Ghost Stories Poem by Francie Lynch

Ghost Stories

Rating: 5.0


Mammy had a cauldron of stories,
And Mammy never lied;
Strange tales about the living,
Still touched by those who've died.

She spoke of a friend who read the leafs:
When babies died, she heard banshees;
She foresaw the cornice collapse,
Saved me when I was three.
She whispered these tales
Through pressed lips,
Would pause to sip her tea.

Seers told her of her one-legged mother
Standing guard at the foot of her bed,
Long after she was dead.

One prophet spoke of an open door,
A one-way trip to a foreign shore,
And agonies she'd bend to endure.

For me, these stories rang so true,
For mothers wouldn't lie to you;
Yet Father said she was a sinner,
Spinning yarns against God's will.
That's not the gossip in Bethany.

Are there ghosts under our beds,
In the closets in our heads;
Hovering over marked graveyards,
Abandoned houses and Tarot Cards?

When the unknown night tore at me,
I'd been told I could pray
To the Father, Son and Holy Ghost:
Now they're the ones I fear the most,
They were one of her stories folks.

Tuesday, May 14, 2019
Topic(s) of this poem: ghost,ghostly,ireland,mother,spiritual,spirituality,stories
COMMENTS OF THE POEM
Jenny Kalahar 14 May 2019

Love this! So atmospheric and stylized and worldly! - Jenny

0 0 Reply
READ THIS POEM IN OTHER LANGUAGES
Francie Lynch

Francie Lynch

Monaghan, Ireland
Close
Error Success