and downs

Michael Christopher Daly
Nov, 27, 2008














And I love you too

We were after playing a Rugby match
Against Glaswegians in Galway bay
It was back in the early fifties
On a bright and windy day
We won by twenty points to twelve
And stayed late admiring the Bay
I had rented a car with my old friend
My scrum-half Nutty O’Dea

We enjoyed our walk along the sand
Having fun with some of the girls
Two of then came from Limerick
With smiles that envied pearls
We had asked them how they got here
They said on a bus to attend a dance
We agreed t drive them home
As we would stay on and go to the dance

Sea Point was the name of the dance hall
Where all the best bands played
And Mick Delahunty was playing that night
And we were delighted that we stayed
We danced and talked until midnight
Never asking each others last name
Susan hooked up with me
And Nutty with Mary Jane

Susan’s parents were away for the weekend
So she invited us to have something to eat
I knocked over a glass off water
On my shirt and allover my feet
Susan helped to me take off my shirt
And hung it close to the fire in the living room
We sat on the couch and began to smooch
Nutty and Mary Jane, in the other room

Suddenly a key to the front door clicked
And the lights were turned on
Susan’s parents shouted in alarm
Wanting to know what was going on
There was I with their daughter on the couch
Without shoe’s or even a shirt
My head bent down, eyes to the floor,
And I was feeling, awfully hurt
To top it all, when I saw her father
With his eyes popping out of his head
He had been my math teacher in school
And I just sat there, wishing I was dead
I was the wise guy in his class
And there had been no love between us
Mary Jane came in from the other room
And it seemed to lessen all the fuss

She asked me if my shirt had dried
So I could take her home
And told a story of how helpful I was
When they missed the bus, I drove them home
Nutty O’Dea got out the back door
And sneaked away down the street
And waited there for Mary Jane and me
To take him off his feet

I never met Susan or Mary Jane
Since that Memorable day
For certain Susan was warned by her father
From me, to stay away
He certainly never liked the way
That I used to carry on
Sure it was only a time of Innocence
One day in a lifetime’s song

Michael Christopher Daly
Nov. 29, 2008







Innocence

We were after playing a Rugby match
Against Glaswegians in Galway bay
It was back in the early fifties
On a bright and windy day
We won by twenty points to twelve
And stayed late admiring the Bay
I had rented a car with my old friend
My scrum-half Nutty O’Dea

We enjoyed our walk along the sand
Having fun with some of the girls
Two of then came from Limerick
With smiles that envied pearls
We had asked them how they got here
They said on a bus to attend a dance
We agreed t drive them home
As we would stay on and go to the dance

Sea Point was the name of the dance hall
Where all the best bands played
And Mick Delahunty was playing that night
And we were delighted that we stayed
We danced and talked until midnight
Never asking each others last name
Susan hooked up with me
And Nutty with Mary Jane

Susan’s parents were away for the weekend
So she invited us to have something to eat
I knocked over a glass off water
On my shirt and allover my feet
Susan helped to me take off my shirt
And hung it close to the fire in the living room
We sat on the couch and began to smooch
Nutty and Mary Jane, in the other room

Suddenly a key to the front door clicked
And the lights were turned on
Susan’s parents shouted in alarm
Wanting to know what was going on
There was I with their daughter on the couch
Without shoe’s or even a shirt
My head bent down, eyes to the floor,
And I was feeling, awfully hurt
To top it all, when I saw her father
With his eyes popping out of his head
He had been my math teacher in school
And I just sat there, wishing I was dead
I was the wise guy in his class
And there had been no love between us
Mary Jane came in from the other room
And it seemed to lessen all the fuss

She asked me if my shirt had dried
So I could take her home
And told a story of how helpful I was
When they missed the bus, I drove them home
Nutty O’Dea got out the back door
And sneaked away down the street
And waited there for Mary Jane and me
To take him off his feet

I never met Susan or Mary Jane
Since that Memorable day
For certain Susan was warned by her father
From me, to stay away
He certainly never liked the way
That I used to carry on
Sure it was only a time of Innocence
One day in a lifetime’s song

Michael Christopher Daly
Nov. 29, 2008