In honor of Saint Patrick’s Day—a celebration that,
as far as I can tell, is Irish-American rather than Irish in origin—I’ve been
thinking about a quote from G.K. Chesterton:
For the great Gaels of Ireland
Are the men that God made mad.
For all their wars are merry
And all their songs are sad.
Not entirely true, of course, although I guess I can
see why it might look that way at times. Because a lot of the songs are about
the bitterness and misery of war, and the men (almost always the men) who are
consumed by it.
A prime example of that is “The Patriot Game”, which
was written by Dominic Behan, brother of the larger-than-life playwright
Brendan Behan. (The Behan boys were also nephews of Pedar Kearney, who wrote the
lyrics to what’s now the national anthem of Ireland. Think about a nation whose
national anthem is called “The Soldier’s Song”.) Here's Behan himself to sing it.
Mary Black’s “Song for Ireland” is an
impressionistic survey of the country. But even this captures the disconnect
between the dream and waking views.
Since this is, as I wot, an Irish-American holiday,
I’ll give you another viewpoint: Cherish The Ladies’ “The Back Door”. For so
many years, this was the future of Ireland: its best and brightest slinking
into other countries to make a living on the grey economy.
It has other resonances, too. I can’t tell you what
the cry, “I want my own bed, my own kitchen” has meant to me over the years.
Finally—one of my earliest experiences of Irish
music was of course the Clancy Brothers (and Tommy Makem, although I wasn’t
that wild about him). And one of their signature pieces was this one. If you’re
summing up a life, of any nationality, there couldn’t possibly be a better one
than “The Parting Glass”. If there’s a wake at the end of my run, someone
better be singing this.
Sláinte bha!
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