The famous poets who wandered Dublin when Anne Enright was growing up were often inspired by beautiful young muses. But their obsessive love looks less romantic now, writes the novelist
My father, who grew up in the Irish countryside, rarely said a bad word about anyone; gossip irritated him and though he sometimes listened, he always dismissed it after as being “made up”. The most withering insult I heard him deliver was about an academic known to my siblings for sexual misconduct with students, a rumour he found unsurprising. “You’d see him, sure, on the top deck of the bus, going home.” What this man did on the bus we can only imagine, but my father’s contempt was clear – the man was drunk and on show. Of the poet Patrick Kavanagh he simply said, “You’d see him about the place.”
Irish writers were often publicly sighted. The woman who came to “do” for my mother on a Friday walked up and down the hall with her hands behind her back in imitation of WB Yeats strolling along St Stephen’s Green in Dublin, and the tea towel twitched behind her as the poet counted the meter of lines he was writing in his head.
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Published on September 02, 2023 03:00
I’m amazed to hear this, that Macken would still go to mass after having his books banned by the authoritarian, creeping Jesus Catholic Church. I have always loved Walter Macken . Not my first love mind; that was Frank O’Connor! I read Seek The Fair Land when I was 10 and have never forgotten it. We read it again in my first year of secondary. Rain On The Wind, I Am Alone, Brown Lord Of The Mountain, etc. I’ve loved them all since my teenage years and have read them a number of times. They were innocuous, so it’s shocking that the Catholic Church banned them.
Great blog. I finished reading The Wren, The Wren in recent days. Carmel and Nell were such wonderfully drawn characters, Terry and Connie as well, albeit being lesser featuring characters. Phil was a solipsistic bastard and Feilim as I said in my review would make good hit man fodder.