A Collection of poems by the late Paude FitzGerald
The Clare Hunter Waiting Cork Have Been Bet John Doyle- A Tribute
The Clare Hurler
Oh, Pat Mc Namara from outside ClonlaraA hurler of promise and sweet I declare.His thoughts they were jaunty – he’d hurl for the county,He was strong as a horse and as swift as a hare.His studies neglected, he hopes he’s selectedBut his mother is crying and tearing her hair.Oh, where is my Paddy? Oh, where is the laddie?He’s out in the haggard a training for Clare.
Now let it be said they’re many years wedAnd they have five sons from twenty to tenSue Ellen like a Turk on the farm is at workWithout getting a great deal of help from the men.But she may stop her scolding and her tongue be holding For all that they notice or all that they care.For with Pat doing the teaching, for their hurleys they’re reachingTo go out to the haggard a training for Clare.
Waiting
Tis half an hour before the start, we are waiting patientlyFrom North and South and East and West the Semis for to seeAnd in among the gathered crowd four men they wait as wellAnd each would have his own particular story for to tell My name is Padraic Kelly and I’m getting on in yearsAnd I’ve followed Galway hurling with heartbreak and with tearsO’er a span of fifty seasons, and I can call to mindGreat Galway teams that ended just a point or two behindAnd I waited till the eighties to see the dreams come trueAnd in the spell of those ten years some wondrous times I knewI’ll see another victory for the men who wear maroon. They call me Paddy Kelly from the fields around KillaneAnd I waited for the fifties as a boy and growing man,And then bold Wexford hit the scene and set the hills alightAnd victory was ours at last in the great All-Ireland fight.Then once in ’68 we won and then the famine years,And I waited since through tough defeats to hear the Wexford cheers.‘Tis a different kind of waiting now and there’s hunger in my soulTo see another victory for the Purple and the Gold I’m known as Paudie Kelly, three miles from Patrickswell And like the man before me, I’ve a similar tale to tell.For three and thirty summers I’ve waited for to seeThe Limerick Laurels raised on high by Grimes and companyThen the waiting game again came back for twenty years or moreAnd I waited six short minutes in nineteen ninety four“Unfinished business” is the cry of Cary and his teamAnd two more games of hurling could fulfil the winning dream. ‘Tis Patsy Kelly speaking from the glens around GlenarmAnd I can tell you other three that waiting is no harm.For my kindred all before me and myself and all my kinHave waited for a hundred years to see an Antrim win.And only twice in all that span – ’43 and ’89 Were Antrim there on Final Day and each time defeat was mine.But we are good at waiting – it’s the patience of the heart,If we have to wait forever we’ll year by year take part. And the rest of Ireland waited to see what would betide As the clash of ash was heard so sweet along the Liffeyside. (printed in All-Ireland semi-final program 1996)
My name is Padraic Kelly and I’m getting on in yearsAnd I’ve followed Galway hurling with heartbreak and with tearsO’er a span of fifty seasons, and I can call to mindGreat Galway teams that ended just a point or two behindAnd I waited till the eighties to see the dreams come trueAnd in the spell of those ten years some wondrous times I knewI’ll see another victory for the men who wear maroon.
They call me Paddy Kelly from the fields around KillaneAnd I waited for the fifties as a boy and growing man,And then bold Wexford hit the scene and set the hills alightAnd victory was ours at last in the great All-Ireland fight.Then once in ’68 we won and then the famine years,And I waited since through tough defeats to hear the Wexford cheers.‘Tis a different kind of waiting now and there’s hunger in my soulTo see another victory for the Purple and the Gold
I’m known as Paudie Kelly, three miles from Patrickswell And like the man before me, I’ve a similar tale to tell.For three and thirty summers I’ve waited for to seeThe Limerick Laurels raised on high by Grimes and companyThen the waiting game again came back for twenty years or moreAnd I waited six short minutes in nineteen ninety four“Unfinished business” is the cry of Cary and his teamAnd two more games of hurling could fulfil the winning dream.
‘Tis Patsy Kelly speaking from the glens around GlenarmAnd I can tell you other three that waiting is no harm.For my kindred all before me and myself and all my kinHave waited for a hundred years to see an Antrim win.And only twice in all that span – ’43 and ’89 Were Antrim there on Final Day and each time defeat was mine.But we are good at waiting – it’s the patience of the heart,If we have to wait forever we’ll year by year take part.
And the rest of Ireland waited to see what would betide As the clash of ash was heard so sweet along the Liffeyside.
(printed in All-Ireland semi-final program 1996)
Cork Have Been Bet
Cork have been bet – they can’t credit it yet,Their crown they have given ‘oerIt’s in Garryowen where we’ll make it our ownWe may not give it back anymore.They were found in a fix, hwen going for the sixLast Sunday in old Thurles townAnd now we can call – whose on the ball?Do you want your ould lobby washed down? Chorus:Do you want your ould lobby washed down, me boysDo you want your ould lobby washed down?At hurling just try us – we ups and repliesDo you want your ould lobby washed down? We’ll never more dread the men togged in redNow Limerick emerge to be seenFrom this victory, it’s now Cork that will be From now on in awe of the greenOur full measure of tears for the past forty yearsIn great celebrations we’ll drownWhen we meet any county, we’ll say with great bountyDo you want your ould lobby washed down? We hurled on the ground and the glories will soundFrom Askeaton in to MonaleenAnd we hurled in the air as songs will declareFrom Old Frum to Fair BallasgreenWe hurled up the middle and with bow and fiddleThey’ll sing it around BallybrownAnd we hurled on the wings and all Limerick singsDo you want your ould lobby washed down? The Pope was in Rome and that day stayed at homeListening in with Father McGeeAnd when it did end he sideways did bendSaying that a great victoryAnd I well remember, when there last September As the copter was leaving the groundI know by the cries that came up to the skiesThat the’d was some big lobbies down. (written July 1980, the day after Limerick beat Cork)
Chorus:Do you want your ould lobby washed down, me boysDo you want your ould lobby washed down?At hurling just try us – we ups and repliesDo you want your ould lobby washed down?
We’ll never more dread the men togged in redNow Limerick emerge to be seenFrom this victory, it’s now Cork that will be From now on in awe of the greenOur full measure of tears for the past forty yearsIn great celebrations we’ll drownWhen we meet any county, we’ll say with great bountyDo you want your ould lobby washed down?
We hurled on the ground and the glories will soundFrom Askeaton in to MonaleenAnd we hurled in the air as songs will declareFrom Old Frum to Fair BallasgreenWe hurled up the middle and with bow and fiddleThey’ll sing it around BallybrownAnd we hurled on the wings and all Limerick singsDo you want your ould lobby washed down?
The Pope was in Rome and that day stayed at homeListening in with Father McGeeAnd when it did end he sideways did bendSaying that a great victoryAnd I well remember, when there last September As the copter was leaving the groundI know by the cries that came up to the skiesThat the’d was some big lobbies down.
(written July 1980, the day after Limerick beat Cork)
John Doyle – A Tribute
When I was young, oh John Doyle saidI had a hurley near my bed.Under my pillow it I keptAnd I gripped the handle while I slept.And I had many wondrous dreamsOf Tipperary hurling teams,Repulsing Leeside’s Red attacks,And I was there among the backs. In Holy cross the ball we hitNorthwards towards the Devil’s BitIt seemed the striking was to show‘Hell’s Kitchen’ I was yet to know –That’s the goalmouth square at Limerick’s ground- No quarter asked for: none is found‘gainst Galway, Limerick, Cork or Clare,Our Backs held out and I was there. From forty nine to sixty fiveWe kept the hurling scene alive.And eight times in those sixteen yearsWe heard Tipperary’s victory cheers.And each time as the hats were doffedThe McCarthy cup was held aloftBy Stakelum, Kenny, Finn and WallAnd I was there beside them all. I’ve shook the hands of forwards goodLike Langton, Barry and Tim FloodAnd then I shook their nimble frames In fast and furious hurling games.And a balding Cork man from the Glen,Who was the prince of hurling menSaid he got a ball outside the squareBut the goal was lost – John Doyle was there. In Stapletons in BorrisoleighAn ageing man he said to me“Your eight All-Irelands I have seenAnd at your losing games I’ve been.And I have watched your hurling thriveFrom Forty Nine to Sixty Five,And upon my soul I do declareJohn Doyle and I – we both were there.”
In Holy cross the ball we hitNorthwards towards the Devil’s BitIt seemed the striking was to show‘Hell’s Kitchen’ I was yet to know –That’s the goalmouth square at Limerick’s ground- No quarter asked for: none is found‘gainst Galway, Limerick, Cork or Clare,Our Backs held out and I was there.
From forty nine to sixty fiveWe kept the hurling scene alive.And eight times in those sixteen yearsWe heard Tipperary’s victory cheers.And each time as the hats were doffedThe McCarthy cup was held aloftBy Stakelum, Kenny, Finn and WallAnd I was there beside them all.
I’ve shook the hands of forwards goodLike Langton, Barry and Tim FloodAnd then I shook their nimble frames In fast and furious hurling games.And a balding Cork man from the Glen,Who was the prince of hurling menSaid he got a ball outside the squareBut the goal was lost – John Doyle was there.
In Stapletons in BorrisoleighAn ageing man he said to me“Your eight All-Irelands I have seenAnd at your losing games I’ve been.And I have watched your hurling thriveFrom Forty Nine to Sixty Five,And upon my soul I do declareJohn Doyle and I – we both were there.”