Poking James MacGuigan’s Pig
By Turlough
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Poking James MacGuigan’s Pig
On a farm up the mountain they had a barn
With an old tin roof and built of stone
Where something evil lurked inside
That chilled young children to the bone
What do you think's behind yon door?
The wee boy Brendan asked with dread
Our stomachs churned as we described
Terrific beasts inside our heads
No words of warning written there
But in our minds so deadly clear
The gruesome movements from within
Spelt out F E A R (that’s fear)
No one could tell just what it was
That rattled and roared inside the shed
If he got out he’d bite us all
Break every bone and make us dead
Long feared by folk in Cushendun
Was the Bodach, Pooka and Banshee
But would they choose to torment us
With their faerie friends from mythology?
I hope it’s not yer man Godzilla
Or Frankenstein or a zombie guy
Margaret’s shaky voice remarked
Or my Auntie Nessa from Athenry
The way it grunts and bangs around
It sounds angry, mad, disturbed and crazy
Bernie shook as she exclaimed
I suspect it’s the Reverend Ian Paisley
On a ship my Uncle Dan sailed twice round the world
He’d met Greeks, Japanese and Armenians
And one evening in Duffy’s Lounge Bar there in Larne
He drank stout and poitín with Presbyterians
Once a dog in Portrush was born with two heads
Four noses and sharp teeth where its eyes should be
But it couldn’t have come on the bus to Glendun
As how could it travel if it couldn’t see?
All night he’d tell tales of the queerest of things
To his incredible yarns there was no limit
So with a bit of a notion of how our monster looked
He could tell what it was and then kill it
He’d seen whales and great sharks and porpoises too
Giraffes, giant snakes and wild sheep
With a need to describe to him the fiend at the door
One of us had to go and take a quick peep
To proceed with the plan a volunteer was picked
Someone big and quite bold and not sickly
Liam’s daddy had bought a new Ford motor car
So he could get Liam to the hospital quickly
We sent fearless young Liam to go up rather close
To peer into the abyss through a crack
I’ve a terrible feeling I’ve just wet my pants
He cried out very loud running back
He'd seen a fearsome creature ugly and fat
A face filthy, coarse, rough and hairy
And from the gut-churning stink you'd just about think
It was the teacher from school, Master Clary
We wanted to show it who was the boss
That huge awful thing needed poking
We'd get a long stick and prod it real hard
I thought the girl who said that was joking
For a few anxious minutes we searched all around
Then Caitlín found a long length of wood
She chose the right hole and carefully took aim
We stood there, bodies trembling, fearing blood
She pushed the sharp pole right into the dark
Then came a loud crash, howl and roar
Followed by banging, some grunts and some groans
The brute trying to smash down the door
I've wet my pants once again, and also my socks
Sobbed Liam in a voice damp, wretched and flat
Soon our mood changed from fear to utter distress
Spotting a man watching us with a gun and big hat
He shouted words we’d never heard
We sensed he meant tremendous harm
He said he’d go tell Sergeant Brennan
If we didn’t eff off from his effing farm
He said he’d kick us up the arse
Tell our mammies and the priest
We’d no business nosing round his barn
We should leave his poor old sow in peace
We ran faster than Liam’s daddy’s car
At least faster than the man could run
The man was farmer James MacGuigan
Out shooting rabbits just for fun
But at last we knew, the word was out
It was nothing like what we had guessed
Neither devil nor demon, just a pig
We’d survived and accomplished our wee quest
If ever a mystery you want to solve
Even if you’re brave and big
Don’t ever try to see or poke
James MacGuigan or his pig
My friends and I whilst only weans
Learned to leave alone and not explore
To stay away from things that growl
And scare you stiff from behind a door
Except for the bits that I’ve made up
Every single word of this is true
And to keep James MacGuigan from my door
I’ve changed some names and forgotten a few
Image:
Created by me. I never saw James MacGuigan’s pig but I imagine that this is how it would have looked. In real life, this is a small sculpture called Capitalism that I saw in a recent exhibition at the House of Humour and Satire in Gabrovo.
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Comments
A fine piece of folklore, it
A fine piece of folklore, it sounds!
'I suspect it's the Reverend Ian Paisley.'
Hahaha! Never! Never! Never!
This made me smile this morning
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I like the image, too
I like the image, too. Very appropriate to a hoary old socialist like me!
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As long as you don't get
As long as you don't get shouted at for writing in English! Unlikely, I'd think
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Very much enjoyed this horror
Very much enjoyed this horror tale but with tons of humor injected in it. :D
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Loved this. Will love it even more if I hear you reading it.
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Poor sow, to be poked out of
Poor sow, to be poked out of the blue! My brothers used to go exploring as far as they could in our area (near Guildford, but this was ages ago probably all poshed up by now) and would come back with tales of what sounded like a dragon, they went back to this farm over and over, the footpath went right by it. They thought it was genetic experiment or some huge beast smuggled in from far away, and when I went and looked over the fence, it was pigs. My standing went up that day, but the world lost some magic, too
I liked the Ian Paisley bit in your poem, too
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I found this blast from the recent past...
I found this blast from the recent past... had me chuckling...
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Hey! Turlough, this was such
Hey! Turlough, this was such a lot of fun to read. I could just imagine the scene. It's funny how children can be influenced and imagine. I recall when I was about eight a house where an old woman lived alone, all the kids were so cruel and said she was a scary witch and used to dare each other to go knock on her door, then run away. Very sad now I look back, but your poem reminded me of how poweful word of mouth with children is.
I thought your story with in your poem was better though.
Jenny.
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The reference to the Reverend
The reference to the Reverend Ian Paisley made me laugh too. I can just see him talking now in that stark, norn iron accent. This is almost Edgar Allan Poe-esque in its telling of a tale within a poem. Entertaining, of course. Paul :)
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