Tuesday, February 19, 2008

Funeral

I will be away for the next two days, staying down in Scituate (the Irish Riviera) for my mother-in-law's wake and funeral. For a diabetic and pack-a-day smoker, living to 86 is a pretty good innings, but it is still hard to see her go.

5 comments:

  1. Condolences and comfort for you all.

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  2. Anonymous9:43 AM

    May God gentle your grief.

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  3. Our thoughts and prayers are with you. I'm sure all your readers hope that their well-wishes and respect for you will be an encouragement, and will strengthen you to be a comfort to your family.

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  4. Travel safely and to plaigerize an Irish saying, may she be in heaven an hour before the devil knows she's dead.

    God Bless.

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  5. Anonymous7:09 AM

    While funerals are sad,as they mourn the passing of a loved one to another world, they can also celebrate the loved one's life on our Earth.May your funeral in the Irish Riviera approach that of Finnegan's Wake:

    Tim Finnegan lived in Walkin' Street.
    A gentleman, Irishman, mighty odd
    He'd seen a brogue so soft and sweet
    And to rise in the world he carried a hod.
    Tim had a sort of a tipplin way.
    With a love of the liquor now he was born
    Helped a man with his work each day.
    He'd a drop of the craythin' every morn'

    Whack fol-de-dah
    Now dance to your partner,
    Welt the floor,
    Your trotters shake
    Wasn't it the truth
    I told ye lots of fun at finnegan's wake

    One mornin Tim felt rather full.
    His head felt heavy which made him shake;
    Fell from a the ladder and burst his skull
    So they carried him home, his corpse to wake.
    Rolled him up in a nice clean sheet
    Laid him out upon the bed,
    A gallon of whiskey at his feet
    And a barrell of porter at his head.

    Whack fol-de-dah
    Now dance to your partner,
    Welt the floor,
    Your trotters shake
    Wasn't it the truth
    I told ye lots of fun at finnegan's wake

    His friends assembled at the wake.
    And Mrs. Finnegan called for lunch,
    First they brung in tea and cake.
    Then pipes, tobacco and whiskey punch.
    Biddy O'Brien began to cry.
    "Such a nice clean corpse, did you ever see
    "Tim, mavourneen, why did you die?"
    Arragh, shut your gob says Paddy McGhee!

    Whack fol-de-dah
    Now dance to your partner,
    Welt the floor,
    Your trotters shake
    Wasn't it the truth
    I told ye lots of fun at finnegan's wake

    Paddy O'Connor took up the job.
    "Now Biddy," says she, "You're wrong, I'm sure"
    Biddy she gave her a belt in the gob.
    And left her sprawlin on the floor.
    Then the war did soon enrage.
    Woman to woman and man to man,
    Shillelagh law was all the rage.
    And a row and a ruction soon began.
    Mickey Maloney lowered his head
    And a bottle of whickey flew at him,
    It missed him falling on the bed,
    The liquor scattered over tim,
    Tim revives,
    See how he rises,
    Timothy rising from the bed
    Said 'Whirl your liquor around, and run like blazes
    Well mother of Jesus, Do ye think i'm dead!'

    Whack fol-de-dah
    Now dance to your partner,
    Welt the floor,
    Your trotters shake
    Wasn't it the truth
    I told ye lots of fun at finnegan's wake

    ReplyDelete