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: Easter

In Dublin

Easter 2024 altar in St. Mary’s Church

It all Happened Again, and Again and Again

From Pres. Secondary School yearbook 2004/05

Knocknagoshel Phoenix 2006

The Big Smoke

I took the train from Farranfore with my friend, Peggy, on a mission to see our old friends who usually travel in the other direction to meet us.

This sign is at the entrance to the station. Take a half a look at the translation of Live train/ platform information.

Did no one check it before it went up?

Who signed off on it?

We visited The National Gallery. It’s a beautiful place, so much more worthwhile than the shops.

The only shopping we did was in the National Gallery. There I spotted a Listowel connection, two displays of Anna Guerin’s Sock Co op souvenir socks.

More Flowers

We have a Champion

Schools 5- a -side soccer is like World Cup when you are 11.

Cora and her Gaelscoil Uí Riordáin team are Cork champions and Cora got the award for “Player of the Tournament”. On now to Munster in May.

A Fact

The most difficult tongue twister in the world is

“The sixth sick sheik’s sixth sheep’s sick.”

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Easter 2023

The Big Bridge on an April Sunday in 2023

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Then and Now

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My Easter Visitors

Grandchildren grow into teenagers and have their one interests and commitments so finding time for Nana is now a bit more difficult. Cora and her Mammy brought Molly for a welcome visit.

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Easter

First I must tee this up with a story.

A. C. Bradley is probably the most renowned Shakespeare scholar ever. He was required reading when I was in college and he was the absolute authority on Shakespeare’s tragedies. An anonymous student wrote the following;

I dreamt last night that Shakespeare’s ghost

Sat for a civil service post.

The English paper for that year

Had several questions on King Lear

Which Shakespeare answered very badly

Because he hadn’t read his Bradley.

Now I’m going to do a bit of Bradleying myself as I interpret for an artist I never met and read something into a work that the creator may not have intended.

This simple artistic installation on Olive Stack’s window says Easter to me. The stone is rolled back and the tomb is empty. Jesus is risen.

Thank you.

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Winner alright

Remember this:

Dave O’Sullivan, our super newspaper researcher found this;

Are any of them still with us and do they remember their win?

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A Fact

China has a population of over a billion. It has only 200 family names.

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Easter, a moveable feast, Horsefair

Today is Good Friday. In ancient Ireland this was a time of great austerity. Holy week was given over to cleaning and whitewashing inside and out. Easter was a feast of newness. New clothes were bought and gifts of wearables such as hats, caps and ribbons were given to children by relatives and friends.

On Good Friday many of our ancestors voluntarily exceeded the rigorous fasting prescribed by the church. According to Kevin Danaher in his book, The Year in Ireland, many people ate nothing until mid day. Many took nothing more that three mouthfuls of bread and three sips of water in the whole day.

No work was done on the land.

Girls let their hair hang loose as a symbol of mourning.

Everyone went barefoot.

No one would move house or begin a new enterprise on Good Friday.

No animal would be slaughtered.

No wood would be worked or burned

No nail would be driven.

No boats put to sea.

From noon until 3.00 p.m. (the period on which it was believed Jesus hung on the cross) silence was observed except for prayers which were said by the whole household together.

Cold and wet weather were expected and accepted a sign of nature mourning.

Water taken from the Holy Well on Good Friday was thought to have curative properties and was kept for the year.

After all this deprivation and fasting, Easter was a joyous festival. Danaher describes a custom on Easter Monday which was observed in places as far afield as Drogheda and Cork of “Whipping the herring”. This was a procession through the streets of people who worked in slaughter houses and butcher shops. They carried a herring on a pole and ceremonially beat him to symbolize an end of fish and a return to meat. Sometimes a collection was taken up to compensate these people in the meat trade for their loss of earnings during Lent.  I don’t see  any reference to this custom in Kerry.

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See the best of Barney McKenna R.I.P. on The Green Linnet here;

http://www.rte.ie/player/#s=search&q=the%20green%20linnet

Only yesterday I was reading this on twitter. It’s worth zooming in, if you can.

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In St. Mary’s yesterday, no flowers no candles in preparation for Good friday.

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Yesterday we had a horse fair on Market Street. I took a few snaps.

I ran into two of my collaborators, Jer and Ger.

I’m not sure if this fellow was for sale. He certainly looked a fine specimen.

€350 the boys were asking for their pony.

This man had some beautiful ducks and ducklings.

There were horses too,

and tack.

There is a lovely video from Fealegood here

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DQI_XHu6fNI

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