September
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Friday 1/9
7:35 am

An article in 'In Dublin' points out that less than 1% of Americans with Irish surnames could tell you what the Red Branch was, or who Cuchullain was, but most of them could tell you who King Arthur was, and who Merlin was, and that the Irish don't market their history very well. Stating the bloody obvious.
I could do it. Find the information, get the graphics together, and all it would take would be the National Museum to give me appropriate amounts of Research and Development money. And it would be better than The Viking Exhibition.

and, on a radio quiz, some Dublin dork didn't know from which novel by Dickens involves a character named Tiny Tim (A Christmas Carol, in case you're wondering), or in which County Cape Clear was (Cork, but he guessed Mayo),

2:40pm
Kilmainham Jail

Seen the video, now the tour.
Escape stories. Bolt cutters, but Paddy Moran got hung anyway, even though he didn't do it. Plunkett and Grace Gifford married on the eve of his execution. 10 minutes, then shot. Markoweitz. Pearse, and in the next cell, his brother, unknown to each other. And Connolly and De Valera and Parnell, and the execution yards, and The Invincibles who were vincible, and the Fianna Eireann, and The Astor landing at Howth, bringing in the guns; and the simple crosses, one at either end of the Stonebreakers Yard.
And I bought a copy of Emmet's Speech, from a woman who got really passionate about the injustices wrought against the Irish. Hey, I'm with you, lady.

Out, through the carved gateway of the manacled serpents, to Emmet Street.

 

Saturday 2/9

10:31am
Irish Tourism Office

 

 

 

 

Liffey Swim

Ladies 4:15
Mens    5:00


begins          Watling Bridge
ends             Burgh Quay

5:20pm
And there's hundreds of the mad buggers, swimming the Liffey, and no doubt they'll all be suffering some kind of intestinal nightmares tomorrow. Still, it was fun to watch the Jack Yeats painting come to life. And the guys leaping off the Ha'penny Bridge are actually living out a fantasy I've often had crossing it.

6:18pm
according to the news, divorce causes the sexual abuse of children. Bejaysus, do priests get divorced ?

 

Sunday 3/9
3:25pm

Whelan's

And the main game is about to start. Shannon and I have just nipped down to to watch this thing.
Offaly have scored the first point, and after 10 minutes and 2 seconds, Clare scores. Even listening on the radio you can here the bodhran beaters in the crowd.

3:43pm
And Clare have just taken the lead, 3-2.

3:50pm
But Johnny Dooley's last point has put Offaly back in the lead.

3:52pm
And Johnny just hit another one !

4:14pm
Offaly 1.6, Clare 0.8

4:28pm
And Clare have just levelled the score.
Offaly 1.7, Clare 0.10
But Johnny Polkington's just scored for Offaly.

4:35pm
Offaly 2.7, Clare 0.10

and Conor Clancy's been injured, in the head, but they're strong these boys, "as strong as two horses", apparently.

now Kevin Kinehan's done his knee. Not looking good for Clare.
Fergus Tuohy, a point for Clare, two points the difference, less than a goal the difference.

and Clare leads! with less than 4 minutes to go. Eamonn Taft goaled!
Offaly 2.8, Clare 1.11

number 11 for Offaly's stuffed. They're bringing out the spray.

another Clare point, by Anthony Daly! The other three in Whelan's are going nuts.

Clare has a free!

they've won! The crowd invades the field. Score, Offaly 2:8 - Clare 1.13

 

Monday 4/9
7:10am
Noises from the flat downstairs, odd noises, imagining the havoc that the fat arsonist and his gang of shitheads were creating throughout Tailor's Court. Then beginning to imagine having to do a lecture on 'Ireland', thinking of the words, and Tara and Cruachain and Emain Macha and Queen Medh and Cuchullain and Saint Patrick and King Loighaire, and how St Patrick has become the Cuchullain of Irish religion. And then, naturally, the secularism the equivalent of fascist thought.

8:13am
Bewleys, Westmoreland Street. A mug of black coffee and a pot of Earl Grey. The usual. Jillian serves, enveloping herself in steam as she warms each pot.

9:50am
Ages spent in a zonked-out kind of newspaper reading mode, the French and their precious bombe, the state of the British Labour Party, the first live gig by the Stone Roses in five years, and a Steeleye Span reunion concert, and the German economic system is working wonders, apparently.

11:02am
Hodges Figgis
Caoineadh - keen, lament, elegy, cry, weep
ki:n'e (with an upside down 'e') - more or less "keenya"

So, I guess the Davy Spillane track on Riverdance translates into something like Cuchullain's Lament or Elegy for Cuchullain. There's all the pain of the Famine in that tune. I'm guessing that keening is the usual translation.

And looking through the Irish Fiction section, getting buttonholed by some woman, Spanish I think, wanting Irish fiction to improve her English. Dubliners, or Portrait of the Artist? Definitely not Ulysses. Yeats. Behan's 'Borstal Boy', Keane's 'Bodhran Makers', she seems to go ecstatic over Oscar Wilde, Kavanagh's 'Green Fool'. She wants things with dialogue, question and answers. Shit, lady, I can't remember. Browse. Leave in the company of her slightly aggro son, whose idea of hell is ending up in bookshops with his mother.

10:30pm
Wonder if the Clare supporters are still vaguely wandering the streets of Dublin, still wearing their saffron and blue tops, with matching strips of plaited wool have found their way back to Clare by now. They all had this utterly forlorn miserable look on their faces, as they they'd tried hard to celebrate all night long, fell asleep god-knows-where-because-they-can't-remember-either, and are hoping their tour bus is waiting for them, if only they could remember where it was parked. And 'it's a long long way from Clare to here' is haunting their haze.

 

Tuesday 5/9
8:00am
News .. Greenpeace raids on Murora Atoll; a ship load of cars is sinking somewhere, and a Japanese radio station broadcasts nothing but the sound of a human heartbeat 24 hours a day .. and Mark Kennedy is being flown into Vienna for the Ireland vs Austria soccer match, whoever he may be, and NATO warplanes have 'roared' over Serbian territory, whatever that means.

9:02am
Museum, and the security guard, Maeve, is from Belfast. She's cleaning one of the cabinets.

10:45am
at morning coffee, the guy being pointed out who was, apparently, Ireland's leading archaeologist, but who gave it away and got into tourism instead, specializing in tourism for the well-heeled. The group with him looked as though they dripped money. Bet they stay at places like the Shelbourne and Ashford Castle.

Sitting in the work room, reading the Illustrated History, stories of Newgrange, St Patrick, Vikings, Strongbow, Cromwell, the Battle of the Boyne, Famine, Emmet. Read for about an hour, 'til about 2:30, 'til I though that maybe I should get back to the Round Towers. Utterly bored with Westropp's Round Towers. Done nearly three-quarters of all the Round Towers in Ireland, TJW must have been on a personal mission to photograph every bloody Round Tower, from the huge, complete ones; to the weird ones, the kind of ones that begin hexagonally than become circular, to the ones where only the 'stump' remains, and he has a habit of taking two photographs, presumably 'front' and 'back', or 'north' and 'south' views or something, then another one, a close-up of the entrance.

And I think I figured out why neither Cuchullain nor Medh nor anything between Newgrange and Saint Patrick gets a mention. Because there's elements in those stories which are mythological. And, apparently, for too long Irish history has been denigrated as 'mere' mythology. Maybe that's why they pay it such scanty regard in general. Maybe that's why The Tain Trail is so hard to pick up. Why Cuchullain's stone is rarely visited, why Ferdia's ford in Ardee is not sign-posted.

6:46pm
and tonight, the demo is on at the French Embassy.

7.29pm
'Glennagalt' is another madman's glen, which according to 'Visiting the Places' is 8 miles west of Tralee. And despite bringing home the half-inch maps from the Museum, still can't find it. From the description, it's similar to Sweeney's Glen Bolcain, with mind-restoring fresh water and cress. I guess I'll have to find it on the 6 inch maps, somehow. 8 miles 'west' is pretty vague.

Finished the Illustrated History. Ends on 31 August 1994, the day of the ceasefire, with the headline 'Peace At Last!'. Bet they didn't think that a year later, the Brits would not even be able to agree to a date for all-party talks to begin. Still wrangling over the decommissioning of IRA weapons. Odd, aren't the Proddy groups armed as well? Why is only one side being told to lay down their weapons? Maybe it's just something I don't get.

11:00pm
And the bloody French have just exploded their first 'test' bomb, somewhere near Tahiti. They're being accused of 'Napoleonic Arrogance', which may be an unfortunate comparison as, no doubt, Chirac would be probably flattered by the comparison. Which reminds me, what is the French for "you stupid French ass" ?
And Austria defeated Ireland 1-0.

Spent most of the evening reading The Beckett Country. Childhood, spent in Foxrock, walking the Dublin Mountains. Glencree. Hell Fire Club. And must have a look at 6 Clare Street upper windows. Either he lived there for a while, or the main character of More Pricks Than Kicks, or Murphy, does. Couldn't concentrate, or take it all in, as I've only read Waiting For Godot, which is apparently set in the Wicklow Mountains, and Vladimir and Estragon both speak with an Irish lilt, apparently. Never noticed, actually.

 

Wednesday 6/9
6:58am
the 'peace process' threatened, as the Brits have cancelled the Anglo-Irish summit.

9:05am
Museum.
Safe, I guess, apart from meeting Ned, walking up Kildare Street, with his stupid hat on. He's 'deaf in the street', the result of overdoing the masturbation, he says.

10:19am
And now, roll the drums and blast the trumpets, I've catalogued the negatives of photographs taken of every Round Tower in Ireland. The one at Ferns looks the best, it's attached to a ruined cathedral.

11.45am
Glennagalt = Gleann na nGealt, also called Glannagalt, according to O'Donovan. But can't find it on the map, either. Just descriptions of how to get there. Maybe they figure that you'll find it naturally if you need to, Like Sweeney did. Yep, he hung out there too.

Lunchtime
HF and Waterstones.
Got watched by the security in HF, while I was browsing. Damn, and I was contemplating shoving The Annals of the Four Masters down me jocks, along with the complete works of Stephen King, in hardback, too.

5:32pm
Dublin Bookshop, in Grafton Street, watching the sailors from the Vespucci watch the girls in school uniform, who were probably watching someone who looked like someone in Boyzone but probably wasn't.

'Hollandais Cakes' from Kylemore Bakery. The girls who work in there have to wear stupid pink hats and uniforms with pink trims. No wonder they look so miserable, although maybe it was just the time of day.

6:00pm
And just had the only cigarette for the day, and eaten the Hollandais cake.
Borrowed O'Donovan's O.S.Letters on County Kerry, vaguely hoping he's got something to say about Glennagalt, or Glannagalt. Bet he won't.

6:28pm
Bloody hell, he does! Two pages no less, so here goes ...

8.50pm
And the local yobs have kicked in the back door of the building on the other side of Chancery Lane, setting off the demented alarm. Maybe they imagine they're only pissing off the owners of the buildings who have to appear sometime and turn the bloody thing off. That's if they're capable of imagining anything anyway, which I strongly doubt. They have heads full of shite.

 

Thursday 7/9
7:16am
Riots in Tahiti. Excellent!

9:01am
Museum, via St Stephens Green, hoping for a little last minute Liam-spotting. But it looked as though it was only the stunt team for Michael Collins. Wonder what Michael Collins did that calls for a stunt team?

9:44am
And TJW 20:24 is a negative of the Railway Station Man from Ballybunnion Station, in Co Kerry, in 1909. In his neat uniform, beside his gleaming engines, both tooting away as the steam roars from both.

12.32pm
Looking through 6" map after 6" map of Kerry. Found Glannagalt .. and .. Sweeney's well!
And Ardfert. Bloody Ardfert. Looking at the photos, and wondering if I'd cleaned up the individuals who may have been buried under those gravestones.
And then .. the miracle .. a named individual, a Michael Fox, in the horse and cart on Smerwick Strand. Incredible. Wonder who he was? A local? Maybe one of Westropp's gophers? They guy with whom Westropp got pissed the night before?

In Nassau Street, Judge Roy Beans' has a notice in its window telling all that French wine has been removed from its stocks, and if you think it's safe - test it in Paris.

9.27pm
Reading about The Tain.

Medh, or Maeve, had to have 30 men per day, or Fergus once. The Lia Fail, the penis of Fergus itself.
Sharkey's book, Padraig na Searcaigh, mentions the possibility that the real Lia Fail is now buried under Rath Cruachan. Wonder if she woke up in the morning, pondering the daily question, then maybe asking a team of servants "bring the royal Fergus".
The Tain has an episode when Cuchullain kills a woman, Finnabair, this way.

If I ever give a lecture that includes a reference to the Lia Fail, I'm going to begin it with "All of you who think it looks like a penis, smile."

 

Friday 8/9
8:04am
On the bus, the 6B to Kerrymount Avenue in Foxrock. Still waiting. No, moving! Eden Quay. Don't know what happened to the 86 from Fleet Street, just wasn't there. Timetable's the same though.

D'Olier Street, Trinity, Nassau. Yes, it all seems familiar, 6 Clare Street, Merrion Row North. Holles. Northumberland Road. US Embassy, must be Ballsbridge, and that's the Dodder down there, flowing against rocks, shallowly. Anglesea Road, pass the RDS. Ailesbury Rd, Stillorgan (must have a Glascock). RTE. A scoill, girls green long green/white tartan. Wish we'd sent the kids there. Texaco has a 'GAA Special Glass Offer'. On the right 'Oatlands College'. In Stillorgan now, a detour, a thatched pub. The woman with the book opposite has disappeared. St John of God. Daughters of the Cross. Disciples of the Divine Master. Turning, Mart Lane, Westminster, Torquay Road right, Brighton Rd left.

8:39am
Kerrymount Avenue. Ascail An Cheire.
the bus driver gave me 'the shout'.

8:42am
And, on the corner, Cooldrinagh. On the second floor is a bay window, the room in which Sam Beckett was born.
Wonder if the tennis court was there then?

8:46am
And the present owner of Cooldrinagh has just wheeled out two massive rubbish bins for collection. I guess the bins will wait, together, side by side, like Endgame.

8:56am
Tullow Church.
current rector: Rev'd Kenneth Kearan
Tel. 2893135

9:02am
And 'Manor House', in the Brennanstown Road, is for sale. One and half acres. 'Impressive Residence' the sign says. Maybe understating it a little. 'Fecking Huge' might be better.

9:08am
Barrington Tower, Foley's Folly, hidden behind housing. Dolmen House, bet they've got it somewhere. Probably have to buy the house to see it, at least it's for auction, by 'Lisney' 6615222

9:12am
Or Druid Glen? next door. This place has it's own dolmen.

9:28am
Cabinteely.

9:50am
Cornelscourt.
Waiting for the 84. Over the road is the Cornelscourt Bridge. Behind me is the 'Magic Carpet' restaurant. Have no idea how long the wait for the bus will be, as I can't figure out the timetable, although a bus left Bray at 9:30, it may have ...

9:58am
The 'local' DB bus driver gives me a lift to the 46A bus stop, near Kill Lane on the Stillorgan Road. 4 k's to Dun Laoghaire, 2 to Kill Of The Grange.

10:14am
the 46A arrives, finally. Richer Than A Cranberry.

11.14am
Through Temple Bar, an exhibition called 'I Love You'. Photographs. Hands held, the three Kavanagh women. School stuff, a blackboard with 'fantasize' written all over it, folded school uniforms. A child's drawing of the things she loves, including 'my dog' and 'my god'.
Across the bridge to Capel Street, then Strand Street and into Behans. The woman there tells me "the band, about 9." Cruachan, which seems to be something's connected. In Cornelscourt Dunne's supermarket, the newsagency, National Geographic has yet another article on the origins of man in East Africa. The article's by Meave Leakey. Yet another bloody Leakey paleoarchaeologist. Pictures of teeth and jaws. Drawings of legs. Must read it. But Meave? She's a long way from Cruachan, a long way from Roscommon. A long way from there to here.
Another anti-French demo at the GPO on
Saturday, at 3:30

12:20pm
from the bus, a Celtic circle and a Celtic cross within it, maybe a Maltese cross, at the entrance to St Stephens Green, drawn in chalk.

12.47pm
And C's just rung the Dublin Corporation to inform them that raw sewage is flowing down Lord Edward Street. Can't believe that no-one else has rung. Not one person. None of the shopkeepers for whom shit is thick outside their premises. They promised to take care of it this afternoon. By then, it will have made it's way, oozing and follooping down Dame Street, to College Green, flowed through the entrance to Trinity College, over the cobbles and through the arch. Jaysus, they're probably so used to shit down there that, by tonight, it'll have been enrolled, have a student card, and getting itself a drink at the student bar.

 

Saturday 9/9
6:22pm
Copying out screeds from Heart of Ireland, which has just a tad more detail about Saint Patrick and the deaths of Laoghaire's daughters, on pages 368-370.


10:45pm
Behans.
"We're Cruachan, and we're from Pagan Ireland !" Yeah, right, if Tallaght counts as Pagan Ireland. Still, I applaud what these guys are trying to do, but it was just too feckin' loud, and my ears are still ringing, even though I could only stay for the first four or five pieces, after 'Brian Boru', but before 'The Exile of the Sons of Uisneach' was introduced.

   
drums
bass  
 
accoustic guitar/
mandolin
 
electric guitar
whistle/
flute
bodhran
     
keyboard

Most of the band were dressed as mighty warriors, kilts and plaids and brooches, except the drummer and the crippled keyboard player. Jaysus, it'd be easy to rag these guys as poseurs, as heavy metal wankers, but that would too easily dismiss the idea. And the idea is brilliant. So obvious, you have to applaud these guys for the doing of it. The Tain and the other mythological cycles do lend themselves to heavy metal, the idea of 'swordland', and the heroes and the bravery and battles and slaughter, and slightly evil queens, and mighty kings swearing dreadful oaths, and sudden death, and brutal combat, raining death upon the enemy, and revenge, and acts of great tenderness and the appeal to other gods. Yet they were just too ordinary. Everything loud, the vocals sung in a demonic torment so they could not be understood. Don't kid yourselves that your material is beyond generational definition. The stories are mine, and yours. And when the heavy metal took over, as it too often did, they were no better than any other head-banging boyos on the night. The 'trad' stuff was leaden and repititious.

Still, it only cost £2.50, and a definite bonus was at a nearby table was the Henry Street hair-wrapping goddess herself. Most of the audience in their heavy metal uniforms. T-shirts of Entombed, Blood and Death, and Satan, while Napalm Death was also a popular choice.

much later
And thinking about Cruachan, the band. Guess it's hard not to when your ears are still ringing. I should be manager of that band. Add a fiddler and dispense with the bodhran. Get a better drummer, the one from the support band was much better, and impose a total ban on cymbals. A second vocalist, one capable of singing less like the mandatory demon from hell that seems to be obligatory. Hell, if your songs tell stories, then let the stories be told. And, for a reasonable amount of time, get quiet. Loud is not loud if there's nothing else but loud, I suppose there's louder. But if it's as loud as the system can be loud, then it's monotonous and boring. The stories, the tales, the songs are not boring, life, death, honour, glory and love cannot be boring. And get a chick in the band, a heavy metal chick, the goddess of Henry Street herself maybe. Women feature in the tales, Medh, Emer, let them speak for themselves. Or is heavy metal, by definition, sexist? Jaysus, almost feel like reading The Tain again, and what was The Exile of the Sons of Uisneach all about?

 

Sunday 10/9
1:43pm
PortoBello Pub, on Richmond Street, near the Grand Canal bridge, and a wee bit a session happening, a couple of fiddles, a flute, accordion, a few guitars, mandolin, and banjo. We're nearer the back, where there's books around the walls, ones that haven't been read in a long time. 'The Complete Book of Gymnastics', 'Shardik' and 'The Complete History of Education', jaysus, think I'll give that one a miss.

6:30pm
And the Grand Canal Tour walk was, well, wet. Beginning from the Portobello Bridge, in front of the old hotel where Jack B Yeats lived in the 1950's, then Leeson Bridge, Paddy Kavanagh, Baggott Bridge, stories about each bridge along the way, and the water clear enough to see the garbage, the traffic cones, the guitar shell, to the Waterways Information Centre, where there's working models of canals and locks, drawings, some artefacts, Paddy's poem on the joys of just sitting by the Canal, then a polite round of applause for our tour guide, Ruth.

7:20pm
And the Patrick Street Londis just got better. They now have the legendary Banshee Bones.

On the way down, noticing the advertising for the nearly refurbished Iveagh Baths, showing people working out and swimming. Remind me to avoid paying the undoubtedly exorbitant membership fees.

 

Monday 11/9
1.45pm
St Enda. The Pearse Museum.
If Pearse had his way, Ireland would be totally Irish speaking. And, according to the guide, an attitude that got right up Joyce's nose, as Pearse's way of promoting Irish involved the denigration of English. Think I'm with Joyce on this one. Anyway, we've been given the tour, by a white-haired man who seems to live in the past, say 'yes' a lot, and gets lost mid sentence. We're shown the Headmasters Room, Willie's sculpture, the photographs, the exhibition of display cases, from childhood through to the 'legacy', and the places in between. Apparently, Eveleen Nicholls was Patrick's only love interest. No more than an interest.


2:32pm
Rathfarnham Castle.
The guide, Orca or Orla - Orla probably, can't imagine too many parents naming their daughter after a whale, taking us on a tour, even though it's only C and me in the group. Through the castle, most of which is in the midst of renovations. Staircases moved, revealing walls built by successive owners, furniture and fittings flogged off by others. Brilliant ceilings. The Greek influenced architects in one corner, the Italianates in the other. The reception room, ballroom, ladies rooms, gentlemens rooms, no bathrooms, the two bedrooms, niches for the chamberpots in the stairwells. The awful paintings left in some of the ceilings by the Jesuit owners.
Still, probably enjoyed it more being half renovated than complete. The stories of the renovations being as interesting as the 'what happened here' stories. The 1½ tons of water bending the ceiling; the resin used violating the 'Code of Venice' which forbids irreversibility. The 'ghost'. The girl in the yellow dress, after being locked in a cupboard while the two duellists competed for her hand, successfully killing each other, and leaving her to die in the cupboard. Her bones apparently crumbling to dust, but her yellow dress bring cut up to make cushions by Lady Blackburn. Yeah, right. Good story, though. Amazing, these Irish girls that just seem to die on the spot.
Still, Orla was cute. Red haired and freckled. Obviously an architecture student from somewhere, with skinny legs and all.

6:15pm
And while I've been sitting out here on the balcony, some kid from Swifts, after pressing the buzzers and getting no answer, and not getting in, decided to throw a screwdriver through the window above the entrance. Jaysus, I mean, that's normal, isn't it. What an utterly brainless and stupid prick.

The garda is being called. I saw it happen, if I'm asked to identify anybody, I'll suddenly not remember. Christ, these bastards know where I live. Our windows would be next.

6:32pm
The garda are here, the screwdriver throwing prick is David Johnston. He's known to them, as an utterly malicious bastard. Not that I care, but you do have to wonder about what's been done to kids like him that turned him into the shite that he is.

9:50pm
And the boyos who are part of David Johnston's gang, are back on Bride Street. I'm wondering if it's possible to plan mindless acts of violence, or if that's a contradiction in terms. They're all stupid pricks, anyway. The fat arsonist is one of them.

10:50pm
And, according to 'Visiting the Places', Rathmooney is where Cuchullain wooed Emer. Two miles north of Lusk, known as a 'bruiden' hostel. Which were centres of feasting, apparently.

 

Tuesday 12/9
9:00am

Museum.
Not feeling particularly safe, with thoughts of the bastards who'd do anything to get inside Tailors Court. And with the Junior Cert results out today, they'll be pissed as well, an annual binge, according to the news.

10:06am
Westropp has photographed Ardfert Abbey. Didn't know they had an Abbey and a Cathedral,
and something called Temple-ne-hoe (Temple of the Virgins).

 

5:06pm
And Michael Hutchence has just been fined £2000 for belting a photographer. Maybe they should've just put him in a room with Bob Geldof for five minutes. Can't imagine that Bob's a big INXS fan.

5:53pm
Down to Colm's the Chemist. Didn't get Colm this time, may have been Colm's grand-daughter, she's better looking than Colm, despite the caked-on make-up. She looks kind of orange. It's a popular look around here.

7:42pm
And in Liam's essay for art, regarding prehistoric art, begins "Newgrange kicks Stonehenge's butt". Bet that'll impress his art teacher.

Much later

Didn't get back the the session at the Auld Dubliner 'til after midnight. The best session so far. Two pipers, Donnica and Ollie, and the bodhran player from Boa Island. Tunes, long, long, sets of 'em, the piper's are firing off each other. Great. On the way, discovered I'm a two pint man.
And all the Junior Cert people are in the streets, some trying to buy drinks at the bar. The chicks tarted up to glory, 15 year olds trying to be 20. Sad.

 

Wednesday 13/9
9:35am

Museum
Westropp wrote that
"In Tooreen, not very far away, another outrage on our antiquities was avenged on the perpetrator. A man blew up a dolmen to clear his land, and in the explosion he was struck on his right hand by a splinter of stone, and was long crippled"
TJ Westropp. Prehistoric Remains (Fonts and Dolmens) in the Corofin District, CO Clare (No. XI) p.238

4:35pm
According to the news, they're about to crack down on the black market tobacco and cigarette sellers in Henry Street, again. This time they've come up with an economic argument, about how much revenue is lost to the government because kiddies can buy cigarettes for £2 a pack, rather than the £3 in the shops. Shows how much they know. On the streets, they're £1.50. Guess the previous argument didn't really have that much impact on the Irish. Health. Jaysus, as if that's going to cause the thousands of kiddie smokers to suddenly give it away. But, if I can't by the Samsons anymore, maybe I really will have to stop. In the shops, Samson's are £7.

 

Thursday 14/9
7:00am

and during the night, sounds of violence outside. Two guys, one slightly more paralytic than the other. The really pissed one wanting to lie down on the road, his friend just trying to drag, shove, roll, push, hit, abuse him off it. Getting him near the footpath, only to have him lurch back again, and lie down again.
Stayed awake thinking of why someone would have a death wish like that, and wondering if his parents were proud of their sons' death wish, wonder if they even knew their boyo was pissed and wanting nothing more than to die.
Then, later, hearing the sound of an ambulance, and wondering if this boyo's wish had been granted. Also, on the news, a man kicked and punched and robbed of £1.50. Maybe he was keeping it especially, intending to buy the new 'In Dublin', due out today. And today is, apparently, the first of three 'Daisy Days', supporting the depression support group AWARE. Maybe they should have been around here last night.

3:14pm
Museum
'Checking current index records - please wait'. Okay then, but I've been waiting a suspiciously long time, somehow holding down the f8 function has stopped it in its tracks. A whole bunch of Promontory Forts in a townland called Courtmacsherry.

6:46pm
A radio competition has a two week holiday in Australia as its first prize, and the idea of winning, at the moment, is kind of tempting.

Reading Voices in Ireland, by P.J. Kavanagh. The literary uses of Ireland's places. Read the Cruachan stuff first, and it's all there. Glen Bolcain, St Molings, other writers, other places. 'At Swim Two Birds' is set in the Red Swan pub in Lower Leeson Street, but there's no pub with that name there. Pity, I'd have a pint there if was.

 

Friday 15/9
8:29am
The Bosnian Serbs are withdrawing from Sarajevo.
Does this mean that all the 'hunry and homeless' beggars, who suddenly discovered there Bosnian ethnicity in Dublin, are about to piss off home ?

9:30am
Waiting for the 41, to Dublin Airport.

"This goes to the airport ?" I'm asked.
"Yes."
"Uhporthen ?"
"Pardon ?"
"Uhporthen ?"
"I guess so, yes."
"Oh, you don't know," he says.
Well, if I knew what uhporten was, I might. It wasn't airport.

11:25am
Dublin Airport
My Dad's arrived.

7:44pm
National Concert Hall
With Liam, in our places, Red Balcony 19 & 20.

7:50pm
The choir appears, then the Orchestra, then tuning.

8:00pm
Then Liam O'Flynn. It's the Brendan Voyage, live. If you have no idea what The Brendan Voyage is, by Shaun Davey, then there's something seriously missing in your life.

9:05pm
And near the end, I'm near tears. And applauding 'til my hands hurt. There's presentations, flowers, framed CD's. Happy Birthday Liam.

9:10pm
Now Gulliver, the new one. The fiddler at the back is rather cute, and I do believe that viola player over there is chewing, she'll probably spit in a minute. Over on the Blue Side, is Shaun Davey himself.

about seventy minutes later
Bits of Gulliver were excellent, anthemic, spine-tingling, but between those moments there was stuff that wasn't, well, quite, together.

 

Saturday 16/9
morning

To Moore Street, for the fruit and vegies, loaded up in the backpack. Then, along O'Connell Street, over the bridge, Westmoreland Street.
"What's that ?" Dad asks.
"Trinity," I reply, for the third time in two days.

We go in. Through, over the cobbles, around, waiting in the queue, with millions of American tourists. No, it's quite alright, I'm just carrying at least 100 pounds of fruit and vegies. We're herded like cattle through the Kells exhibits, the information, the book itself, the Book of Durrow, the Book of Armagh.
Then through to the Long Room. Which absolutely blows Dad away.

Stupid American question of the day, "Why does Aristotle have an 'f' in it ?". The Spirit of Gump lives on.

later
To Grangegorman Upper.
Down Bridge Street, and along the Quays, up Queen Street. Grangegorman Lower, then Upper. Passing old warehouses, then, after the £1 entrance, Holy Bleedin' Sacred Heart o'Jaysus, Dublin as it was in 1916, just after the GPO's been shot to shit, and there's Clery's, Mooney's, the Turkish Baths, Hannans, asbestos socks, trams, armored cars.

It's the set for Michael Collins, and it's breathtaking. There's voices roaring over loudspeakers, there's Red Cross nurses, uniforms, Black and Tans, Merrion House, tram tracks, cobbled road.

6:00pm
A Dublin Castle tour, taken by Tara. Good name for an Irish tour guide. I'm the only one to ask a question on the tour. If Connolly was injured, why did they bring him to the Castle, and not a hospital. Because, apparently, it was used as a hospital then. Still, I asked. The other tourists were mostly French. Maybe they didn't understand Tara. Maybe they didn't have Jacque Chirac's permission to speak, or to question.

7:50pm
The Savoy

11:20pm
Braveheart is a bloody good movie. Glad I saw it in an Irish cinema, as they clapped and cheered when the Irish joined with the Scottish after charging down into the battlefield on the orders of the English. Almost a deathless silence before that moment though, as every Irish mind was thinking "surely we didn't ... ", then relief, as no, they didn't.

Seriously impressed by the successful attempt of Dublin cinema-goers to turn the Savoy into what looks like landfill. So much garbage, a graveyard of half-eaten popcorn and drink cans.

 

Sunday 17/9

St Patricks Cathedral
11:11am

For a service. Shown to one of the special pews, the ones with the red padded seats. And today is the Fourteenth Sunday after Trinity. But I knew that, was keeping count. There's the Carolan Memorial, and a nice stained-glass of a green-robed Hibernia.

11:20am
The choir enters. Second time I've seen them in three days. They're seriously good. Well, you would be if you'd been rehearsing since 1432.

12:15pm
"She was beautiful ..." the sermon began. What, or who, is this guy talking about? Turns out to be a description of the Titanic, and ended with a line about how JC is our lifeboat. The Titanic stuff was great, but the link at the end was, well, a tad tenuous.

5:25pm
In Whelan's, watched The Dubs 1:10 defeat Tyrone 0:12 in the All-Ireland football finals. Not a good game of footy actually, even the commentators called it scrappy. Thought the score was tied a few seconds before the end, but the last Tyrone score was disallowed, according to some rule that I didn't get.

7:20pm
Outside the Auld Dubliner in Temple Bar, there's hundreds of Dubs in blue-shirts drinking, whooping, giving hell to any misguided Tyrone supporter that had to walk through the mob. But, it's all kind of subdued, like they have to work up the effort to be really enthusiastic. Grafton Street is almost lifeless.

9:06pm
There's been a SFX truck outside Bull Alley, cobble-stoning part of the Iveagh Buildings for a Michael Collins shoot tomorrow.
Maybe Liam will be here himself, probably legging it up to Burdock's for another bag of chips with vinegar. Hope he doesn't litter up our street when he's finished, or shove the discards behind the Viking Stone, or over the railings of St Werberghs. He probably won't, he's not a Dub.

 

Monday 18/9

about midday
Outside Quay Travel, there's a guy who must have the world's most boring job, just sitting and holding the Quay Travel sign. 'Quay Travel. Blackpool. Isle of Man & Sun Holidays'. Nothing else, just sits and holds the sign. He has the choice of smoking or not smoking, and that's about it. He has a walkman, which means he's doing something besides holding the sign. I don' think his heart is in his job.

1:42pm
Just watched the filming of part of Michael Collins, in the Iveagh Buildings just across the road. The 'Black and Tans' having garbage thrown at them by the occupants of the building, then the B&T's returning with machine gun fire. Bejaysus, it's loud. Yelling, "Black and Tan bastards !", more yelling, more fruit and vegies flying, more machineguns, blatterblatterblatter.
Quite looking forward to seeing this scene on the big screen, whenever that may be. I'll be the one leaping out of my cinema seat, letting everybody know I saw it being filmed ..

5:24pm
They've finished filming for the day, but the crowds of onlookers are still there. The old guys maybe remembering the real Black and Tans of seventy years ago, maybe wishing they'd brought the bloody pitchforks from their garden sheds, probably wishing they'd remembered to put their teeth in that morning so they'd be comprehensible as they yelled "get out ye black and tans! get out ye bastards !", maybe the years between then and now have disappeared, maybe they're just getting the chills at the sight of these costumed actors.
And there's kids everywhere. The fat arsonist who wants to argue with the crew; the bolt-throwing window smasher, the braindead grey-haired guy from the Napper Tandy who images his directing the traffic as it turns into Bride Street, some kid named Joxer blowing snot from his nose, and the girl on the gate who's passing the cigarette around, with the other brainless wonders of the Liberties.

 

Tuesday 19/9
Museum

12:47pm
Just finished TJW's book of obscure Promontory Forts around the Cork Coast, beginning at Skibbereen, and ending at Ballcotton, and near the end, Power Head, a tempting name if ever there was one. And more obscure churches in obscure places.

3:30pm
Feck. This is unbelievable. Where the hell is this Kiltinanlea in Clare? First clue is that it might be on Map 28 of the 6" series, but no, that book doesn't exist, it's gone. I find maps 10-30 on Raghnall's table, but 28's disappeared. And it's not among the maps to be refiled. Kiltinanlea might not even by the 'right' spelling. Is it a town? a townland? This is seriously pissing me off.

 

Wednesday 20/9
11:35am
At morning break, learnt that the four previous directors of the National Museum were quite mad. Michael Ryan, Barry Raftery, and the others. All mentally unbalanced. Maybe it goes with the territory but Raftery's Pagan Celtic Ireland is almost a bible here.

1:50pm
Museum
A Westropp negative of two women, near the stone wall of the old church in Tomfinlough, which O'Donovan calls Tuamfinlough, which, apparently, translated into 'The Tomb by the Beautiful Lake'. Don't know who they were, maybe one of them was Mrs Westropp.

2:05
Grafton Street. The depressed banjo player is back in town, unfortunately. Maybe he's been holidaying in sunny Spain or somewhere, but he hasn't learnt only new tunes, the same slow versions of Molly Malone and other pieces from the hack range of Irish songs.

5:40pm
Showing Dad around. Henry Street, Market Street, show him the stained glass in the Mary Street Bewleys, Capel Street, passing Slattery's, to Church Street, the gate of St Michans is open, but he doors are locked. Closes at 4:45, according to the sign. Maybe that's when the Proddy God knocks off for the day, wanders home, and sinks a pint or two. Cross the Liffey, along the Quays, to Fishamble Street, The Messiah Plaque. To Christchurch. It charges admittance, £1 for adults, children 50p, maybe that's how the Proddy God pays for his pints, and picked up a brochure for Vivaldi concert, and asked about the price of the tickets, "£10" was the answer, snapped back by some stuffed suit with a tie. Bugger it, then. They only intend to play two of the four seasons anyway, Autumn and Winter. Back, extolling the virtue of Leo Burdocks.

7:22pm
Down to Thomas Street, passing Mother Redcaps. Yes, and that's where Emmett got hung and decapitated. Meath Street. Francis Street, looking at antiques, The Coombe, up Bull Alley.

8:13pm
In the roof garden. Sitting in the dark, watching the cityscape towards the Guinness factory. Steam, massive amounts of it, lit underneath somehow, so much that it looked as though Arthur's place was ablaze.

 

Thursday 21/9
8:05am
Burlington Hotel, Upper Leeson Street

For the ostentatiously well-heeled. For Americans with too much money, with a Victoriana lounge. Suits and ties, and the white sugar bowls have just been refilled. You really have to wonder about the type of 'irish Experience' the ilk who stay in places like this have. Different from mine.

The CIE bus leaves from here, Dad's going touring.

8:32am
St Stephens Green. Over there is the Braille Garden, the plant identification tags are in braille

9:53
Museum
And where the hell is Kiltoola. It's not in the Townlands index, it's not in John O'Donovan's survey of Clare. It's either a misspelling, or it only exists in TJW's head.

10:07am
Nell, the rheumy old ex-Museum type, who's been working in here, has insisted that the window in front of my desk by opened. It's cold. If I get sick again, I just may have to kill her. I'll probably be able to get some help from the Museum's military expert, whose birthday it is today. They presented him with a cake topped with toy soldiers, army camouflage, toy guns ...

12:49pm
Forgal, who was Emer's father, was Lord of Lusca, that is, Lusk. His dun, that is, fort, where Cuchullain carried off Emer, is there. It's marked on Sheet 8 of the Dublin 6" map series, a 'mound' to the North-West, passing the Monastery (site of) and Presbytery, five road junction, on the edge of the third and fourth farmers fields, on the left. But according to the 6" map, there's nothing there at all. Nowt. Maybe it's all been flattened by farmers.

Later
HMV
Listening to Mike Scott's new CD through the headphones. He's found God, unfortunately, and singing "What Do You Want Me To Do ?" If God has any sense, he'll tell Mike to put out a CD as good as Fisherman's Blues, if not This Is The Sea.

10:12pm
Burdocks, waiting in the queue, watching girls drown their chippies in vinegar, but eventually get to order, three haddock and two serves of chips.

 

Friday 22/7
9:30am
Ouside Dunnes. Down the street, a man with a tattooed hand asks us to help the unemployed. No, dickhead, that's what you say when you're selling the Big Issue, when you're begging you ask for spare change or for the price of a cuppa tea.

12:55pm
Doheny and Nebitt's. It's busy.

2:10pm
Ely Place, the Norwegian Exhibition. Ground floor, photographs. Of the Vatican Gardens, of John Gielgud, of Amanda Ooms flashing a tit, of Anne Grethe Preus the rock singer, of Odd Nerdrum the painter and Per Ung the sculptor. Upstairs, the Gallagher Gallery, paintings and sculpture. One of chairs and windows, given pretentious titles, The House of Protection, To Ask Is To Have Where Answer Is Given, Standing On My Own Two Feet, which might be okay if the subject matter were not entirely chairs and windows.

Frans Widerberg's bright paintings of Northern Lights, and mystic people part of the Universe they inhabit, outlines glowing orange outlining the blue within, Odd Nerdrum's heroic types wearing skull caps (must be a Norwegian thing), Solo Morte, the dead face made full by its' own reflection.
Sculptures, Per Ung, Adam and Eve, the woman with the masks of Tragedy and Comedy, the Wanking Woman who I reckon is Mrs Ung.

In the next room the Royal neo-Celtic stuff, dragons, spirals, drinking horns, boats in an armada formation. Apparently the neo-Celtic was a looking back to the past, as part of the Norwegian struggle against oppression. Didn't know they had a struggle, but apparently Norway was a colony of Denmark for some time.

8:00pm
Burger King, O'Connell Street, waiting for Liam to emerge from the Savoy. Lisa's serving, she looks a bit grumpy at the moment. Been walkies, while waiting. Frederick Street, a shop with the most amazing amount of crap in the windows, Irish badges, coins, comics, phone cards, leprechauns. Thinking it's a pity that Walton's display window, that used to jut out of the wall, has been removed, probably got damaged too many times. Jaysus, with the brilliant stuff they had on display there I'd be tempted too, just gimme the rock. Somehow finding Eccles Street, from the old hospital end, opened 1861, must have been there when Leopold left his house that day. Wish I had the Joyce Map, vaguely hoping to find Oldhausen the Butcher, who's still in business, apparently. Dorset Street, the red corner shop. Gardiner Street Upper, then Lower. Mountjoy Street. Summerhill. Bus Depot. The Kasbah looks more ruinous everytime I see it. To Talbot Street, Abbey Street, O'Connell Street, passing the Savoy and another tourist shop that's stiflingly hot. Up O'Connell, Ambassador, left, up Parnell Street, the Young Traveller, I love that place. I'd live there if I could. The Black Church is still closed, somehow I don't think it's still a going concern as a church. Down Dorset, then Frederick. Tom Mack's pub, with the brilliant Guinness sign that's been there forever. The Gardens of Remembrance, closed. Back to the Savoy.

8:58pm
Back to the apartment, found a penny near the Ha'penny Bridge, would have given it to the hunry and homeless, but there were none around. Probably at home, having tea.

 

Saturday 23/7
9:40am
My sister just rang to tell me that the AFL Preliminary Final just finished 10 minutes ago, Geelong 20.9 just killed Richmond 6.4. Jaysus, we're in the Grand Final.

a bit later
at Shannon's gym practice, people were picking up chestnuts in the schoolgrounds. She was tempted to collect some too, but probably wouldn't have known what to do with them. Cook them, boil them, roast them, lightly soutee them, or just grab the lot and throw them at the fat arsonist.

6:37pm
Hodges Figgis. Upstairs, in the Art section, reading a book which was a collection of clippings and photographs about death. Sugar, my blood, salt. The bodies that get torn apart by vultures. Intriguing but depressing.

6:52pm
"Still on the Shannon, downstream a little between Clonmacnois and Shannonbridge, is Devenish island, in Irish Snámh-dá-en, literally, 'Swim-two-birds'; one of the resting places of Mad Sweeney when, bird-like, he fluttered all over Ireland after the battle of Mag rath (Moira). It is the surrealist-sounding title chosen by Flann O'Brien for his great comic novel, in which Swwney appears among other phantasmagoric characters and stout-swilling Dubliners. Flann O'Brien (1911-1955) (one of several pseudonyms; real name Brian O'Nolan) spent a happy part of his childhood in the flat bog-landscape of Tullamore (Offaly), not far away. It is pleasing to discover that Swim-two-birds exists in reality'
P.J. Kavanagh. Voices In Ireland. John Murray, 1994. p.150

 

Sunday 24/7
9:03am
Shannon's cutting the tokens from the CocoPops packet. Only three, but to get 'Polly and the Puppies', she needs eight. Her new-found hearts' desire.

10:17am
Bewleys. Westmoreland Street. Settled down for a good read of the three issues of Hot Press. But only got as far as the editorial in the first one, about Brenden Smyth, the pedophile priest, or one of the many, but the only one jailed so far. The editorial has a great phrase, about how his victims now have 'the worm in the heart'.

12:22pm
Hugh Lane Gallery, for the midday concert, another in the series. The composer has just finished introducing his second piece, he calls it a rhapsody, but sounds more like an atonal mess. A few seconds of gentle notes, then a loud whacka-whacka-hit, a chord, a few weird noises, then just mix-n-match the ingredients. Then 'Lines and Configurations', bass clarinet and marimba, actually, it should have been called 'Sounds In Search Of A Time Signature'.

12:50pm
The last item. "This is new music of mine .. way out on the edge .. fractured .. lonely .. like ice cubes in a cold glass." Bejaysus, the introduction is more of a wank than the piece itself.

Then a quick look at the Madonna Irlanda, the best thing here, although if you're into Corot, you're in heaven here.

1:49pm
The Quays, the Sunday Morning market's still on, with the worlds' greatest salesman in full flight. We buy 16 Ferroro Roche's for £1. Brilliant.

5:01pm
St Stephens Green. Shannon's just stopped to tie her shoelace on the James Joyce And His Corkonian Father's Green Seat, the one that faces Newman House, but which now has a parking meter virtually plonked right in front of it, so Joyce and his Dad would be able to see how much time they had left before one of the Brown Bombers slaps an infringement notice on their windscreen.

6:05pm
Dunnes, buying bread but on the way out, buying a Dubs t-shirt for Shannon, the one with every well known Dubliner on it, supporting the Dubs. 99p, sold to me by the lovely Aran.

 

Monday 25/9
7:12am
In Hot Press, there's an article about Roger Casement. Gay, apparently. Maintained something called the Black Diaries. And, on the news, Bob Geldof may be buying the Gaiety Theater, after "being spotted there" several times over the past few months. Hey, Bob, where were you when I walked past ?

10:48am
Howth, picking blackberries along the way, half filling a margarine container. Then to the top, looking out over Dublin Bay, a ferry leaving, and it's windy.

11:35am
In the restaurant. Out the window is Howth Harbour, where the guns for 1916 were landed and given out to the eagerly outstretched hands on the harbour wall. Nearby is a monument, not to that event, but of an anchor and a Celtic Cross, to commemorate those drowned or lost at sea. Sad. Comments, on the side, "although your light has been washed away ..." and others. Fathers, brothers, sons, swallowed up by the sea the instant they took it for granted, assumed it was a friend, turned their backs on it for just the shortest time.
Then to the rhododendron gardens, up the rocky outcrop, having a picnic up there, and not caring that picnics are banned up there.
The view over the harbour, Irelands Eye, and whatever the island beyond that's called.

Later
The bus terminates in Marlborough Street, so took Dad to the Pro-Cathedral. A woman praying at each of the statues in there. Mary, Jesus, kneel and pray. 10 and 20p candles. The tomb for Francis and Eleanor Cruise, and I'm wondering if they're related to Bridget, of O'Carolan fame, his one true love, or maybe related to Tom, the Top Gun himself.

3:20pm
back, and Matt (Botanic Man) holds the door open for us. He didn't seem too depressed for a man whose wife is bonking his best friend, or, as Matt put it the other night, "sowing her post-marital wild oats". Actually, he's all smiles.

Later
The Lord Mayors Walk, Molesworth Street, Waterstones, then over the road to Hodges Figgis, then passing the hole in the ground that was Brown Thomas and The Bailey, passing McDaids, the only pub in Dublin that Brendan Behan wasn't banned from, through the Powerscourt Arcade, looking in Giles Norman's shop of photographs.



Tuesday 26/9
3.25pm
Reading stories about watery tarts in O'Donovan's papers ...

6:42pm
Liffey Street, Bridge. In the Merchants Arch, a beggar with a child, behind a cardboard sign. 'I Am From Bosnia. Please Help', and passers-by leaving him a heap of coins. Pounds and Pounds. Bosnian? Jaysus, if he's a Bosnian then I'm a Serb. Must be one of them Clontarf Bosnians.

6:50pm
The Dublin Library just rang, 'At Swim Two Birds' is finally in.

 

Wednesday 27/9
Phoenix Park. Taking Dad on a Greatest Hits tour. Explaining things along the way, Mullingar House, the cromlech, the Pal Cross, the US Ambassadors Residence, Mary's place, her light still burning but there's no unruly lines of returning countrymen waiting to be welcomed home, then down passing the zoo, the seals willonking, then into the coffee shop, to the Wellington Monument, walk past the Sean Heuston statue. Out through the entrance, up to Kilmainham Jail, walk the distance. The Jail, a monument to the rebel leaders of Ireland; Young Irelanders, United Irish, 1916, 1798, 1856, the Invincibles, the Civil War, De Valera. The tour begins, even the obligatory OPW slide show is better than usual, and Catherine O'Connor is our tour guide, who warns us about the height of the doors, she has a sense of humor, and pathos, and appears genuinely enthusiastic. And bonus points for attempting to explain the Civil War, in two minutes, it ain't easy. The Stonebreakers Yard, the crosses, the cells. Bejaysus, I didn't know they had Emmett's chopping block.

A walk through the Royal Hospital, and student artists are drawing various aspects of the Hospital's architecture, the windows, the arches.

Out, up towards James Street. The Barn Owl, the converted church that's now a lighting shop, Crane Lane and now the Guinness Hopstore. Another tour. Watch the 15 minute Guinness ad, "hey mister, bring me back a monkey !", then the displays, the coopers at work, others, then the free sample room. Yep, free Guinness, my favourite kind. Pity it ain't in pint glasses.

Then back, up Thomas Street, but somehow deviated to the Liffey. The Four Courts dome now covered with scaffolding, and the flagpoles are now fluttering with brightly coloured Dublin flags.

And back.

10:20pm
And tonight's radio talk-back topic is whether good sex is important to a good relationship. Jaysus, don't they just love talking about it, never miss a chance.

 

Thursday 28/9
8:57am
Talking about the incomprehensibility of really large numbers. Would one's grief be greater if 60,000,000 Jews had died rather than 'only' 6,000,000. Would the grief be less if it has 'only' been 2,000,000. Would it be on par, then, with the grief one feels for the victims of the Famine, or is it just different.

8:45am
To the Busaras, Dad's off to Northern Ireland. Ulsterbus Goldliner, Gate 13. And, on the way, some school chick with the ear-lined studs, rings, and the cigarette.

10:15am
Museum.
Bejaysus, Westropp, is it Drumcreely or Drumcrelly. It makes a difference.

3:31pm
And, in the attempt to change the spelling from Ballyvaughan to Ballyvaghan, this computer's just had two heart attacks. It tells me that it's merely 'checking the current index', but it's not, it's died.

4:10pm
Cross O'Connell Bridge, up to Henry Street, passing the GPO which looks disappointingly peaceful, buying Samsons. Our Price is being refitted as yet another Virgin outlet.

Liffey Street, the bridge, merchants Arch, a beggar with a cardboard sign 'I Am From Bosnia. Please Help'. Yeah, right, and next week you'll be from Rwanda. Or maybe they've just learnt how to spell 'hungry'.

And back, passing the Olympia and walking through the Castle, you know when you arrive at Tailors Court by the smell. The drain out the front that's been leaking, not just water now, tissues, shit, floating down past the Napper Tandy. I'm amazed that it's not fixed, that no-one else rings the Dublin Corporation. Still, having both a shit-spilling drain and the kids from Swifts outside your window is much the same thing.

7:06pm
At last, there's two guys having a poke around the manhole cover outside, but not the one that's creating the torrent. They replace the lid of the wrong one, then leave.

 

Friday 29/9
10:45am
Alien's Office, renewing the registration.

We're number 36, and they're up to 26, so this may take awhile. At least 25 got short shrift. Forgot the stamped, endorsed, and signed in triplicate bank statement didn't she. I mean, that's so blatantly obvious.
The room is full. Americans, Asians - one of whom is sniffing back enough snot to blow his brains out. Meanwhile, 26, Dr S Mahmoud is being told to get a letter from his college
27! The middle window is really getting through them. But 27's just left.
28!
Some old couple have been bogging up the end window all the while, and the snotty one's been handed a tissue, must have been near brain melt-down time, but the guy on the other side, one of the Middle-Eastern types has taken up the snotty chorus.
28 has trouble spelling his name,
"T ?", "D"
"D ?", "D ... for Dea."
"T ?", "Yes, T .. for Dea."
uhhmm, I think 'T for Tommy' would have been a better word to use.
Yay! The old couple have finally gone, must've figured out it wasn't worth the precious moments they have left on this earth wasting it on the Irish Aliens Office. Fair enough too.
Wonder where the one with the bad teeth is? Maybe she's ill, maybe someone reached through the window, grabbed the bitch, dragged her bodily through, on to the waiting side, while he's screaming "whaddya feckin' mean previous employers' wifes' grandmothers' maiden name signed in triplicate from the registry of births deaths and marriages !" as he slams her against the so pale green they're almost grey walls. Wish I'd been here to see it..
30!
Shit. There she is, like Shane MacGowan's sister from hell. She's smiling. Yep, her malicious bitch smile. Sent some guy back to his seat, closed the window, and obviously thinking "got that one, on rule 1154 sub-section 25viii, point 2, that all people registering as aliens must be told to come back at some unspecified time when they'll be told they should have been in yesterday." Bet they do exams in obstructionist theory, being difficult 101 and 201 ...
31!
and specialist courses in officialdom, red tape and triplicate theory. If in doubt, ask for it to be stamped, authenticated.
33!
I wonder if they're easier on these useless bunch of student-type slags, the Swiss at the desk with the shaven head, the guy seated next to him with the metal-decorated baseball cap, or the overweight Ugandan there.
34!
than they are with someone who actually contributes something to this country. Hell, if the photographs I've catalogued are being used to track down, or at least identify, what's been taken from this country, then my work is of value, of use to the heritage of this country. Just wish they were paying me for it. Rather than just the very ..
35!
occasional cuppa, two so far. I wonder what does the Museum do with all those American notes that get stuffed into the donation box? Speaking of Americans, the one at the desk, 35, who lives at Halfpenny House, Lower Ormond Quay, doesn't know his own phone number. He's gone, I think, they'll have him on a technicality. But, Holy Bejaysus, Sinead MacGowan, behind the desk is all smiles at this one, she's letting him get away with it, all that training just gone in a flash. She has her eye on the bigger picture here, permanent residential status in the USA. Jaysus, don't they just love Americans here. Not only will his registration as an alien be through within the next minute, she'll be carrying his lovechild in even less.
36!
yes, we're next, probably after the American at the desk is through writing whatever it is he has to write. Can't see Ms MacGowan from here, but "I'll just get you to fill out your National .. whatever .. and I'll be back to your shortly." Probably her little black heart's going pitta-pat and needs time to recover, to collect herself, to take stock of all those years of study, take a bureaucratic stance, insist the paperwork is done, demand that he come back at the previously specified unspecified date, remembering that she must frustrate, annoy, and belittle at very opportunity. Nay, verily, create the opportunity to treat all before thee as shite. Though shalt destroy the Cead Mile Failte image. Thou shalt not be co-operative. Thou shalt follow procedure to the letter, and certainly though shalt not deviate from the rules and regulations, and though shalt get all paperwork endorsed and signed in triplicate.

Our files are being dragged out from somewhere, from wherever they're kept. Probably in the red one marked 'Dangerous'. Photographs of me with Gerry Adams, me and Sinead O'Connor, me ...

11:38am
It's done, renewed, valid 'til 2/1/96. Unbelievable. And a chat about the Brown Thomas window at Christmas.

 

Saturday 30/9
11.22am

Castle Inn
And it's the third quarter in the 1995 Grand Final, and Geelong is being killed. 3 goals to 13.

11.30am
And at the ad break, 6 to 16. Bloody Williams, the bastard. Ablett's not doing much.

11.44am
6 to 18

11.45
6 to 19
and they've just got another one. Ten minutes to go, and its 7 to 20
Geelong 7:13 Carlton 21.14

two quick ones with 3 minutes left. Whoopie.
Now another one from Billy 10:13
yet another from Billy 11:14
it's over,
and that's it, and Geelong's out of its misery. Shite shite shite. Ablett didn't even get a goal.

3:04pm
The Famine Exhibition.
Our guide is Margeurite Grey. History, the farms, the potato, the blight, the famine, the "noses on" part, real leaves from the blighted spuds on display, the typically English bastard response. Peel, Trevalynn, poor houses, work houses, the quarter acre and the conacre, the soup kitchens. Emigration, Canada, America.
The best bit were the actors, in character. While a woman, bathed in green light, spins and cards wool, her Kerryman farmer 'husband' explains what 'lazy beds' were, and asks "Margeurite, what'd be happenin' to m'potatoes over here ?"
Leave, with an incredible urge for potatoes. A plate of roast spuds with butter. Hell, any bag of crisps will do.

10:15pm
And if Matt Molloy has become a piss-pot and has taken to walking up and down Bride Street, then that's him. Maybe not, but you never can tell. Maybe he's seeking inspiration for the next Chieftains CD. The Bride Street Suite, Leo Burdock's Reel, The Napper Tandy Polka, the Chancery Lane Jig. Maybe a song inspired by the woman who just walked by him, lyrics that go something like "feckin' this and feckin' that and feckin' the other feckin' ting." So, Shane MacGowan, eat yer heart out. Poetry in the streets. Maybe Matt's in the Napper putting a tune to it this very minute.

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