Nobel Prize Winner Seamus Heaney Reads For Irish Press Journalists' Fund

by Lucile Redmond

NOBEL PRIZE winner Seamus Heaney read his poems to thunderous applause in Dublin's Project Arts Centre on Sunday October 22. A packed house heard Heaney and fellow-poets Robert Greacen, Medbh McGuckian, Michael Longley and Nuala Ni Dhomnaill read, with music from David Hammond, Neil Martin and Donal Lunney.

Poets and musicians were giving their services free, to contribute money to the Irish Press hardship fund. The Press group closed last month after a long battle by its journalists to keep its three papers open.

The Press had a long tradition of employing writers, especially on the sub-editing desks, and Hugh McFadden, Irish Press news sub and poet, was the one who gathered together this group to read. He had asked Seamus Heaney last month, before the poet was awarded the Nobel, and it is a measure of Heaney's worth that he came along calmly to read, without any kerfuffle surrounding him - and that every poet and musician had some affectionate story to tell about time spent with him.

Theo Dorgan, who runs the poets' organisation Poetry Ireland, introduced the reading, noting that it was entirely appropriate that when the Nobel committee was tearing its collective hair out looking for Seamus Heaney, who was on holidays in Greece, he was "somewhere half-way between the Hotel Aphrodite and Sparta".

When Heaney stood up to read, at the end of this night of celebration, he himself remembered the scene from Beckett's Waiting for Godot where Vladimir and Estragon ask each other about the night before - beaten up? who was it? the usual crowd. ah, isn't life wonderful. "It's great to be here with the usual crowd tonight," joked Heaney, to warm and loving laughter.

He read the old favourites, this night with old friends - the poem about his childhood fascination with wells, when he'd peer down into the depths to see his reflection: "As a child they couldn't keep me from wells...now I rhyme to see myself"; the poem about St Kevin, who, deep in meditation, found that a blackbird had laid her eggs in his hand, so stayed with his arms outstretched in prayer for the weeks until the eggs hatched:

"alone, in love's deep river".

He read the beautiful poem written on the death of an Ibo friend from Nigeria, and based on an Ibo legend of the coming of death to the world, the story of the dog who delayed to bark so that the toad got to God first and told him humans wanted death to be forever; that poem with its shattering final line: "The dog crying out all night behind the corpse-house".

The poem about the Dublin sculpture of a bronze chair, its feet variously animal, human and demonic, its back sprouting upwards into leaves; a poem that remembers him sitting as a child with his back to a thorn-tree, so that now: "I am all foreknowledge, of the peom as a ploughshare that turns time under".

And last, he remembered his childhood neighbour Rosie Keenan, the blind musician who listened to see, and how when he read her the first poem he had written, about the neighbouring Keenans' Well, she said "I can see the sky at the bottom of it now".

It was a night of music, and very much a night of Derry people celebrating their fellow-Derryman Heaney's happiness, with Davy Hammond's plangent, soaring voice singing against Donal Lunny's bouzouki and Neil Martin's cello, or with Lunny and Martin playing synthesizer and uileann pipes in a strange but weirdly suitable sean-nos.

Hammond sang Derry favourites of Heaney's and his own - the song about the cabin boy who swam to a Spanish ship and bored holes with an auger to sink it, for the promise of marriage to the captain's daughter, only to be left to die in the seas of the Lowlands low.

And he sang Master McGrath, the song about the tiny greyhound like a streak of speed that won every race before him in Edwardian days. Seamus Heaney and he went on a "sentimental pilgrimage", he said, tongue-in-cheek, to the statue of Master McGrath in Kilmacthomas in Waterford.

"It was the time the statues were moving down there in Ballinspittle," he said, remembering an outbreak of religious fervour some years ago when crowds gathered to see statues of the Virgin Mary reputedly moving miraculously.

"They were terrified Master McGrath would start moving, and running around killing sheep," he said.

Davy Hammond said his own dog was a descendant of Master McGrath, with the same markings: a lithe brown dog with a shower of hail down his back. He'd wanted to call him after the famous racer - not his racing name, but the name he was called in the stable, his pet name, which was Tucker.

"But my wife said no, we have too many coarse friends, so to this day he comes to the table and answers to 'McGrath'," he said.

Paula Meehan was meant to read, but had come down with a ferocious dose of the flu, so Theo Dorgan read her poem Dervogilla, which she wrote in memory of a Dublin character the Diceman, who enlivened the city streets posing as everything from the Laughing Cavalier to Dracula in drag until he died of Aids, to the country's great loss and mourning, last year.

It was a night of mourning as well as rejoicing, with many of the readers speaking of the recently dead: of Professor Gus Martin, of poet Tony Curtis's father, and of poet Sean Deane.

Rober Greacen, who has just won the Irish Times Literary Award at the age of seventy for a book of poems, read to warm applause.

Many of his poems were on the theme of the cultural dissonance of being a Presbyterian at sea in Catholic Ireland. The first poem he read alerted the audience: "On this October day of mists and mystery...there is an area ribboned off", he read, in a description of one of the city's bomb alerts.

He remembered living in the same house as Patrick Kavanagh - "there's a plaque there now - to Kavanagh, not to me!" - and later sharing a house with Brendan Behan's widow, Beatrice, and shockingly knocking on her door one morning to find her dead: but most, his poems remembered what the newspapers call the Northern Ireland conflict, of which, in the end, a poem pleads: "Teach us to care. And not to care".

Medbh McGuckian's difficult and wonderful poems stunned the audience into silence, followed by a roar of applause. The Feast Day of Peace, with its haunting image, "too familiar to be seen, the long, long dead" opened a series that continued with Filming the Famine, about the films that are being made everywhere this year to commemorate the Potato Famine which cut by two thirds the population of Ireland 100 years ago this year. The poem talks about the ships that carried the survivors in their millions to the Americas, in that "Spring that has carried the steely dusk into my heart", and about the "soldiers impersonating soldiers" in the films (the FCA, the volunteer army corps that teenage boys and girls join in Ieland, is often drafted in to "serve" in films - Braveheart's Scottish army were the lads of the FCA).

Her sensual love-poems - "I have kissed the door behind which he is sleeping," says one, "his inbreathed air was my drug of choice" another - were received with joy by an audience familiar with the body of work of allthese poets.

Michael Longley talked of the anger and despair he and others felt at the death of Sean Dunne at 39; he read two of Dunne's superb translations from Anna Akhmatova's Russian; talking about the Irish Press, he said that it seemed to him that journalists and poets had it in common that their vocation was to share information, and to tell people in authority the truth.

"It was about 1977 that Seamus Heaney met me off the Enterprise and we went for a drink, and it became obvious to me that he had a poem he wanted to recite," he confided, to a ripple of laughter, "and I had one too.

"He went first, and read a poem called The Harvest Bowl," said Longley, smiling back at Heaney where he sat behind him on a straight-backed chair - the poets were reading in the oddly appropriate set of Pentecost, the play showing at the Project at the moment, so they stood amid the furniture of a stuffy bourgeois house of the 1950s.

Longley read his own Bleach Green, a love-poem to Ulster, "where fields are compacted into windowboxes, and a tender and erotic verse. Then he read The Quilt, about a visit to Amherst and a loved friend - as he described the white quilts for weddings and asked how would you choose the colour for a funeral quilt, for "The quilts for funerals? How do you sew the night?" someone in the audience gave the quiet little "wew" yip that in Ireland is the traditional salute to a musician who makes a particularly graceful play.

He finished with his tragic peace poem based on the story of the aged Priam, who begged Achilles to allow him to bury Hector, his son whom Achilles had killed and mutilated; the hero, shamed, went himself and washed and wrapped the body for burial, then the two sat down decently together to eat, the young thug and the old man whose son he had killed - that poem that finishes with the horrifying and yet proper image of the old man killing the killer's blood-covered hand.

Nuala Ni Dhomnaill sang a child's song for Heaney: "An Bhfaca Tu Mo Sheamuisin?" - "have you seen my little Seamus?" - then read in English and Irish from the series of poems she's working in at the moment: these are poems about a race of merfolk, an image for the lost language of Ireland, as hidden for us as water for the landbound mermaids and mermen.

Her sea people have denied the existence of water, denied their need for it; yet they dream about water - "agus ag an seisiun psychoteirpeach seachtaniuil, abair 'silteach...ruc fliuch?' "

Her merpeople are, as she said, a little at sea on dry land, but they refuse to capitalise by publishing books like "Submarine Cookery" or "A Mermaid Bares All".

Last of all she read the beautiful Mo Mhaistir Dorcha - My Dark Master, about the hiring fair where we hire our spirit out to Death, by tithing him a portion of our lives, those black days of depression and fear.

"When I was young," she said, "I knew people who had gone to hiring fairs when they were young; and what they bargained for most of all was "pa phliuic no cead aighnis" - the pay of well-rounded cheeks and the right to say your say."
I lead his blue-black cows
with their fabulously long horns
to water. They lie down in pastures of clover and fescue
and lucerne. I follow them over hills faraway and green -
Is tugaim a thainte dubha chun abhann,
Buaibh ud na n-adharca fada.
Luionn siad sios i moneir.
Bim a n-aoireacht ar chnoic san imigein
ata glas agus fearach.

Dublin audiences are the kind poets prefer - they know their poetry, they take no nonsense and they appreciate a well-made poem more than any crowd outside of Russia. But this audience was the Platonic ideal of all poetry hearers. They stood and stamped and cheered for poets, and for the cause for which they read; and they went home to read, and write, some more.

If you're interested in bringing Irish poets to read in your town or village, contact Theo Dorgan at 671 4632, Poetry Ireland.

Freelance journalist Lucile Redmond is available for research or writing work at Edit, or at email: lucred@mac.com




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