Around Ireland. A 2013 Diary.
Silke
Hesse
When friends heard I was travelling to
Ireland this year, their reaction was almost invariably: Why? It doesn’t seem
to be the thing to do if you don’t have Irish ancestors.
So why did I want to go to Ireland?
It is a beautiful country, is an obvious
response.
Or: I have travelled round England, Scotland
and Wales and if you grew up in Australia, the other British Isle should be of
interest too.
Or: Australia is full of Irish people and
their descendents. Much of what we think of as Australian seems to have been
shaped by their customs and attitudes and above all their humor. How can anyone
understand Australia without understanding the Irish?
Or: I love Irish literature. I want to see the
country where it originated.
Or: When I was eight years old and a public
enemy because of my ethnic background, the Sisters of Mercy allowed me and my
brothers to attend their school as the only Protestant children. They promised
not to proselytize and kept their promise scrupulously. I have a soft spot for Irish
Christianity.
But there was really no need to be so
personal. I could have said that I wanted to experience a country where it
seems that the layers of history through 9000 years have not been concreted
over or relegated to museums and where what is ancient is still perceived by
most as an integral, living and perfectly natural part of their nation’s present
identity.
Most of all, I wanted to go to Ireland to
hear how the Irish talk about themselves.
Sunday,
August 25. It was surprisingly quick to travel from
Melbourne to Dublin with just one stop-over in Dubai: only 23 hours. I took the
opportunity to watch Akiro Kurasawa’s film Dreams
that shows legends and myths haunting the lives of everyday people, and later
the Marx Brothers’ A Day at the Races,
both films I had never got round to seeing. Surprisingly, both helped to set
the mood for Ireland.
As I was heading out for a taxi, I almost
missed a driver holding up my name. Our tour leader, Rouna, who had arrived
about the same time and was expecting a pick-up, ended up making her own way in
to town. We met in the hotel foyer, both waiting to register, and agreed to go
out together in half an hour’s time. She knew where the on and off Red Bus stopped.
We walked up from the corner of the Bleeding Horse Inn and through the fine
park at Saint Stephen’s Green, catching another glimpse of the solid front of
Georgian red brick houses which my taxi driver had pointed out earlier and
which I had thought unremarkable. In Australia factories and very suburban
houses are made of red bricks. But now I also noticed the famous fan-lights.
At Saint Patrick’s Church of Ireland
Cathedral, only a few stops on, I followed Rouna, herself a singer, to Evensong
with a fine guest choir from Northern Ireland. The last hymn was Cardinal
Newman’s “Lead kindly light, amid the encircling gloom / Lead thou me on” which
we used to sing at school to the tune of “Abide with me”. I did not remember a
second stanza but lines from it now stood out like a motto: “I loved to choose
and see my path; but now / Lead thou me on.” I would like this trip to come
together as a whole, with every experience meaningful. Others have planned it
but there is no reason why it should not give me the insights I am hoping for.
Saint Patrick’s is dominated by the spirit
and presence of Jonathan Swift who became Dean in 1713 . Stella, one of two
women he loved, is buried there beside him. Swift’s death mask shows a face
contorted by the suffering of Ménièrs’s disease which almost drove him mad and deceived
his friends into believing he was just that. The home for the mentally ill
opposite the Cathedral, to which Swift donated his estate, is a working psychiatric
hospital to this day.
This cathedral, just outside the city precinct,
was always the people’s church while nearby Christ Church Cathedral was popular
with the establishment. St. Patrick’s offered refuge to the Huguenots fleeing
France in the 17th century. Apart from an over-large and stiffly
pious monument to the Anglo-Irish Boyle family, headed by the Earl of Cork, the
most notable exhibit here is an ancient door into which a rough opening has
been cut. When in 1492, amidst the interminable tribal warfare of the times,
the Lord of Ormonde sought refuge in Saint Patrick’s from his enemy the Lord of
Kildare, the latter used this sword to cut this hole and “chanced his hand” in
peace. In the grounds outside the Cathedral what appears to be the original baptismal
well of Saint Patrick, Ireland’s Patron Saint, has been rediscovered.
Monday,
26 August.
I went off by myself today. Since it was
Monday, I could only wander past most of the museums, but the Yeats exhibition
in the library was open and I listened to the beautiful recording of his poetry
twice. It began with “The Lake at Innisfree”, a poem I learned when I was young:
I will arise and
go now, and go to Innisfree,
And a small
cabin build there, of clay and wattles made:
Nine bean rows
will I have there, a hive for the honey bee,
And live alone
in the bee-loud glade.
In the Art Gallery, which was also open, I
viewed paintings by the poet’s brother Jack, paintings that use the techniques
of Impressionism for disturbed and other-worldly images more characteristic of
Expressionism. In contrast to the less radical William Butler, Jack was an ardent
Irish nationalist. I then walked to the other side of the River Liffey, up
O’Connell Street with its nationalist monuments, and to the new Abbey Theatre. A
poster advertised “The Gathering” taking place this year, a call to the
millions of people of Irish descent all over the world to visit the homes of
their ancestors, meet up with the people who stayed, and gain an understanding
of common roots. It is obviously also a strategy for boosting tourism at a time
of recession.
Later this afternoon the other three
members of our tiny group of four arrived, all seniors with an academic background
or interests. They had come from voting at the Australian Embassy. I had voted before I left. Obviously none of us were prepared to forfeit our vote in the coming
election and we have cautiously established that our political views are similar.
Tuesday,
27 August. On our walk to Trinity College we passed
the amazing statue of Oscar Wilde in Merion Square, opposite what used to be
the residence of his father, a renowned eye surgeon, and his mother, a writer.
It shows him reclining on a granite boulder. His dandyish clothes are made from
stone; he is wearing a green jacket with pinkish red quilted cuffs and lapels that
could be mistaken for soft fabric.
At Trinity College Michael O’Gorman gave us
a historical introduction. He is probably a resident tutor, deliciously cynical
about the younger generation of students over whom he obviously has supervisory
duties. When he told us, without explaining himself further, that the Celts
never existed, we presumed it to be an Anglo-Norman provocation to match his sly
smirk, his Oxford accent and his dandyish get-up. Trinity has always been British,
and Protestant. Irish Catholics were excluded from the College for most of its
history; in the days of James Joyce, it was actually the Catholic Church which
forbade its members to study there. The Catholics had finally founded a college
of their own.
.
Everyone in Dublin seemed to want to see
the Book of Kells today. It is reputed to be the most beautiful of all medieval
manuscripts. Inside, our group quickly lost contact with each other in the
crush. I was drawn to the interesting side exhibitions on such topics as the
materials and techniques of manuscript creation. Visitors see a different page
of the Book of Kells each day. Its illustrations of the four gospels emphasize
the sacred letters of Christ’s name, in keeping with the centrality of “The
Word” in St. John’s Gospel; they reflect the enormous emphasis the newly
literate and geographically remote Celts placed on the written word as the
supreme vehicle of the Christian mission. Also important for these scribes were
the evangelists, the men whose teachings the books pass on; they are depicted
again and again. The biblical stories themselves take up little space. But in
the niches between the huge sacred letters tiny dramas with animals and humans
take place. It was clearly not the Biblical stories, which lend themselves to
misinterpretation and literalism, but the sacred ideas and their sacred origins
amongst what looks like suns and moons and snake-like labyrinthine ways,
designed in the Celtic la Téne style, which were important for these early
Christians.
Other valuable manuscripts were also on
display at Trinity, among them the Book of Ardagh, but it was not possible to
more than glance at them over somebody’s shoulder. We left the exhibition space
through the Long Room, a breath-taking library of 200,000 leather-bound antiquarian
books.
After lunch we drove to the Hill of Tara,
the mythical, ceremonial and political centre of Celtic Ireland from very early
times on. Our bus-driver Tony delighted his passengers with his quick Irish wit,
the butt of which were invariably the gullible Americans. Rouna tried to secure
him for the rest of the trip, but that request had to go through his employer.
Though the Hill of Tara is not high, you have
a panoramic view from there. An introductory film showed the massive earthworks
from the air, the only way one can appreciate their shape and size. Later we
hardly noticed that our climb to the Stone of Destiny, an ancient fertility
symbol once central to the inauguration of Ireland’s High Kings, had taken us
right into the royal enclosure, known as Cormac’s House. In addition to the fortifications
and what may be unexcavated burial mounds all around, we got to see a Stone Age
passage grave. We were told by our guide that the High Kingship was conceived
as an ideal or sacred status; a king had to abdicate if he incurred the slightest
physical defect. But it is likely that customs and purposes changed over the
long period the site was used; the more gruesome early rituals go unmentioned
to tourists. Daniel O’Connell chose Tara as the gathering point for his 1843
rally demanding home rule. It was attended by a million people.
Back at the hotel we had a lecture by
Professor Sean Duffy, a specialist in the early history of Ireland. He sees the
crucial reason for the uniqueness of Ireland’s culture in the fact that it was
the only European country never conquered and colonized by the Romans. Ireland
was, among other things, he believes, situated too close to the presumed edge
of the world to feel safe. On the whole, there was probably little difference
between the Germanic warriors of the Age of Migration and the Celtic ones; both
had to be fierce in their fight for land. But never to have experienced the
concept of a world-wide empire in which all were citizens and the nominal aims
were peace and prosperity; or the engineering projects of Rome, such as roads,
aqueducts and stadiums; or Rome’s tolerant indifference to religions as long as
they were subordinated to the cult of the Emperor; or its concept of a
citizen’s duty to give disinterested patriotic service to his country; or its Stoic
or Epicurean but worldly approach to life, set you apart from the rest of
Europe. Irish Christianity was thus in the early stages untouched by the Roman ideal
of a universal “catholic” empire.
Wednesday,
28 August: In the morning we had a tour of Dublin
with the lovely, quick- witted and very knowledgeable but overly soft-spoken
Kay Caffrey: we saw, among other things, the site of the 10th
century Viking settlement (the Vikings founded the first Irish towns), drove
past the Guinness brewery that none of us really wanted to inspect, visited
Saint Patrick’s Cathedral again, and eventually did a tour of Dublin Castle, which
had been the site of an Anglo-Norman fortress since the thirteenth century. Its
courts currently contained a number of sand sculptures with strange themes,
some probably alluding to Irish myth or history. The first room we were then
shown commemorated the martyrs of the 1916 Rising against English domination
and the brutal execution of the fourteen idealistic Irish patriots who planned
it. Since the rebellion happened while Britain was at war, it was classified as
treason. We were also told that the British Viceroy, on leaving Dublin, took
every single item of furniture in the Castle with him. Large floral rugs
designed and made in Killybegs are now part of the first stage of refurnishing.
In the cellars we were able to appreciate the suitability of the site for a
fortress, protected as it is by Dublin’s two rivers, the Liffey and the now all
but invisible Poddle.
After lunch Padraic O’Brien took us for a
literary walk through Dublin. We saw Sweeney’s Pharmacy where Leopold Bloom
used to buy his lemon scented soap (it is still available) and were taken into
a tiny back room with early editions and memorabilia. Having recently reread Dubliners and Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man, and listened to large
sections of Ulysses spoken superbly
by Irish actors, I had walked through Dublin on my first day thinking I would
recognize Joyce’s city. But I found that I had built up a completely different
Dublin in my mind, one where buildings were irrelevant and people met and
interacted. As I had already spent time in the Yeats exhibition, to which we
then walked, I used the opportunity to get Padraic to talk about such things as
the Gaelic syntax of Synge’s poetic language.
This evening we had a somewhat rushed celebratory
dinner at a restaurant with a décor of memorable antiques and then went on to
the Abbey Theatre for George Bernard Shaw’s Major
Barbara. I found the performance a little disappointing because the actor
of the crucial figure of Undershaft did not infuse it with the subtlety needed to
carry the argument convincingly.
Thursday,
29 August: This
morning we drove to County Wicklow to inspect the extensive gardens of
Powerscourt against the background of Sugarloaf Mountain.
After lunch we continued on to Glendalough
in lovely forested hilly country beside two lakes. This was a 6th
century monastic settlement or town, founded by Saint Kevin and apparently long
functioning as the equivalent of the capital of tribal Ireland. Apart from an
extensive cemetery, it has the High Cross, oratory and the characteristic Round
Tower of such abbeys, also other buildings and well preserved gate arches. The
guide who gave us our introductory talk interpreted the circle of the High
Cross as the Celtic sun or snake symbol, suggesting that in Ireland the new
faith respected the older religion and built on it. The Round Tower, she said,
was built both as a landmark for pilgrims and a bell tower, not as a
fortification, though the monks may later sometimes have hidden sacred treasure
there from the invading Viking raiders who molested them for centuries. The
tower’s high door required a ladder to access.
Kevin was, like so many early Irish saints,
an ascetic who originally dwelt in a cave-like cleft and spent days standing in
the icy waters of the lake. Later his followers persuaded the reluctant saint
to head the monastic settlement. It would have included women, children and
married couples and they would have kept themselves busy with farming, teaching
and transcribing manuscripts. The monastery also offered refuge and instruction
to many Christians fleeing the turmoil of the collapse of the Roman Empire on
the Continent. Though it was partly destroyed by English forces in 1398, it was
not closed down till the Protestant closure of Monasteries in 1539.
On a walk by the lakes Rouna and I
encountered a singer and harpist advertising her CDs. She had that pure Celtic
voice Welsh singers are also noted for and her singing seemed like the very soul
of the countryside. Unfortunately we then lost her CD in the faulty player of
our bus.
Friday,
30 August: We left Dublin today. The trip along the
freeway to the Rock of Cashel in County Tipperary took not the hour our
organizers had calculated but two and a half. When we arrived, it was raining
but the vast view of the countryside with bursts of sunlight penetrating the
clouds was still commanding; it encompassed much of the island. For 600 or so
years, the Rock was the seat of the Kings of Munster, eventually of the High
King Brian Boru who successfully defeated the Vikings in 1014 but was killed in
the battle. In 1101 the Rock was handed to the Church as an ecclesiastical site.
Its important buildings are now only religious, a 13th century
cathedral, a bishop’s dwelling, the beautiful 12th century Romanesque
Cormac’s chapel and a Round Tower. The massive walls, now broken open, contained
secret escape passages in case of attack or siege. But when Cromwell’s army arrived
in 1647 they were of no help and all 3000 occupants were massacred.
We continued past the city of Cork to
Blarney Castle where only the 15th century Norman style keep
remains. We climbed the over 200 steps up to the battlements; all but one of us
avoided kissing the famous Blarney Stone which is reputed to confer eloquence.
It is a precarious maneuver. Eloquence is something the Irish are still noted
for.
Our final destination was Killarney where The Earl’s Court Hotel,
replacing the original choice just recently damaged in a gas explosion, proved a
particularly hospitable and well run establishment. It has an excellent cook
too.
Saturday,
31 August: For our trip around the Ring of Kerry we
had a farmer, Michael Burke, as our guide. He could tell us a lot about the
formation and harvesting of peat, still the local fuel, and about the plants of
the area. This wildly romantic peninsula contains Ireland’s highest mountains
and closer to Killarney beautiful lakes, once visited by Queen Victoria. The
local Lord had invited her in the hope that his hospitality would bring
benefits for him or at least Ireland. But soon after the Queen’s return, her husband
Alfred died suddenly and she was so devastated by the loss, she forgot all
about her Irish stay. Her host, as a result, was bankrupted by his hospitality.
The peninsula also has a famous links golf course with helicopters waiting to
ferry the rich and famous.
That night we went to the Irish-speaking Folk
Theatre at Tralee where we saw the dance performance The Children of Lir. Lir was the Celtic god of the sea. When his
wife and the mother of his children died, he married again. But his new wife
was jealous of the love he bore his children and turned them into singing swans.
They had to live in exile in three places successively for three times three
hundred years till the coming of Christianity. When the magic finally left them
and they turned into humans again they were old men and women and their only
compensation was baptism along with a Christian burial. One can ponder why this
tragic legend about the innocent victims of an evil stepmother is so popular in
Ireland.
Sunday,
1 September: On the Dingle Peninsula
we had the benefit of two Seans, a very knowledgeable bus driver as well as a good
guide. We first stopped in the grounds of a castle to have a look at stones
inscribed using the early Ogham alphabet. The spectacular road we then took
along the cliffs above the sea, though notionally two-way, was often too narrow
for another car. We passed a prehistoric fort and spent time at the Blasket
Centre which commemorates the pre-modern
lifestyle on the islands just ahead out at sea. The writer Synge was one of
those who visited the Blasket islands around
the turn of the century and helped to put them on the map. They were evacuated
in 1953 when virtually only elderly people remained. Several of the former
inhabitants later wrote about the lives they had left and the Centre documents
their work and exhibits the boats and implements then in use. The language spoken
here was Irish Gaelic, used widely in most areas of the west, known as the
Gaeltacht, through which we would travel. The Centre showed a film, had an
interesting photographic display and a good bookshop where I bought a book of
limericks.
Later on the road, we passed a beehive hut
and the Gallarus drystone oratory, a tiny church built without mortar by monks some
time between the 6th and 9th centuries and still
completely weatherproof. From both the Kerry and the Dingle Peninsula we could at
times also catch glimpses of the Skelligs, two high, bare, rocky pyramids far
out to sea on which Irish monks had settled in the 6th century. The
larger, Skellig Michael, still contains beehive cells and a thousand year old
stairway. Apparently two Japanese tourists were recently swept into the sea
from there during a storm. It seems the early monks supported themselves by trading
with passing boats. Yesterday, Michael Burke had mentioned Tim Severin’s book to
us that tells the story of his successful reenactment of Saint Brendan’s 6th century voyage to America in
an open leather-covered boat, Up to then it had usually been considered fictional. Severin
followed a route via Iceland and Greenland and found that many of the islands he
passed on the way contained remnants of the monastic settlements of Irish
monks. These monks are often spoken of as the ‘white martyrs’, as against the ‘red
martyrs’ of the Roman Church who were tortured and killed for their faith, and the
‘green martyrs’ like Saint Kevin who lived ascetic lives somewhere in Ireland,. They were all sons of a heroic age. Both Brendan, and later Severin, set out from the
Dingle Peninsula.
We ended the day with a walk through the
pretty fishing village of Dingle. And back in Killarney there was time for some
shopping that included Severin’s book.
Monday,
2 September: We travelled north to Galway today,
stopping off at Bunratty Castle and Folk Park with its large collection of
characteristic buildings from the 19th century.
The Cliffs of Moher with their
perpendicular drop into the sea were too commercialized and too rainy to be
attractive. Our route then took us through the Burren, a spectacular area of
grey limestone karst. We reached our bayside hotel by evening.
Tuesday,
3 September: Peadar O’Dowd showed us around Galway city.
He is obviously the local eccentric and national treasure in one, a man who has
fought passionately all his life for the preservation of the archaeological
history of the town. He also contributed by helping, for example, to house appropriately
the stone age weapons young divers he used to swim with brought up from the
river bed. Once, he told us, he sat all day on a significant stone that the
road workers would otherwise have removed.
When Ireland received development funds upon
joining the European Union, the Dublin Government decided to encourage a
combination of historic restoration, commercial enterprise and housing
development by granting those who fulfilled all three requirements ten years’
tax exemption. In Galway the historic walls, once built by the Normans to keep the Celtic fishermen out of the Claddagh settlement (which still exists) were thus
preserved in the basement of a large shopping centre, on the top floor of which
flats were built. The approach that preserving historical memories does not
necessarily entail allowing ancient ruins to dominate the appearance of a
contemporary town or countryside, had been noticeable to me elsewhere too. On a
closer look, the neat and colorfully painted farmhouses we passed on our way tended
to be small two-room buildings that would never have been designed today. They must
have been ancient stone houses. The old was preserved but given a new and
friendlier appearance. For in the West of Ireland, where everything has always
been built of grey stone, a material to which even the poorest had cheap
access, the look of grey walls enclosing grey cottages can become quite
depressing. The official Irish approach seems to be that a nation should
remember its past but should not allow itself to be shackled to it.
Not all the stories Peadar told us could be
verified. He claimed, for example, that during the period of the anti-Catholic
Penal Laws the Anglo-Norman Lynch family, one of the so-called fourteen tribes
of mostly Anglo-Norman merchant families that ruled Galway town for centuries,
allowed their superb old townhouse to be used as an unobtrusive Catholic Church.
Galway, he explained, had always been a merchant town, trading with France and
Spain, and traders had to be tolerant of difference. If the trade of tourism
also affects the character of communities, it is perhaps no wonder that we have
met so many friendly people here in Ireland which now relies heavily on the
tourist dollar.
Peadar also took us through the medieval
Collegiate Church of Saint Nicholas, showed us the house where the Australian
explorer Robert O’Hara Bourke was born, as well as the simple dwelling where
James Joyce’s wife Nora Barnacle spent her youth. Later, on our own, we
inspected the grand new Catholic Cathedral financed by American expatriates, found
a marvelous bookshop specializing in Irish history, had seafood for lunch, walked
by the river with its locks, and of course visited the museum. It had mounted an
exhibition on the Congested Districts Board, the first government institution
to take on Irish rural poverty energetically, and there were reproductions of
the now archival articles John Millington Synge wrote for the Manchester
Guardian about the people he and his illustrator, W.B. Yeats’ brother Jack, had
interviewed and portrayed on their travels.
Wednesday,
4 September: It was Connemara today, a bleak peninsula
of mountains and moors and lakes that reminded me of the Lake District in
England. We first visited a national park and were taken on a guided walk by a
ranger who showed us among other things different varieties of heather and another
peat bog. The Connemara horses, supposedly descendents of Arabs on board a ship
of the Spanish Armada wrecked on this coast, stayed out of view. The native
animals we were shown were all stuffed but they gave us a sense of the local
environment all the same.
Our next stop was Kylemore Abbey, a
nineteenth century fairytale castle, a little like those that Bavaria’s King
Ludwig was fond of building in his fine landscapes. Around 1850, Mitchell
Henry, a Manchester doctor and industrialist, had visited Connemara with his
young wife on their honeymoon. This was just after the region, one of the
poorest in Ireland, had lost a third of its population in the potato famine and
then suffered a cholera epidemic. The couple fell in love with the wild
romantic landscape. Henry bought the land and built the castle in 1867. He
planted a park and a walled garden with 21 glass houses and later, after the untimely
death of his wife, built a Gothic church there in her memory. He employed about
300 workers from the area in the construction phase and gave ongoing employment
to many. He paid them well, built a school for their children, and had windows
put into the houses of his tenants for healthier living. In 1893 he pioneered
hydroelectric power, thereby reducing his electricity costs to one fortieth of
what they had been. For many years Henry also represented the district of
Galway in Parliament, determined, it would seem, to do his share to make good the
damage English pride, bigotry and greed had inflicted on the Irish over
centuries. He was not the only charitable Englishman. We were told that during
the famine an English Quaker couple had come to nearby Letterfrack to devote
their lives to helping the poor. In 1920, after the Henrys had left and the
next owners had also departed, a community of Irish Benedictine nuns, who had
lived in exile in Belgium until their convent was destroyed in WWI, were able
to buy Kylemore and turn it into an abbey. Until recently they conducted a
boarding school for girls there.
Thursday,
5 September: We were picked up from our Galway
hotel by a local driver this morning and taken along the coast to Rossaveal,
from where we caught the ferry to the largest of the Aran Islands, Inishmore,
along with hundreds of other tourists. We walked the twenty minutes to our
hotel with a group of American scholars who were going to share our
introductory talk. It was given not by the local poet and singer we were
expecting, but by a man called Cyriel who seemed to have more to tell us about
the island on which he had grown up than could ever fit into half an hour, even
at the pace he goes. What Cyriel talked about was not, as we might have
expected, an age-old and unchanging traditional island culture, but change,
constant change. In distant geological times the island’s land mass had been
off the African continent; then the movement of plates pushed it north. Perhaps
as recently as 500 years ago, he claimed, the island was attached to the
mainland and in a few hundred years a developing rift through Inishmore will
most likely break it in two. The population of the island, he said, had come
from all over the world: from the Black Sea, Egypt, the North African coast and
Spain, though probably never from continental Europe. (I had read somewhere
that the mythical Fir Bolgs were exiled to Inishmore by the Tuatha de Danann,
but this was not Cyriel’s story.) The
Irish and above all the Irish Islanders were always a seafaring nation. They
still traveled a lot, he himself had lived in many countries, but they eventually
came back to the island. Life for the Aran fishermen, he told us, had always been
tough and unpredictable; young and old men drowned, and their families had to
cope. In anticipation of such a fate, fishermen always wore their heavy Aran
jumpers, knitted in their sculpted family patterns so that when their bodies
were washed up, usually in distant Donegal, their families could be informed.
Cyriel answered our question as to how Aran people had coped in the recent recession
by telling us that he, like all the others, works at many jobs: he is an
artist, he helps unload the ferries, he works as a teacher and he drives
tourist buses or pony carts when there is demand; whatever needs doing, he is
there to do it. Living on the island has always been tough, he says, for like
the Burren, of which it once was a part, the island is covered with slabs of
limestone. They have to be broken up with balls of granite and then cleared
away into walls before “landmaking” can begin. That is a laborious process of
carrying first sand, then kelp, then sand, then kelp up to the newly cleared
site, till after months a patch of arable soil has been created. From the Stone
Age till now, many thousands of kilometers of walls have been built from broken
rock in this manner. So why do people seek out such a hard life? They still
follow, Cyriel told us, the tradition of the white martyrs; at one time there
were probably about forty monasteries on Inishmore. They adopted the Coptic
tradition of the desert fathers rather than the traditions of the Roman Church.
The island has always attracted people who want to get away from the endless
“troubles” of Ireland, but also live a life of hard work and uncertainty that
will challenge them to prove themselves. Though Inishmore (the name means large
island) is surrounded by the wild Atlantic, it is also warmed by the Gulf
Stream and as a result plants from every part of the world, from the tropics to
the arctic, grow wild in the cracks between the rocks. The island contains several
Iron or Bronze Age forts like the superbly constructed Dun Aengus with its rare
chevaux de fries fortification and
the Black Fort, both situated right on the edge of high precipitous cliffs. Dun Eochla, in turn, is on the highest point
of the island and there is Dun Eoghanachta too. We should also visit the well
preserved ruins of an early Christian settlement known as the Seven Churches; a
hermit’s beehive hut is another relic from the past. And there are sacred wells
dotted throughout the island to which the islanders still do pilgrimage. Many
believe in their healing powers.
After a chowder for lunch, some of us went
for a walk along the walled lanes. Many of the laboriously ‘made’ plots have been
allowed to run to weed, some are too small to be of much use, others provide
grazing pastures for sheep, cattle and horses. In one of them there were
upturned currachs, boats with a colander-like construction covered with tarred
canvas. We came across wayside monuments for young men who were the victims of
British soldiers: “Pray for the soul” of whoever it is, they all say. Later some
of our group bought Aran jumpers in a particularly well stocked shop in
Kilronan where we are based; there you can get not only the machine knitted
ones sold everywhere in Ireland, but beautiful hand knitted jumpers as well.
The wool is from Australia these days.
In the evening we had dinner at the Ti Joe
Watty restaurant, where there was live music. We were then dropped back to our
hotel which had even better live music, played by the three young Mulkerrin
brothers, twice all-Ireland prize winners. Padraig, Eamon and Sean, who is only
fourteen, use a range of instruments: concertina, tin pipes, guitar and violin among
them, and they sing. Sadly, I missed Sean’s Irish dance at the end of the
night.
Friday,
6 September: I went for an early walk along the bay
this morning After breakfast we then hailed a minibus driver, expecting him to
be at our service till further notice. But like Cyriel, he needs to fit as
much work as possible into a day. Michael is an elderly man who had been a fisherman
all his working life; lately, however, the French have edged Ireland out of the
lobster and seafood market so he has had to turn to other work. We eventually agreed
on a pick-up time and in the course of the day we then did get to see Dun
Aengus, which was quite a walk, the Seven Churches, the end of the fourteen
kilometer long island with its drying lobster nets, a seal off a beach
frequented by seals and other sights on the tourist list. One of our group had asked
to see the sacred wells and Michael agreed to take us. Up on the ridge we got
out and followed a narrow path through weeds and scrub, climbing over stiles on
several stone walls. We then came upon a small hole in the path, roughly secured
by stones; it turned out to be the well that cures eyes. But Michael urged us
to go a bit further to a well that cured all ailments, and Rouna and I followed
him as the threatening clouds started to dump their rain in a sharp, lashing
shower. The second well was a little larger and close by some overgrown ruin.
Michael told us to scoop up water and then crouched down on the lee side of one
of the walls to wait out the rain while Rouna and I ran back and got wet to the
bone. We were then dropped at the hotel and changed into dry clothes.
Once dry, I decided to walk alone up the
steep hill to the Black Fort by the edge of the perpendicular sea cliffs at our
end of the island. Up on the ridge the ground was still paved with unbroken slabs
of limestone but there were little gardens in the cracks and they probably
contained those plants from many regions of the world Cyriel had mentioned. As
I walked back down the hill, wishing I could transfer the benefit of that
healing well to a young friend struggling with cancer, I noticed a tiny patch
of rainbow over the bay. I focused my hopes on a full rainbow and, to my
delight, I was able walk down the hill with a perfect double arch ahead of me
all the way. This is without doubt a magical island!
In the evening we had the lobster dinner
which one of our group had arranged. A fisherman had been sent out specially
that morning.
Saturday,
7 September: We left by the earliest ferry and found
a new, quite delightful bus driver John waiting for us at Rossaveal. He took us
back through Galway and then north into the rain. We caught just a glimpse of
the spire of Knock pilgrim church to which planes full of the faithful are
flown for healing each day. Lunch was at Waterford Hotel in Sligo, Yeats
country. Afterwards, just a short way up the road, we had a lecture by Stella
Mew of the Yeats Society on the poet’s family connections and on Irish politics
of the time. The Yeats family even has an Australian link; everyone in Ireland
seems to have a link with Australia. We stopped briefly at rainy Drumcliffe
under Ben Bulben where Yeats is buried
in the old churchyard. We then had to drive on past Donegal through hilly
country dotted with tiny half collapsed famine houses to the village of
Glenties. The family hotel where we are put up is also the village pub and the
harvest festival is on this weekend. There was live fast Irish music after
dinner.
Sunday,
8 September: We were in Donegal early and our guide
Anne Leonard was waiting for us in the deserted town. She told us she wonders
why there has been so little work for guides lately; Rouna suggested that
stingy tourists were probably letting bus drivers take over that role. Anne went
on to lament that great numbers of unemployed young people were leaving the
district again for places like Australia, as in the bad old days. The
population had now declined so much, it had to be boosted with non-Irish people.
Poles and Lithuanians are prominent.
Anne walked us down towards the bay, pointing
out the low islands at its mouth from which the famine ships once set sail for
America or Australia. We moved on to the ruins of a Franciscan monastery by the
shore; it was where a famous history of the Irish people, The Annals of the Four Masters,
was written in the 1630s. But the
monastery was sacked so many times that the monks eventually moved to quieter
Drumcliffe.
The town square, known as the Diamond in
these parts, has recently been renovated with European money. European money
has also bought a sight-seeing boat for tourists which was, however, unmanned
today. On a walk by the river that flows through the town, Ann pointed out a
forbidding house that people call the Orange house. Nobody had ever seen
movement there but everyone felt threatened by it, she said. We had a tour of
the castle which the ruling O’Donnells left in 1607 during the “Flight of the
Earls”; the Irish Earls had hoped to get military help from Spain to vanquish
Cromwell and his Protestants. When the O’Donnells fled, the English Brooke
family took over the castle.
Yesterday we had asked John what “fairy
forts” were. He was kind enough to enquire locally and was given directions to
the closest one. The narrow road took us up to the top of a hill where piles of
rock suggested a prehistoric fortification, a dun. Apparently fairy forts must
not be interfered with. At Sligo we had been told it was Yeats’ bad luck that
the digging of his grave disturbed such a fort. Can the dead suffer bad luck?
We drove on to Killybegs. It was the source
of the beautiful floral Donegal carpets in Dublin Castle and is still a busy
fishing village as well. Hotel Tara was the only place open for lunch; it was
overcrowded with guests from a wake. But the salmon we eventually got was
excellent.
We now drove up a narrow, bumpy and winding
road to the spectacular Slieve League sea cliffs, at around 600 meters the
highest in Europe, molded mountains that change their colors with the light and
drop steeply into the Atlantic.
In Glencolumcille on the northern side of
the peninsula we met Paddy Gillispe, a name that means “son of the bishop’s
servant” he told us; but as he is short in stature he is known to all as Paddy
Beab, the little. Paddy took us first to the church, a Church of Ireland, but
he said they had always been generous to him. The English Lord of the region was
apparently also generous to his tenants during the famine years. A stained
glass window over the altar reflects his attitude for it depicts Christ letting
the children come to him.
In the churchyard with its dignified Celtic
crosses you could distinguish the hastily dug graves of the famine times. We
were shown a trap-door that opened to a tunnel beneath the cemetery where in
the 7th century the monks would hide when their monastery was once
again raided and burned by the heathens.
Glencolumcille is named in honor of
Ireland’s second patron saint, the “dove of the church” Columcille, also known
as Saint Columba (521-597). He came from a prominent Donegal family; his direct
ancestor had been a High King of Ireland. Columcille founded several Irish
monasteries but we were told that he made Glencolumcille his base. He then got
into trouble because he copied a Psalter belonging to Saint Finian, intending to keep the copy. When St. Finian
objected, the king commanded him to return it. (The first copyright ruling).
Columcille refused and a battle ensued in which 4000 men were killed. This probably
much simplified story was repeatedly
told to us to emphasize the importance of written documents to the early Irish
Christians. In punishment, Columcille was exiled. He then went to the island of
Iona and founded a monastery there which became a great place of learning and
central to the Christianization of the Gaelic tribes of Scotland.
Paddy showed us a Turas or pilgrimage stone
beside the church that was part of the pilgrimage route the Saint had
inaugurated. It was engraved with Celtic symbols. As a boy, Paddy had taken
part in barefoot pilgrimages in which each of several such stones was circled
three times in silence while the pilgrim said three Our Fathers, three Hail
Marys and one Creed. It is not unreasonable to presume that the purpose of this
ritual was to somehow integrate the Celtic past into the new Christian faith.
Paddy then accompanied us on a drive along
the beautiful coast with its fine beaches, pointing out a Martello tower, one
of a number that had been built in the early 19th century in case
Napoleon invaded. When we returned to the village, we were also shown six
prehistoric dolmens, graves between 3000 and 4000 years old, the largest made
with 20 ton stones.
Paddy was in no doubt that the mythical
early Irish settlers could be identified as coming from specific areas on the
Black Sea and the Mediterranean, the Tuatha de Danann, also know as the fairy
people, definitely from Egypt. The Celts, with whom the Irish identify so
strongly, did not arrive before 500 BC at the earliest and so could not have
built these graves.
On our way back to Glenties we passed
through Ardare and dropped in at Eddie Doherty’s shop. Although it was Sunday
evening, Eddie demonstrated the hand-weaving skills that had created the
beautiful tweed cloths and garments he sold there to people like us.
There was a harvest ball at our Glenties
Hotel in the evening with the women wearing grand ball gowns but we did not
participate.
Monday,
9 September: We drove to Derry this morning through
fertile agricultural country. It was a surprise to hear that Britain had not
wanted the poorer lands of Donegal, traditionally a part of Ulster, to be
included in the Northern Irish state. In Derry, which is called Londonderry
across the border that it adjoins, our guide Tommy met us. Derry was the first
Irish town to be selected in 1613 to receive so called “plantation” immigrants from
England and Scotland. They were brought in to take over the lands of which
Catholic landowners had been dispossessed. (Our guide did not use the word
“plantation” so that I initially got the impression he was talking about
developmental aid.) Since London merchants organized the migration, the town
was renamed Londonderry. There is apparently still legal controversy about this
name. Our tour began at the 1890 Neo-Gothic Guild Hall. The first exhibit there
is a statue of Queen Victoria in white Cararra marble. Its hands are broken and
we were told that an IRA bomb had catapulted it onto the street. But all the
damage it could do was broken hands and a few chips. (Republicans could
presumably interpret the loss of hands as the cessation of English meddling.)
In the large assembly rooms of the Guild Hall the London merchants and their escutcheons
are depicted on stained-glass windows, as is the story of the Apprentice Boys
who alerted the city when Catholic King James II tried to invade in 1689. The town’s
walls, built by the London Merchants in 1618 to protect their investment, are
still intact and have never been breached. But King James’ Siege of Derry, during
which a third of the town’s population died of starvation and disease, took a
heavy toll all the same.
We then walked along the walls. From there
we could view the city from a detached distance, in particular the Catholic
Bogside quarter down the hill where three large murals on the gable walls of houses
commemorating Catholic martyrs could be seen. The first was of a schoolgirl
shot on her way home because she was carrying a suspicious briefcase.
Derry was another of the places where Saint
Columba, the city’s patron, founded a monastery but the cathedral named after
him was built much later by Protestants.
Once our tour of the wall was over, we had
a quick look at a historic emporium in the centre of town; but its wares were
not enticing. John our driver then insisted that before we go we must walk
across the new Peace Bridge, designed by Wilkinson Eyre and opened in mid 2011,
which winds across the wide River Foyle . Till recently, the river’s opposite
banks represented opposite sides in the political struggle but with the Good
Friday Agreement in place this is hopefully no longer the case. Derry has just
been awarded the UK City of Culture designation, which may help it to create a
new peaceful image for itself.
Tuesday,
10 September: Today’s drive took us first to the
Bushmills Distillery where the difference between the making of Irish whisky
and Scottish whiskey was demonstrated, and then to the Giant’s Causeway with
its spectacular basalt columns. Our guide tried to interest the children of the
group in the old legend of the two giants. The Irish giant Finn MacCool once
built this causeway to Scotland (where there is actually a similar matching geological
formation) to challenge the Scottish giant, Benandonner to do battle. But when
he saw the size of his rival coming across the straits, his courage forsook
him. His wife, however, has a good idea. She tells him to dress as a baby and
lie in the family cradle. He does that and when Bennandonner arrives and sees
this enormous baby he can only assume that its father must be of truly
monstrous size. So he flees back to Scotland destroying the causeway behind
him. The children are unimpressed by such nonsense but an adult could deduce
something about Ireland’s self image from the story: On this small island you just
can’t get by without kissing the Blarney Stone when you are in trouble.
After lunch, our driver drove us along
beautiful coast roads until it was time to take the freeway to Belfast, where
we are put up in the central Jury’s Inn Hotel. We were invited by the leader of
an American scholarly tour group to attend Professor Bill Rolston’s lecture on
the political murals of Northern Ireland. Rolston has been photographing such
murals for many years and has just published the fourth volume of Drawing Support. Northern Ireland’s
often giant murals, many of them on the gable walls of houses, allow a nuanced
picture of the emotions, arguments, historical interpretations and political
trends in this long and bitter struggle.
Wednesday,
11 September: Our driver John, who is leaving us this morning, came and told us he
had been burgled last night and a lot of his personal property including his
GPS had been stolen. He was such an empathetic, knowledgeable and thoughtful
man that it is quite upsetting to think that this was his reward.
After breakfast, we took a taxi to see the
murals of Belfast at first hand. Our driver was prepared to chat, telling us
that he had grown up in a mixed marriage. His father was a Catholic and his
Protestant mother had originally refused to marry him. But he was able to prove
to her that her own grandfather had been a Catholic, a carefully kept family
secret. However, though his parents personally were able to reconcile across
the religious and political divide, they still had to make decisions as to
where to live and where to school their children, for in Belfast there are only
Protestant or Catholic areas and Protestant or Catholic schools. In the whole
of the city, he said, there was only one interdenominational school and that
was posh and expensive. So whatever choices his parents made, it invariably involved
enmity and persecution from one side or the other. It was simply impossible to
live in Belfast without being drawn into the Troubles. One of us asked him
where the many Polish Catholic immigrants now working in Ireland lived.
Anywhere, was his answer, it is not about religion, it is all about politics
and they are not stigmatized by that. In the area he took us to there is still
a long high wall separating off the Catholics and they still lock the gates at
night. Belfast has always been a working-class city and the suburbs we saw
looked run down and damaged. Their saving grace is their murals which are
everywhere; it is in the murals that cautious attempts at reconciliation are
tested and the identity and dignity of a culture is preserved.
In the afternoon we all went to the huge,
multi-storey waterfront Titanic Experience
Exhibition. Its interactive exhibits are aimed at a fairly naive audience.
All the same, the exhibition was an eye-opener for me because I had not realized
how many people in this city had worked on the liner and what breadth of skills
they had developed to create its structure, its machinery and its high-class
interior and then organize its servicing and provisioning. When the ship went
down, it took with it many people from Belfast working in the service
industries; but its sinking also destroyed a communal project that an entire
city had proudly and successfully worked on over many years.
Tonight there was an hour or so before
dinner to find a bookshop and get Seamus Heaney’s wonderful translation of Beowulf. Ireland’s latest Nobel
Laureate, who grew up in the Ulster countryside, died just a few days ago and
the papers have been full of moving tributes and farewells. His last words were
to his wife, telling her not to be afraid.
We then had our last dinner together at the
nearby Crown Bar and Restaurant. You grow fond of people with whom you have
shared so many impressions. In the morning we will then take separate taxis to
the airport to catch our various flights.
Silke
Hesse
The Roman Catholic Church grew out of the
collapse of the Roman Empire.
That had stood for order, peace and
universal values under a single “god-like” leader. After any initial conquest,
a relatively small amount of coercion was usually able to maintain its hold.
The Roman Empire eventually collapsed
because 1) citizens became too comfortable, prosperous and greedy, so the
taxation system no longer worked. 2) Dynastic leaders were not up to the task
of constant visionary renewal. And 3) there were new outside pressures from the
great migrations of Indo-Germanic peoples into Europe.
I am tempted to put forward the following
theory:
The Catholic (i.e. universal) Church, as for
example Saint Augustin saw it, was conceived as a re-embodiment and improvement
of the Roman Empire.
It too was to be a system to unite
disparate peoples under one set of values without otherwise interfering too
much with their cultures.
It was to be subject to the absolute authority
of a non-dynastic leader, the Pope, chosen on his merits, but now celibate and thus
free of family pressures.
It was to have the same lingua franca as
the Roman Empire, namely Latin.
Members would enjoy citizenship of the
Church where before they had been citizens of the Roman Empire.
There would be non-violent coercion through
the sacraments which the faithful would believe could alone assure eternal
well-being and which were controlled and could be withheld by the church.
These sacraments had to be predictably
available and independent of the personal merits of the individual priest in
charge of them, so a ruling was made to that effect.
Men’s fear of punishment could be
transferred to a hell and a purgatory in an afterlife, in preference to torture
and dungeons, except where the absolute authority and unity of the Church was
questioned. In the case of heretics, terrible forms of torture and death then
became accepted practice.
There would be discipline as in the Roman
army: hierarchical structures, obedience, a culture of the sacrifice of the
individual for the community as a whole, pride in coping with hardship, and an
ethic of martyrdom.
The suppression, exclusion and control of
“feminine” values that were associated with nature and not subject to the
man-made laws and decisions of the Church was considered crucial. Feminine
values included procreation, care of the physical person with food and drink,
healing and comfort, and the avoidance of warfare. In the new Catholic Church,
women could only be included if they lived an “unnatural” life of celibacy,
physical hardship and withdrawal from society.
The ideal of woman, which could not be
suppressed completely, would be made available through the transcendental
figure of Mary, also conceived as non-sexual.
The growth of the Church Empire was to be
brought about by a combination of persuasive conversion, conquest, political
agreements and a high birthrate, the latter the “mission” of women.
This re-conception of the Roman Empire at a
time when the wider European world was collapsing into chaos, was brilliant and
by intention benign, largely designed by the first great psychologist of the
Christian era, Saint Augustin. Once established, the regime of the Church did
create fairly good order in Europe for a time. And many, though by no means all
the teachings of Christ fitted into that scheme quite well.
But it was a dangerously one-sided culture
that excluded and repressed many things, in particular, all that was feminine.
In the view of the Catholic Church, the
sole purpose of sexuality was to increase the constituency of the Church.
This new “Roman Empire” used religion for
its own political ends, much as its predecessor had, suppressing individual
intuition and vision, personal conscience, the ability to adjust to real life
situations, and human personality with its fruitful variety.
Though it proclaimed peace as its ideal, it
was a fortified peace that did not rule out violence.
And it was still an institution based on
hierarchical power with inadequate restrictions on the potential abuse of such
power.
Though attempts were made in medieval
Europe to create a dual system of political and religious power working in
tandem, the Church was never willing to relinquish its worldly role, leaving it
vulnerable to the accusation of abusing its religious role.
What could a legitimate religious role have
entailed?
The Church could have encouraged a search
for values appropriate to any specific age and then embodied these values. (Our
age, for example, gives higher priority to a naturally fulfilled life than
earlier ages did. Celibacy is no longer a widely admired value, either among
the clergy or the wider community, and that can lead to problems of abuse.)
It could have championed individuals and
countered social injustices.
It could have drawn attention to the
ultimate unknowability of the Divine and consequently shown interest in and
respect and tolerance for all humankind’s diverse religious attempts to
approach the Divine..
It could have asked philosophical questions
about the purpose of life.
It could have shown the respect for life demanded
by the Ten Commandments.
It could have helped wherever help was
needed.
It could have modeled an ideal community.
At various times the Church did try to do
many of these things but there was always a conflict with its political role
that interfered with the purity of its design. As a result many modern people
are disillusioned with religious institutions.
Can a Christian Church not built on the
model of the Roman Empire be imagined?
Early medieval Ireland was the one country
in Europe never colonized by the Romans.
It had the advantage of being a society in
which Druidic wisdom and learning were highly advanced, meaning that complex
mythologies, rituals and laws and their thought-provoking interpretations were
available to the people. And Ireland was, on the whole, a well controlled
country under strong-man kings who were in close touch with their
constituencies. But it was a country that still suffered from a warrior ethos
of strength and honor and armed contest, now driven by intoxication rather than
meaningful purpose, a way of life no longer appropriate for settled modern man.
Ireland at the time was also a country in which there was little discrimination
between men and women. In the fourth and fifth centuries, when the Roman Empire
was collapsing and Saint Patrick began his mission, Ireland was ready for the
new ethos of Christianity. And it was in the unusual position to receive the
Christian message at a time when it was hardly influenced by the as yet
developing Roman Catholic Church.
Ireland’s great missionary, Saint Patrick,
who had spent sixteen years of his youth as a shepherd slave in the
countryside, had had time to observe the culture and understand what was needed.
When he returned after the necessary years of study, he went round to chieftain
after chieftain making treaties with them. It seems that these natural leaders
of the people could easily be made to appreciate the advantages of a change of
culture and in only a few years Ireland was almost uniformly Christian. In
tandem with the political system of chiefdoms, but not in competition with it,
Christian abbeys or settlements developed, typically around a notable saint or
leader who had usually spent years as a hermit and had no political ambitions.
These early abbey communities included men and women, married and unmarried
people. Saint Brigid, a contemporary of Saint Patrick, was the abbess of a
convent that seems to have included monks. In early Ireland, women were not
excluded from leadership in the church.
Moreover, the heroic ethos of pagan society
was not, as in Rome, replaced with the “red” martyrdom of valiantly endured
torture and death, but with the “green” martyrdom of subsistence amongst the hardships
nature imposed, or later with the “white” martyrdom of heroic exploration of
the Creator’s world in its hitherto unknown and inhospitable reaches. It would
seem that Saint Brendan and his monks travelled through the frozen seas as far
as America. Saint Kieran, we are told, lived alone in the woods for many years
with wild animals for his monks before he founded the monastery and metropolis
of Saighir Chiardin. And Saint Kevin heroically stood for days in the freezing
waters of Glendalough to declare his unwavering Christian commitment.
The early Irish monks immediately
understood that their oral Druidic culture could be extended by means of the
written word and that books were a great treasure. Their writers and copyists
made no distinction between the works of the ancients, biblical and theological
texts, the mythologies and songs their druids had so faithfully handed down
over the ages, and historical chronicles. They knew of no censorship. For them,
everything that human experience and imagination had contributed to an
understanding of the world was of value. After European culture had largely
been destroyed by the barbarian hordes, it was the Irish copyists who rescued
it and returned it to the mainland. It is significant that one of Ireland’s three
great patron saints, Saint Columcille, committed his great sin, which gave rise
to a battle in which 4000 men fell, by not giving up a book he had copied
without the permission of its owner. In punishment, Columcille was exiled from
Ireland. He proceeded to found a monastery on the Scottish island of Iona which
became, with its many subsidiaries, the greatest centre of early Christian
learning of the time and the bearer of the Christian mission to the Celtic Picts
and Scots of Scotland.
Legend tells us that Saint Patrick enjoyed
the company of the ancient heroes of Irish Celtic myth, heroes like the giant
Caeilte whom he asked for a “well of pure water from which we might baptize the
people of Bregia, of Meath, and of Usnach.” Eventually Patrick even baptized
Caeilte and his followers and in parting he said: “By me to thee, and
whatsoever be the place – whether indoors or abroad – in which God shall lay
hand on thee, Heaven is assigned.” By some interpretations the Celtic cross, a
combination of cross and circle, points to the merging of Christianity with the
pre-Christian cults of the circle that included the sun, the moon and the snake,
in other words the merging of feminine cults with the masculine, sword-like
cult of the cross. The illustrations of the famous Book of Kells also make much
use of snake symbolism. The legend that Saint Patrick drove all the snakes of
Ireland (Ireland never had snakes) into the sea obviously makes a statement that
denies such merging.
Joseph Campbell points out that the “heresy”
of Patrick’s contemporaries, Pelagius and Caelestius, both apparently natives
of Ireland, was perhaps indicative of views held among the early Christians of
Ireland. He sums their teachings up under the following headings:
- That Adam would have died even if he had not sinned.
- That the sin of Adam injured himself alone, not the human race.
- That newborn children are in the same condition in which Adam was before the Fall; corollary: that infants, though unbaptized, have eternal life;
- That the whole human race does not die because of Adam’s death or sin, nor will it rise again because of Christ’s resurrection;
- That the Old Testament Law, as well as the New Testament Gospel, gives entrance to heaven; and
- That even before the coming of Christ there were men who were entirely without sin. (p.465)
These teachings are probably closer to what
many modern Christians are willing to believe than traditional Roman Catholic
doctrine. And they seem closer to the spirit of Irish Christianity too. Today
there are theologians who believe they can prove that the ideas of Pelagius were
never at odds with the spirit of Christianity. It could be suggested that
Augustin and the Roman Catholic Church felt they needed a doctrine that
required a firmer rejection of Paganism and more of the coercive power of
threats, such as the withdrawal of sacraments or the fear of hell-fire, to
subdue the turmoil of homeless and often starving nomadic intruders entering
the settled territories of civilized Rome. There is no reason why dogma should
not be read as political policy.
Perhaps unfortunately, Irish Christianity
could not long withstand the influence of the Christianity of post-Roman Britain, which
was more attuned to and therefore more directly influenced by the Roman Church.
At the Council of Whitby, where the Irish Church subordinated itself to the
English Roman Catholic Church, the issue at stake was the date of Easter which
differed according to different calendars. In other words, what was on the
agenda was the enforcement of absolute unity and subordination to a central
authority. The Irish delegates probably thought, as we might today, that the
date on which such a festival was celebrated was irrelevant.
To those who encounter Irish Christianity
in its natural settings, or the reflection of this in e.g. James Joyce’s
writings, it still seems to have a different ethos from European Catholicism.
Large numbers of its members have always felt rebellious against the
dictatorship of the Roman Church imposed upon them. In Ireland, Celtic ideas have
even now not been discarded and there is often an underlying contempt for
Rome’s suspicion of natural processes, its fear of women and its
prescriptiveness that interferes with individual conscience. More recently
Ireland, like so many Catholic communities around the world, has also had to
cope with the shock of its many abusive and very un-Christian clergy.
Like the Roman Empire and like the
ideological dictatorships of the twentieth century, the Roman Church believes
that human nature, which has always been a force for both good and bad, is best
controlled with coercive prescriptions and the ideal of unity. The doctrine of
original sin is a Roman doctrine. It can, however, just as validly be argued
that human nature comes into its own and is most creative, productive and
humane if it is given the greatest possible freedom to explore its potential.
That is the view of today’s democratic societies. They can be seen as the
logical outcome of the Protestant Reformation that discarded the Roman Church
with its dogmas and called on people to explore their consciences. In Ireland,
the Roman and the Protestant Churches are today trying to overcome enmities
that have existed for centuries. If Irish Christianity had, however, been able
to go its own way, which had become clearly defined after three centuries of un-Roman
religious practice, the Christian world would have had a third and possibly
better model to follow.
Notes on Aspects of the
Struggle against English Colonial Dominance in Ireland
Silke
Hesse
The
Irish History of Invasion:
Over the millennia, from 7000BC, Ireland
was invaded by many different groups of people.
Mesolithic hunter-gathers and Neolithic and
Bronze Age builders of massive stone graves were among the earliest.
According to mythic tradition, Irish
history began with five settler groups. They were the Milesians, probably Celts
who had perhaps come from Scythia via the Iberian Peninsula to displace the legendary
Tuatha de Danann (perhaps from Egypt), the Fairy People, who had in turn
superseded the Fir Bolg and the Fomorians. Some early invaders may have been
pirates from the African coast. And fairly late, between 500 and 100BC, the
Celts, the vanguard of the Indo-Germanic tribes migrating westwards through
Europe, invaded, perhaps from more than one site on the continent. Most of
these groups fought, settled, moved on, merged or died out as they did
everywhere during that age of migration. It is not possible to reconstruct
those times accurately.
The Celts had also come to England but were
there pushed to the west into Cornwell and Wales by a group of Germanic tribes,
the Angles, Saxons and Jutes. Scotland
was settled by the Picts and Scots, who were also Celts.
Then the Romans arrived and incorporated
England into their Empire until that collapsed in the fifth century AD. But the
Romans never reached Ireland. During the 9th and 10th centuries the
Vikings raided Scotland, Northern England and Ireland. In Ireland they
eventually settled as traders and builders of towns like Dublin and Limerick.
In
1066 the Normans conquered England and introduced a fourth language after
Celtic, Latin and Germanic, namely French. A century later the Anglo-Normans
were invited in to help an Irish chieftain against his tribal enemies and
decided to stay in the country. This led to the Pope recognizing the English
king as overlord of Ireland three years later in 1172.
Colonization
Up to that time, each group of invaders
brought different skills, among them seafaring and fishing, farming, trading
and building. Initially the groups probably fought each other hard for land and
resources but eventually learned to share them. Once the Anglo-Normans were involved,
however, a form of feudal class system was introduced. In Europe, this was
originally a system of reciprocal rights and duties, designed to facilitate
life in a largely lawless society. But since feudalism fulfilled no real purpose
in Ireland, it was perverted into a colonial system. In 1366, the Statutes of
Kilkenny forbade marriage between Anglo-Normans and Irish, an early sign of an
intent at colonial domination and a very un-Roman approach. Richard II’s
attempt to assert control in 1394 had only limited success. But in the
following century the Anglo-Norman Earls of Kildare took on the office of Lord
Deputy for the English Crown. With Henry VIII’s Protestant revolution and his proclamation
as King of Ireland by the Anglo-Norman Irish parliament, the Protestant-English
takeover then became entrenched, even though by now many of the Catholic
Anglo-Norman families no longer supported it.
Thus, in addition to the age-old
distinction between cultures and languages there was now also one of religious
faith and affiliation, though in practice Protestantism in Ireland was from the
start a mainly political force. Its religious mission could, however, serve to
legitimize colonial domination of the Catholic majority with their potentially
dangerous loyalty to the Roman Church and to Catholic neighbors like France and
Spain. What ensued was 150 years of warfare that ended with the Irish-Catholic
defeat at the Battle of the Boyne in 1690.
From 1622 onward, the English supplemented
military force with a plantation program; British and Scottish Protestants were
settled on the estates of evicted Irish landholders, forcing Irish loyalists
onto ever more marginal land and into ever greater economic hardship. All the
Catholic churches in Ireland were taken over by the official Anglican Church of
Ireland, all monasteries were dissolved, and the Penal Laws were passed against
Catholics. The laws of 1695 took away almost all of the civil, religious and
economic rights of Catholics, including their right to own or lease property,
to hold public office, to vote, to acquire an education or to worship in public.
From the late 18th century
onwards, many of these laws were then modified or even repealed. The Act of
Union in 1801 made it possible for Irish Catholics to be voted to Parliament
again, which now sat in Westminster, for the Irish Parliament had been abolished.
This meant that the regular famines that resulted from an inequitable
distribution of land and which culminated in the terrible Potato Famine of
1845-1849, were not a priority and handled with such negligence that the
response amounted to genocide. Its hypocritical brutality certainly fuelled
Irish determination never to be dependent on Britain again. While Irish
religious persecution began in the century of European religious conflict and
war and was partly fuelled by the political agenda of Rome, it continued far
beyond the wars of the Reformation. Of course the era of nationalism that
followed also saw the internationalist Church of Rome as its greatest threat.
In Ireland, Britain learned the tactics of
colonial domination and obviously developed a taste for colonialism. Australian
historians can hardly overlook the continued persecution or exclusion of Irish,
Catholic and disadvantaged people that occurred in our country too. One wonders
whether it inspired the ruthless suppression of Aboriginal culture and religion
and the hypocritical neglect of starving indigenous people when their lands and
waterholes were taken over by white settlers, a neglect that often amounted to
a discreet but highly effective form of genocide. The approach was similar.
Modern British colonialism was a
large-scale version of the sort of class system of which remnants still exist
in England, a system in which the perception of a right to privilege is
central. Though it builds on earlier feudal structures, it is an aggressively
modernized version of economically defined dominance, suited to rewarding and
facilitating commercial enterprise. In it fairness tends to be disregarded and
any means effective in providing an advantage are legitimized in order to
ensure the continued dominance of a clique of people who consider themselves superior,
irrespective of the value of their wider contribution to society. It was this
class system that created the narrow, self-righteous, unimaginative,
judgmental, bullying attitudes of the Victorian era. In English society the
class system would eventually call onto the scene people with democratic,
creative and charitable ideals and urges. They would form a rebellious
counterweight to entrenched and officially sanctioned practices.
Irish-Protestant
Writers: Between the Camps
In this context it is interesting to look
at the contribution of the writers of the so-called Anglo-Irish ascendency, who
grew up in Ireland but were of Anglo-Protestant stock, usually well to do and
well educated, consequently not forced into partisanship either as
Irish-Catholic victims or as English-Protestant aggressors, and at liberty to
examine the situation in their country rationally and impartially.
The first to come to mind is Jonathan Swift
(1667-1745). He had initially tried to embark on a career in English politics
but had soon realized that he would need to find other ways of making an
impact. He retrained and became both a prominent Anglican cleric and a great
writer. More than a century after his death Irish-British literature then took
off. There came in quick succession Oscar Wilde (1854-1900), George Bernard
Shaw (1856-50), William Butler Yeats (1865-1939), John Millington Synge
(1871-1909) Samuel Beckett (1906-1989) and Seamus Heaney (1939-2013). Of these, Shaw (1925), Yeats (1923) Beckett
(1969) and Heaney (1995) were all awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature, an
unusually rich harvest. Wilde enjoyed at least as much fame and international
publicity as the Nobel Laureates did, but
eventually in the form of notoriety, persecution and humiliation. Synge,
for his part, died young. He had spent much of his adult life in Europe but
then sought out Irish culture in its purest form on the Aran and Blasket
islands. These British-Irishmen were perhaps the most gifted of the British
writers of the modernist period. James Joyce, their contemporary and perhaps
the most influential modernist prose writer, had an Irish-Catholic background
and does not quite belong in this group.
Jonathan
Swift wrote his most scathing attack on England’s
treatment of the Irish, A Modest Proposal
for preventing the Children of Ireland from being a Burden to their Parents or
Country, in 1729, 34 years after the
introduction of the repressive Penal Laws that followed upon William of
Orange’s defeat of James II and the Irish at the Battle of the Boyne in 1690.
He begins: “It is a melancholy Object to those, who walk through this great
Town or travel in the Country, when they see the Streets, the Roads and
Cabin-doors crowded with Beggers of the Female Sex, followed by three, four or
six Children, all in Rags, and importuning every Passenger for an Alms.” His
modest suggestion is that babies be cheaply fed on mother’s milk for the first
year of their lives and then sold by their mothers for meat. This, he argues,
would provide money for the mother, decent food for the populace, particularly
the wealthier people who can afford meat, and release from a future life of
suffering for the child. He is firm that he is suggesting this remedy for
Ireland only. “Therefore let no man talk to me of other Expedients: of using
neither Cloaths, nor Household Furniture, except what is of our own Growth and
Manufacture: Of utterly rejecting the Materials and Instruments that promote
Foreign Luxury: Of curing the Expensiveness of Pride, Vanity, Idleness, and
Gaming in our Women: Of introducing a Vein of Parsimony, Prudence and
Temperance: Of learning to love our Country, wherein we differ even from
Laplanders, and the inhabitants of Topinamboo: Of quitting our Animosities, and
Factions, nor act any longer like the Jews, who were murdering one another at
the very Moment their City was taken: Of being a little cautious not to sell
our Country and Consciences for nothing: Of teaching Landlords to have at least
one degree of Mercy towards their Tenants. Lastly, of putting a Spirit of
Honesty, Industry, and Skill in our Shop-keepers, who, if a Resolution could
now be taken to buy only our Native Goods, would immediately unite to cheat and
exact upon us in the Price, the Measure, and the Goodness, nor could ever be
brought to make one fair Proposal of just Dealing, though often and earnestly
invited to it.” In other words, he suggests that the economy of Ireland is
severely distorted by class-based profligacy. He is sensible enough to barely
touch upon the punitive license that Protestant landlords have been given to
exclude Catholics from the economy in the hope of annihilating all who had
defied England and supported James II and their descendents as well. Instead,
he proposes what one might facetiously call a sensible and kindly form of the
genocide which the Protestant loyalists were in fact perpetrating, thus
exposing the sentimental hypocrisy that disguised Britain’s policies in
Ireland.
In his most famous work, Gulliver’s Travels, Swift again
inconspicuously identifies with the Irish by playfully assimilating their
folk-tales of giants, “little people” and the flying hosts of the Sidhe, while
depicting his hero as an English patriot. Gulliver gives glowing reports of the
laws, practices and customs of his homeland which the rulers of the distant
countries he visits strangely enough seem to reject as either inhumane or
nonsensical. In the fourth book, human nature itself, as embodied in the
Yahoos, is presented as irremediably barbaric compared with the natural virtue,
good sense and dignity of the Houyhnhnms or horse people. At this point in his
book, Swift seems to have lost faith in mankind. His entertaining and
interesting stories contained much food for thought for all those who could
have had an indirect or direct influence on English politics. But few of his
readers seem to have been prepared to listen to his message while they were
enjoying his stories!
Oscar
Wilde who spent his productive life in London and
not in the Ireland of his youth, had a wit that never failed him and a love of
all that was unconventional, beautiful and extravagant. His conviction that art
was to be pursued for its own sake, that stories must be newly invented, not
retold, and that realist concerns were totally out of place in the artistic
world do not, initially, suggest a man with a social conscience. But in his
late essay “The Soul of Man under Socialism” the vision of a good world is much
to the fore. Wilde’s “socialism” that predates the Russian Revolution, is one
in which individual possessions are kept at a minimum and shared by all. He has
in mind a form of socialism that is totally devoid of authoritative
prescriptions. In Wilde’s interpretation, the true meaning of Christ’s
teachings is that each man has the duty and mission to be himself, completely
and uniquely. This goal can be realized in many ways but among other things
through art. In the Victorian world of conformity, where a person was expected
to be like everyone else and behave like everyone else, anything that deviated
from the accepted standard was deeply suspect. The Catholic Irish, their religion
and culture, were among the casualties of such conformity, as were Wilde’s own
homosexual desires. But if life is to reach its full potential, Wilde protests,
all its possibilities have to be explored and ultimately accepted. Man has to
become a “true Individualist”. Wilde lends himself to being quoted and his
ideas are pithiest in his own words: “In the modern stress of competition and
struggle for place, such sympathy [for the true Individualist] is naturally
rare, and is also very much stifled by the immoral ideal of uniformity of type
and conformity to rule which is so prevalent everywhere and is perhaps most
obnoxious in England.” ”[…] the Renaissance was great, because it sought to
solve no social problem, and busied itself not about such things, but suffered
the individual to develop freely, beautifully, and naturally, and so had great
and individual artists, and great and individual men.” “The new work of art is
beautiful by being what Art has never been; and to measure it by the standard
of the past is to measure it by a standard on the rejection of which its real
perfection depends.” “A work of art is the unique result of a unique
temperament. Its beauty comes from the fact that the author is what he is. It
has nothing to do with the fact that other people want what they want.” “A map
of the world that does not include Utopia is not worth even glancing at, for it
leaves out the one country at which Humanity is always landing. And when
Humanity lands there, it looks out, and, seeing a better country, sets sail.
Progress is the realization of Utopias.” “What I mean by a perfect man is one
who develops under perfect conditions; one who is not wounded, or worried, or
maimed, or in danger. Most personalities have been obliged to be rebels. Half
their strength has been wasted in friction .” “The proper aim is to try to
reconstruct society on such a basis that poverty will be impossible.” “Wealthy people are, as a class, better than
impoverished people, more moral, more intellectual, more well behaved. There is
only one class in the community that thinks more about money than the rich, and
that is the poor. The poor can think of nothing else. That is the misery of
being poor.” But charity, Wilde believes, is not the way to help them: “…in the
present state of things in England, the people who do most harm are the people
who try to do most good. … Charity degrades and demoralizes.” It prevents
people from going out and finding their own solutions; it makes them
“welfare-dependent”, a word much used in present-day Australia to describe the
malaise of Aboriginal people. To flourish, people need to be themselves
completely. And being that, they will be an inspiration to others too. As Wilde
sees it, the entire culture has to change if social progress is to come about.
This is not an immediate or practical solution but one in tune with his age of
radical revolutionary thinking.
George
Bernard Shaw, a friend of Wilde and a Fabian
socialist, picked up and reworked some of these ideas in his play Major Barbara, written five years after
Wilde’s death. This is its story and argument: Lady Britomart, a member of
upper class society, had married the gifted foundling Andrew Undershaft, who is
fabulously rich due to his efficient management of the arms factory he
inherited from his adoptive father. Society never likes being directly involved
with such dirty businesses as the manufacture of armaments, so the Undershafts
had a rule that the firm had to be run by a foundling. The money, of course,
that could be earned in this industry was always most attractive. Lady
Britomart rejected her husband once their three children were born but he had
supported them over the years, as was his duty. When the play opens she has,
however, just decided to make contact with him because her children, who have
never earned a penny in their lives, will need more money to establish
themselves in society once they are married. Sarah and her brother are content
to continue living the lives of spoilt parasites. But the intelligent and
passionate Barbara has gone in the opposite direction. She has joined the
Salvation Army and made it her mission to help the poor for whom the Army
provides meager meals on condition that they repent formidable sins (which they
tend to have to make up because in the eyes of the rich the poor are always
morally inferior) and that they loudly confess their faith in the Christian
doctrine of a good God even though they can no longer believe in. It is an
approach perfectly in tune with the values of polite society. The money for
this charitable work is provided by industrialists such as Barbara’s father,
the munitions manufacturer Undershaft. When Barbara realizes this, she leaves
the Army in protest. But a visit to his industrial empire with its emphasis on
the safety of the workplace, the dignity of work, the welfare of the employees,
beauty of design and the care of nature, makes her change her views. It is
decent work, not charity and preaching that the poor need. And the conundrum of
munitions manufacture? Should armaments be sold only to the “good”? Undershaft
is adamant that the manufacturer has no right to meddle in politics by refusing
his wares to those who are not of his nation’s party. And Barbara’s fiancé
enlightens her further: “You cannot have power for good without having power
for evil too. Even mother’s milk nourishes murderers as well as heroes. This
power that only tears men’s bodies to pieces has never been so horribly abused
as the intellectual power, the imaginative power, the poetic, religious power
that can enslave men’s souls.” When Shaw wrote his play the world was about to
enter a period of righteous world wars and massive and brutal utopian projects
that involved industrialization on a grand scale. It has since, of course, been
conceded by most that wars and utopian politics create far more problems than
they solve and ought to be abandoned. But Shaw’s implied suggestion that the
Irish problem too, that was at the time being sympathetically investigated by
the Congested Districts Board (active between 1891 and 1923), was better solved
by providing useful work to the poor than by offering or imposing charity, was
pertinent then and remains valid.
William
Butler Yeats was another writer who came from an
established Anglo-Irish family. He spent his youth in Sligo, London and Dublin.
In London he wrote the beautiful poem “The Lake of Innisfree”, “innis” meaning
“island” in Irish and “free” being an English word:
I will arise and
go now, and go to Innisfree,
And a small
cabin build there, of clay and wattles made;
Nine bean rows
will I have there, a hive for the honey bee,
And live alone
in the bee-loud glade.
While it is a poem of yearning for the
countryside of his childhood, there is an island by that name in Sligo, it is
also a program that Yeats then fulfilled. This involved a return to things
simple and natural, and it involved a nurturing of the freedom of the small
island on which he was born, an island where two languages were spoken, often
in combination, that both needed to be heard. The founding of the Abbey Theatre
in Dublin then gave Yeats a platform from which he could help the ordinary
people of Ireland rediscover their culture, not just as archaic mythology or
superstition but as an indigenous system of values suitable for a modern age
and substantial enough to found a nation upon. It is worth looking at a few of
the 26 plays in his Collected Plays to see what he was trying to tell his
audience. All but one of them were performed at the Abbey.
The
Countess Cathleen is set in a time of famine.
Father and son, Shemus and Teigue, have decided it is better to earn money by
devilish means and sacrifice the insubstantial soul, which probably doesn’t
even exist, than to starve. They sell their souls to the demons disguised as
merchants. Mary, the wife and mother, refuses to be a part of this bargain and
dies of starvation. At this time the young Countess Cathleen, the heiress of an
absentee landlord with vast properties, returns to her childhood home. There
she sees the suffering of the people and is determined to help with all she
has. When tricked into believing that she has lost everything, she decides
instead to sell her beautiful and expensive soul to the merchant devils so she
can feed the people and prevent them thus losing their own souls. The angel
receiving her soul after death reassures us, however, that “The Light of
Lights, looks always on the motive, not the deed, The Shadow of Shadows on the
deed alone.” There are four main messages in this play : 1.The children of
absentee landlords, who have had the benefit of the sort of education that
makes a person compassionate, must return home and help. 2. People have a right
not to starve, even when religious morals suggest they do not. 3. True religion
is embodied in an ethics of love and helpfulness, not suffering. 4. Modern day
evil takes the form of financial exploitation, which drives people to desperate
measures. Famine is thus an economic problem, to be solved by economic
measures.
The
Land of Heart’s Desire tells of Mary, Shawn’s young
wife, who is bored and unsatisfied in her primitive surroundings where there is
nothing to nourish her imagination. She turns to an old book about fairies that
she finds in the rafters. Her mother-in-law decries her laziness while the
priest and the men of the house tell her that as a married woman she can no
longer expect to have a life of her own and her restlessness will disappear
once she has children. She, however, though hesitantly, chooses to abandon the
world of bourgeois and church values to go to a land where joyfulness and
imaginative values flourish, where “the lonely of heart is withered away”,
where even the old are fair and even the wise are “merry of tongue”. There is
no need to be frightened of the much maligned fairy world; even women are
entitled to choose the life they want to live.
In The
Pot of Broth, the farmer’s wife, the mean and greedy Sibby, refuses traditional
hospitality to the tramp who comes to the door. The Tramp gets his due by
tricking her into believing that he owns a stone that can cook a fine broth
(albeit with her ingredients). Her fair-minded husband realizes what is going
on and says nothing. The beggar for his part is careful not to take more than
his liberal due.
The
Green Helmet shows us the superiority of the heroic
ideal that the legendary Cuchulain
represents. The mythical Red Man chooses him over King Conall and Leary who
have dishonestly broken a pledge in order to avoid death. He says: “I choose
the laughing lip/ that shall not turn from laughing, whatever rise or fall/ the
heart that grows no bitterer although betrayed by all/ The hand that loves to
scatter; the life like a gambler’s throw”. Cuchulain is what Australians might
call a larrikin hero.
The
Dreaming of the Bones tells of a young fugitive
from the Post Office battle for Irish independence who asks a stranger and a
young woman he meets on a bleak hillside to help him hide. This is desolate
country haunted by lost souls. It turns out that the couple are Diarmuid and
Dervorgilla, the 12th century King of Leinster and his lover who
called in the Normans to help them avoid the punishment of exile imposed on
them. It is Dervorgilla who introduces herself and her lover as “that most
miserable, most accursed pair/ who sold their country into slavery; and yet/
they were not wholly miserable and accursed/ if somebody of their race at last
would say, ‘I have forgiven them’.” But this is the one thing the patriot, with
his narrow nationalist values where even legendary love means nothing, will
never be able to do, for it was this act that ended up causing the centuries of
Troubles in Ireland. He answers: “O, never, never / Shall Diarmuid and
Dervorgilla be forgiven.”
The
Only Jealousy of Emer shows Cuchulain’s much
wronged wife Emer beside the dying hero. She has had the magnanimity to call
his young mistress Eithne Inguba to his side. And faced with the choice of
relinquishing him to a Woman of the Sidhe or releasing him, she does the
latter, though she knew that the dying hero would call for the arms of Eithne
Inguba, her rival. True love, the play tells us, is prepared to give up the
beloved if it is in his interests rather than insisting on ownership and
inviolable marriage rights.
There is a certain simplicity to Yeats’
plays but they are intended for simple people, people whose ethical instincts
have for centuries been interfered with by a doctrinaire and self-serving Roman
Catholic Church. By drawing his examples from the myths and legends they were
familiar with, Yeats gave the Irish back their heritage in a purified and
usable form.
John
Millington Synge was the first of the modern Irish
writers to realize that it was necessary to meet and get to know real Irish
people in their own natural surroundings if one wished to understand them
enough to help them regain their self-esteem and confidence. And more than
that, you had to learn to speak their language to understand how it had modified
and changed the English they spoke so that they were only seemingly using your
language. Synge, who also travelled for the Congested Districts Board reporting
to the Manchester Guardian, then
spent the better part of five years living with the locals on the primitive
Aran islands, sharing their lives and learning to feel at home in their
language. He eventually published a detailed diary of his observations and
experiences. Synge also stayed on the Blasket Islands and in County Wicklow.
The plays he wrote for the Abbey Theatre were psychological studies of people
living in a pre-modern world, rather than the moral sermons Yeats produced.
Synge understood how women felt, women who had again and again lost husbands
and sons to the sea and were eventually left with a household of females,
unable to support themselves adequately in this harsh life with its entrenched
rules and customs. Their sense of tragedy was not the impassioned protest of
Greek princesses addressing callous deities, but the exhausted resignation of
people for whom, realistically speaking, there had never been any way of life
that could have led to happiness. That is the story of Riders to the Sea.
Synge’s comedy Playboy of the Western World caused riots when it was
performed in Ireland and the United
States. It tells the following story: In a primitive and isolated farm cottage
a young woman is awaiting her marriage to a young man for whose cowardliness
and unthinking obedience to the priest she has little respect. A disturbed
fugitive turns up at the door. When pressed, he confesses in terror that he has
just beaten his niggardly and despotic father to death. To his amazement not
only his hostess but all the young and old women of the area now see him as
their hero, a strong man with the courage to do something about the dictatorial
authority they all suffer from in their lives. They all want to marry him. This
unexpected adulation causes the shy and awkward young man to excel in the games
being put on by the village next day and his status as hero rises still
further. Unfortunately, however, it emerges that the beating had not quite
killed the father who has meanwhile also taken to the road to haul his son and
slave back home. When this is revealed, the unsuccessful murderer suffers an
instant and shameful loss of prestige. He decides that he will have to do the
deed again more thoroughly. But his father is too tough and it is now this
heroic survivor who impresses the fickle women. The young man is no longer
welcome. In the end he has to accompany his father back home without getting any
of the women who had wanted him for their husband. But he goes in the knowledge
that he is a young man who will only grow stronger with the years while his
father an old man who can only grow weaker. So by the laws of nature he will be
the winner in the long run. The simple story gives deep insights into the
mentality of a rural Irish society in which women and the young traditionally
have nothing to say. Reading between the lines, the play makes it obvious,
however, that Irish women have far more entrepreneurial spirit and far more
energy and wit than their men who are all weaklings, drunkards, gamblers or
exploiters. You need to understand such things when you take it upon yourself
to help the poor, as the people of the Congested Districts Board were.
Without betraying their artistic standards,
these young writers found a place for themselves from where they could
contribute to the struggle of the Irish people for dignity, justice and a life
worth living.
Other
Contributors:
James
Joyce writes about Irish people living between the dictatorship
of Catholicism and the beauty of a natural life. In Ulysses, Stephen
Dedalus stands for the contorted and conflicted position of the indoctrinated
but rebellious Catholic caught between the Church he hates and loves and
humanist values. Stephen is far too belligerent for his own good; he is also
too easily tempted to drown his sorrows in drink. And he is too doctrinaire to
fulfill his mother’s dying wish, even though, paradoxically, the doctrine he
stands for is a protest against doctrine. Moreover, he is in the grip of lust
rather than love when he meets women: a patron of brothels racked by guilt.
Leopold Bloom, the Jew, on the other hand
may not be virtuous by bourgeois standards but as a humanist, a caring, loving
human being, he cannot be faulted. And his adulterous wife Molly recognizes
this and feels free to fully enjoy her lover without ever feeling guilty
towards her husband, who knows about the other man but avoids meeting him for
simple reasons of tact and decency. The Blooms are rare people but Irish
society as a whole is far more like Dedalus, a society of pugnacious, lustful,
righteous and unkind men who try to escape their problems through alcohol. That
is what Roman Catholicism has done to the Irish people. This is something only a
person who was brought up an Irish Catholic could have written about.
In Samuel
Beckett’s plays, in turn, we find a deep compassion for the people who have
been thrown irreversibly on the scrap heap of life, like so many of the
disadvantaged Irish in the “congested districts” were, people for whom there
was never any hope. He teaches us to see the humanity, the comedy and the
tragedy in meaningless, even sub-human lives. These days, it is a message that
seems to have reached the dementia wards of our nursing homes with their kindly
nursing staff.
Seamus
Heaney, the most recent Irish Nobel Prize Laureate,
succeeded in drawing attention to the beauty and richness of the simple lives
of rural people like the Irish farmers he grew up with, people who cared for
the earth and the landscape they loved but were for so long looked down upon by
the “better classes”.
What the Irish writers of the twentieth
century produced was socially relevant, enlightening and useful and it was also
beautiful and wise, all at the same time. While adversity may destroy those it
strikes, it can heighten the creativity, humanity and understanding of the
compassionate who take up their cause and are determined to bring about a
better, fairer world. It is an awkward lesson to learn that a polarized society,
in which injustices cry out to be rectified, can also nurture the best and most
creative in people.
[1] This draft essay is
particularly indebted to Joseph Campbell
The Masks of God: Occidental Mythology,
Penguin Books, New York, London, Ringwood et al.., 1964 etc. ISBN 0 14 00 4306
3
and
Thomas Cahill How the Irish Saved
Civilization. Hinges of History. Hodder and Stoughton, London 1995. ISBN 0
340 63787 0.