Mending A Dry Stone Wall
My grandfather
repaired our dry-stone wall,
That his own
father had raised in his day,
Carefully
choosing the fallen stones,
For the shape
and size of their array.
The sound of one
falling into place,
Had magic and mystique,
As if some
secret thing was being entombed,
That only an old
dry wall could keep.
Now it's come
down to me,
To walk that dry
stone path,
To handle and
position stones,7
The exact same
ones, that have been held for generations past.
To block up
where the fox had run,
Or the panic of
a hare,
And feel the
soft dust on my hands,
Of those ghosts
no longer here.
The Old Lamplighter
The last
lamplighter in the whole wide world,
Has passed away
today;
A flame was lit
in Heaven,
To guide him on
his way.
His ghost was
seen in many places,
Where he once
brightened darkened streets;
There are still
one or two old lamps remaining -
But stand there,
just as cast old iron motifs.
An early morning
riser -
Also, a lighter
of the flames,
Familiar as the
evening fell -
Yet, he was
never known by his proper name.
‘Here comes The
Old Lamplighter!
All us kids
would give a shout,
Then, with a
whoosh of gas - and sometimes a bang,
He would black
the darkness out.
JOHN ANTHONY FINGLETON
JOHN ANTHONY FINGLETON: Irish poet
(Native of Cork). Seven collections published. Plus, poems in many
international anthologies. At present
living in Paraguay Latin America.

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