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And Words Are All I Have

Finnegan Begin Again, a poem by Tricia McCallum

Finnegan Begin Again

Almost every seaside town in Ireland has one.
The resident canine.
The Duke of the Docks.
The Chairman of Chill.
This one answers to Finnegan.


No mutt was ever more streetwise,
this is his turf.
He knows the ropes here,
just who is a soft touch,
who will chastise,
and who will give chase.

Finnegan makes his rounds daily.
First to Mrs. Tyrell’s Bake Shop for a day old bun.
If he's lucky they've remembered him
at O’Riordan the Butcher's with a decent bone.
Then it’s down to the rectory for a ladle full of yesterday's soup
and a neck rub from Father Tam.

Afternoons mean dozing on the pier,
a sure-fire tourist draw.
His bedraggled coat brings out the mother in everyone, it seems.
By nightfall his belly is full.

He knows where he can keep dry and out of the cold.
Crafty is Finnegan.
And on frosty nights there are warm grates outside the pubs.
But there is no master awaiting him,
no hearth his very own,
Finnegan is no one’s and
his wise wee self sleeps alone.

~~ Tricia McCallum


Any Heavens

If there are any heavens my mother will all by herself have one. It will not be a pansy heaven nor a fragile heaven of lilies-of-the-valley. It will be a heaven of robust yellow roses, with thick notched stems not prone to bending. The blooms will be embarrassingly, sinfully fragrant, the size of baseballs when fully blazing. They’ll radiate light …
Macro shot of a yellow rose

In the Pink

Pink Angora How wrong we can be about the things we think will save us... I walked behind them on the way home after the usual Saturday night skating at the small town's arena. He was the high school all-star, she the ice ballerina. She wore pink angora mittens, and a matching beret perched at what seemed the …
In the Pink

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