This blog is a personal take on Listowel, Co. Kerry. I am writing for anyone anywhere with a Listowel connection but especially for sons and daughters of Listowel who find themselves far from home. Contact me at listowelconnection@gmail.com

Tag: A Minute of Your Time Page 4 of 5

Ard Churam, LGBT, Lartigue and Book Promoting

photo: Chris Grayson

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Turning the sod at the new Dementia Care Unit in Greenville

 Mike Moriarty addressing the invited guests.

 Musicians and singers, Mile Moriarty, Denis O’Rourke, Batty Hannon, Caitriona O’Neill and John Kinsella

 Committee Members and dignitaries turn the first sod.

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VISIBLE in Pres


VISIBLE is an initiative for Mental Health week which aims to acknowledge and include people of all sexual orientation. Here are the staff of Presentation Secondary school Listowel raising the LGBT flag as part of this.

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Ballincollig Active Retired folk at the Lartigue

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A minute of Your Time




When I went to Tralee on my book promotion tour I met a lovely past pupil, Sandra Lynch. Sandra is th store manager in Super Valu Tralee and the answer is yes. They will stock A Minute of Your Time. 

It is available in Listowel bookshops and Super Valu and i’m slowly spreading the word.

books and libraries, more on the Taormina Duomo Fresco and A minute of your Time launch

Pigeon

Not the most popular of our feathered friends

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Listowel Connection in Ballincollig

 Here I am in Ballincollig library with another proud North Kerry woman, Helen Bambury of Ballylongford. Helen and I enjoy a good old natter about North Kerry whenever I am in Ballincollig and we are both in the knitting group.

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Reading A Minute of Your Time

Dave and Mary enjoying a quick peak before dinner.

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That Fresco



Maybe not a woman after all



Nicholas Leonard was convinced it was a woman on Christ’s right hand. This is what he wrote;


That surely is a woman in that fresco- she has no beard, has finer, feminine, facial features (alliteration unintended) has no sandals, has slender arms and small hands, compared to Our Lord and other men.  The usual argument for not having women priests is that none was present at the Last Supper and therefore no woman received the power or authority to consecrate the bread and wine, etc. This apparent lady was obviously not a servant as she was at the right hand of Jesus,and was closer to him than men there, even had her hand familiarly on his arm as if a ‘wife,’ or someone very close, usually would have- the men there did not adopt her close attitude and position. Could it  be Mary Magdalen; she was close to Our Lord; or could it be His Mother, Mary? She was sort of ‘in charge’ of and advising  Him at the wedding Feast of Cana, like a mother would. Maybe she was trying to talk ‘sense’ into Him!!


But Billy McSweeney wrote again with some clarification.

While I was in Sicily I went back to the Taormina Duomo and did a further bit of research, mainly through reputable tour guides. There were not too many people in that “Greek” part of Sicily, on the Eastern coast, that spoke English. I was not aware of the story that unfolded.

I gleaned that nearly all artistic post works based on the Last Supper were interpretations of Leonardo da Vinci’s fantastic fresco in the Convent of Santa Maria della Grazie in Milan. This latter world-famous art was, in reality, a failed experiment, not a genuine ‘fresco’, having been painted on dry plaster by da Vinci in 1495 as opposed to the tried and trusted tradition at the time of painting on wet plaster, This caused it to deteriorate rapidly but because it was so fantastic it has fortunately been copied many times and attempts have also been made to restore the original fresco with varying success.

The story is that the painting depicts da Vinci’s interpretation of the scene of consternation a moment after Christ dropped the bombshell to the Apostles that he would be betrayed by one of them. Da Vinci’s take on the incident is coloured by many lesser efforts by other people in the previous 1400 years and possibly by his own inclinations.

My interest was aroused by the figure sitting at Christ’s right hand-side in the terracotta relief under the altar in the Taormina Duomo. This particular relief was done by Meister Turi Azzolina of Messina in 2014. Like all the others it has striking resemblances to da Vinci’s painting. Apparently the figure on Christ’s right is that of John the Evangelist, the “Beloved Apostle”, who was the youngest Apostle and was recognized as being effeminate in his looks. Dan Brown, the best-selling author of ‘The da Vinci Code’ (2003) picked up on this and dramatized it by suggesting that the figure was, in reality, that of Mary Magdalene. This makes for a good story for the Sicilian guides and although there is some expert justification for showing Mary Magdalene in the painting the general feeling is of ‘one never knows?’. She was widely venerated in her role as the “Apostle to the Apostles” and was the patron of the Dominican Order, for whom The Last Supper was painted. It was from the Dominican Order that Inquisitors were chosen so they would have been influential enough to silence any attempt by the Inquisition to denounce the painting. 

It is said that the Dominican Abbott, for whom da Vinci was working, complained that the freco was taking too long to complete. Da Vinci is reputed to have replied that he was having difficulty in getting the face and expression of Judas right but, if the Abbott so wished, he would use the Abbott’s face as the model!! The complaint was immediately withdrawn.

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The Launch


Charlie Nolan recorded the whole thing on October 19 2019 and here is a flavour of a great night for you to enjoy

Launch of A minute of Your Time

St. Luke’s Day, St. Mary’s Stained glass, Piseoga and A Minute of Your Time

St. Luke’s Day


Window in Taur Church


Saint Luke the Evangelist, whose feast day occurs today, has many strings to his bow. He is the patron saint of artists, physicians, bachelors, surgeons, students and butchers. In common with some of his fellow saints he is also mentioned in weather lore – 

St. Luke’s Little Summer, summerlike days around 18th October.


St. Luke’s Day did not receive as much attention as St. John’s Day (June 24) and Michaelmas (September 29) and others, so, to keep from being forgotten, St. Luke used his influence to give us some golden days to cherish before the coming of winter, or so the story goes. Sadly, he tried in vain. His feast day is forgotten by all except those on the loony fringe of folklore. Forecast for the weekend isn’t great – heavy rain, hail, thunder and the first widespread frost. Maybe he will prove them all wrong, or maybe he has just given up trying?  

Photo and text: Raymond O’Sullivan


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Statue of Bryan MacMahon at The Kerry Writers’ Museum

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Stain Glass Windows in St. Mary’s, Listowel


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Folklore in the Dúchas Collection

Piseoga gathered by Lyreacrompane schoolchildren from older people in 1936.

51. If the right side of your nose is itchy it is said that someone is talking good of you.

52. If the left side of your nose is itchy it is said that someone is talking bad of you.

53. If you right eye is itchy, it is said that you will be crying.

54. If your left eye is itchy it is said that you will be laughing.

55. If you marry on a Wednesday you will never have a day’s luck.

56. You should never carry a coal of fire out of a sick house.

57. You should never give away money on a Monday because you would be spending money for the rest of the week.

58. Thirteen is an unlucky number because at the Last Supper Our Lord and His twelve apostles were present and one of the twelve apostles betrayed Our Lord.

59. If you were playing cards and to have a dormouse in your pocket you are sure to win.

60. If you put the frame of a dead woman’s hand under a tub of cream it is said that there will be no butter taken.

61. You should never carry a coal out of a house on May Eve

62. If you throw an old shoe after a couple who are getting married it is said that they will be lucky.

63. If you wash your hands in the dew early on May morning it is said that you will be ripping knots for the rest of the year.

64. If you hear an ass braying it is the sign of a person dead. – You should never interfere with a fort. (No 24) (One day a man was crossing a fort and he saw a nice blackthorn stick growing inside in it. He went in & began to pull it. It was a beautiful summer’s day. As he stooped down a shower fell on him. He looked up and saw the sun shining. He stooped again and another shower fell. He looked up again and saw the sun. He stooped again and a shower of blood fell on his clothes so he went away without the stick).

65. If you spill salt it is the sign of bad luck because Judas, before he betrayed Our Lord, when reaching over, spilled the salt.

66. You should never strike a cow with a white-thorn because it is said that the Cross of Calvary was made of white-thorn.

67. If you hear a cock crowing it is the sign of bad luck, because when the cock crew St Peter denied Our Lord.

68. You should never hit anyone with a brush.

69. You should never catch a tongs in your hand unless you want it.

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A  Minute of Your Time


Here I am finalising arrangements with Elaine Kinsella of Radio Kerry for Saturday evening’s launch.

Dont forget…7.30 in St. John’s


Piseoga, a Rainbow and the Opening of Moyvane Church in 1956 and A minute of your Time Launch nears

Listowel Castle, October 2019

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More Folklore from the Dúchas collection

More Piseóga from Lyreacrompane in 1936

27. It is said that you should not throw away feet-water at night.

28. It is said that you should never sweep the dust of the floor out the door.

29. If you see a sod falling out of the fire it is said that someone will come into the house soon after.

30. If a sod falls out of the fire and sparks hop out of it, it is said that money will come into that house.

31. If you see two cocks fighting it is said that you will have strangers. (to visit)

32. If you see two looking into a mirror together it is said the two will fight.

33. If anyone goes to the well after 12 o’clock on Little Christmas night (January 6)it is said that that person will be dead before the next morning.

34. If you get meat you should never return it.

35. You should never kill a pig on a Monday for it is said that the meat will get bad.

36. Some people say that if you throw a cake of bread against the door on New Year’s Eve, it is supposed to keep the hunger away for that year.

37. Some people bless the cattle on May eve, expecting that they would not die during the year.

38. If you put your dress on wrong in the morning it is supposed that you will have good luck for the day.

39. If a widow’s curse will fall on you it will stay on you.

40. If you steal anything out of a forge it is said you will never have a day’s luck.

41. If you put on your right shoe first in the morning it is said that that you will have good luck for that day.

42. If a spider hops on your shoes or on your clothes it is supposed that you will get new shoes.

43. If you break a cup on Monday it is said to bring bad luck.

44. If a ring falls from a person who is getting married it is said that that person will not have a day’s luck during life.

45. If you go on a journey you should if possible go into a church before you perform it.

46. If you met a greyhound at night it is said that he is a devil. (A person was ill one night and they sent for the priest. When the priest was coming he saw a greyhound singing inside a fence and it was said that that was a devil singing Cailín Deas Crúidh na mbó and that song was never sung again.)

47. If you give away a black cat it is said that you give away all your luck.

48. If a spoon falls from a table it is supposed that a lady will come in.

49. If a knife falls from a table it is supposed that a gentleman will come in.

50. You should never refuse good money for a horse. (A few weeks ago a man refused thirty pounds for a horse and a few days after, the horse fell and broke her leg and the owner of her shot her.

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A Rainbow over a Shed

Could there be a pot a gold behind the cowshed?


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Opening of Moyvane Church in August 1956


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Still Promoting A Minute of Your Time

Yesterday I gave a few sneak peeks to local people. The reaction was invariably good from the hairdressers, the pharmacy, the theatre and the bookshop.

Danny and Yvanna

Brenda of Woulfe’s Bookshop liked what she saw.

Máire Logue of St. John’s is enjoying her promotional copy.

Oonagh thought it was one of the nicest books she has seen launched in Listowel in a long time.

Listen out for me today Oct. 17 2019 talking to Deirdre Walsh on Radio Kerry.

Below is the link to the piece I did with Mary Fagan on Horizons.
Horizons

Pilgrim Hill, A fresco in Sicily and A minute of Your Time

Listowel Courthouse in 2019

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The Last Supper



Billy McSweeney was in a 14th century cathedral in Taormina in Sicily recently. He sent us this picture of the frieze that is before the altar there. Is the person on the left of Jesus as we look at it a lady???

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Pilgrim Hill (from the schools folklore collection)


Gallán standing alone 3 1/2″ by 3″ by 1 1/2″ situated in the property of Mrs. Nora Brosnan, Lacca East,  Kilmorna. It was an old burial-place.

Folk-lore.The hill, on which this stone is situated, is called Pilgrim Hill.
According to the old people engineers, who visited the place fifty years ago, said it was the second oldest Church yard registered in Rome.
There is a well in the recently called an tobar mór and it was regarded by the old people as being a “blessed well”.
Beside the well there was a big mound of earth where the Pilgrim was supposed to have his cave. This mount was all burnt stone.Hence the name “Pilgrim Hill”. The field below the well is called seana t sráid, it is said to have been full of houses long ago and traces of them remained up to recent years.


COLLECTOR

Máire Bean Uí Catháin

Gender

female

Address

Rea, Co. Kerry

INFORMANT

Kathleen Brosnan

Gender

female

Address

Pilgrimhill, Co. Kerry


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The Colourful Language of the Letter Writer


(From John B.’s Letter of a Matchmaker)


My dear Jack,


I hope the weather over there is not like what we’re getting here. We’re all but drowned and what harm but I have five acres of hay down these nine days and The Pattern of Ballybunion staring me in the face. If the weather don’t come fine soon it won’t come fine at all and if it don’t come fine at all my cows and pony will walk The Long Acre trying to nose out their pick across the coming winter….


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A Minute of Your Time



People are asking me where they can get the book in the event they don’t make it to the launch.

It will be in Flavin’s, Woulfe’s and Eason in Church Street, Listowel. I’ll be hitting the road next week, so if you know of a bookshop or other outlet that would like to stock it, let me know.


I will be doing 2 Cork events in November, Nov. 2 in Philip’s Bookshop in Mallow at 4.00 p.m. and Nov. 15 in Edel Quinn Hall Kanturk at 7.30p.m.


I am also selling it to the diaspora through Paypal. If you want to buy it this way , contact me at listowelconnection@gmail.com


The book will cost €20 and the P and P is €8 if you are abroad and €6 within Ireland. 

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