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: Paddy Fitzgibbon

Obituary to Paddy Fitzgibbon

+ R.I.P. Paddy Fitzgibbon+

Paddy Fizgibbon R.I.P. and his wife Carmel with Mary Keane R.I.P. at the unveiling of the Tarrant sculpture to John B. Keane in The Garden of Europe in 2008

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The March of Time

A few years ago Paddy Fitzgibbon sent us this picture of his bookshelf with the above caption. I think it is a fitting memorial to open my tribute with.

Paddy was an extraordinary man. I have never in my lifetime met a man of such intellect, such wit and such diverse talents.

He was a scholar, a reader, a writer, a photographer, an artist, a garden designer, a linguist and of course a lawyer. He was also a husband, a father and a friend. He will be missed by many.

I didn’t know Paddy in his professional capacity as the Fitzgibbon in Pierse and Fitzgibbon. This example of the beautiful artwork that was his signature style is on display in his former workplace.

This witty photograph is typical of the man who rarely saw the world as dull and ordinary as you or I see it.

Paddy snapped this full nest a few years ago and in his usual insightful way captioned it “The Supreme Court”.

Isn’t this the best ever photograph of Charlie Nolan? Paddy caught Charlie, a keen photographer, in a setting so dear to his heart, beside his beloved River Feale where he enjoyed so many happy hours.

Closer to home, he called this one “Florist in Dromin”

I will never forget his exhibition of photographs in St. John’s a few years back. Every image raised a smile. The pictures were of weird and wonderful signs and names that he spotted on his travels. The pictures had little commercial value but that was Paddy’s way. He framed them and exhibited them to entertain us. It was just one of his many contributions to our enjoyment of the town he loved so well.

Paddy is on the far right of Junior Griffin’s photograph with Mervyn Taylor T.D. and other Jewish dignitaries at the Holocaust Memorial at the official opening of The Garden of Europe in 1995.

The Garden of Europe today is a beautiful legacy this marvellous man conceived and, with the help of his friends in The Rotary Club and his hard working and supportive wife, brought into being.

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Now to Paddy Fitzgibbon, the playwright, poet and writer.

I have a confession to make. Much of Paddy’s writing was way too scholarly for me. When I think of him I think of the lines from Goldsmith’s Village Schoolmaster

“And still they gazed and still the wonder grew

That one small head could carry all he knew.”

I’m going to repeat here in full an old Listowel Connection post from a few years back….

You would never know what you might encounter on Listowel Connection. This next must be the most unusual item I’ve yet posted. It is a Listowel sequel to a Victorian translation of a poem by an 11th century Persian poet.

This is how Paddy Fitzgibbon introduced his poem to us;

Attached is a sequel to Edward Fitzgerald’s 1859 translation of the Rubaiyat of Omar Kayam. It is written by the entirely fictitious North Kerry poet Tomaisin Og McDoodle, a son of the equally fictitious North Kerry statesman Tom Doodle.

Seán Moriarty as Tom Doodle and Paddy Fitzgibbon during Vincent Carmody’s Writers’ Week Tom Doodle walk in 2017

(First of all let me fill you in on the original. In case you were wondering, no, I didnt know this stuff. I looked it up.

Omar Kayam was a Persian poet and astronomer who lived from 1048 to 1131. During his lifetime he was most famous as a scientist and mathematician. His poetry might never have gained its worldwide acclaim were it not for the English translation by Edward Fitzgerald in 1859. 

Apparently the translation was not over faithful to the original.

A rubaiyat is a poem of four lined stanzas. Fitzgerald translated hundreds of them. These translations are widely available and very popular.

The theme of the Rubaiyat of Omar Kayam is Carpe Diem. It chimes well with mindfulness and other philosophies that are currently having a moment. 

Here is an example

26.

Oh, come with old Khayyam, and leave the Wise To talk; 

one thing is certain, that Life flies;

One thing is certain, and the Rest is Lies;

The Flower that once has blown for ever dies.

Now to our modern day Kerry Rubaiyat. Like the original, it is very long so I’m only giving you a taste. M.C.)

One evening, when the Sun began to sink,

Greatrakes  FitzGodward calmly deigned to think,

Then gulped his wine, to celebrate and wake, 

His sixty- ninth sincere farewell to drink.

The evening of his own wild days grew late,

The storm curls of his brain grew limp and straight;

So, should he hurl invectives at the gods,

Or kneel, and pray, and tintinnabulate ?

FitzGodward  filled another glass; bombast

And blighted folly then combined to  cast

One marching, flashing, laughing glance, that left

The cavalries of misery aghast.

           ……………..

          The solstices of good and evil came 

And went; no one can bridge with praise or blame,

The endless chasm between Is and Ought,

The raftless river between Pride and Shame.

…………………….

He took to sportsmanship in Cork and Clare,

( His winters shortened by a well – turned hare );

He once fell off a horse, near here or there,

And licked the lattice work of life, but  where?

( Our reformed hero took Holy Orders and soon rose through the ranks to become pope)

Then at theology he made a start,

And tore both schisms and heresies apart;

He thrived, and soon became an expert in

Aortic aspects of the Sacred Heart.

( His conversion was short-lived, He returned to his old ways)

Old Earth still calmly went around the Sun,

And soon Greatrakes returned to sin and fun,

He drained a barrel then, to eulogise

The obsequies of piety undone.

(When we all come to the end this is how Tomaisín sees it.)

“Come now old friend  Khayyám, and while we can

We will proclaim some sort of well laid plan,

Conceived in wine by Zeus or Proust or Faust,

Or someone’s cousin’s father’s Uncle Dan

When, towards our one last hideous latch we’re drawn,

We’ll greet its rusty  hinges with a yawn,

Then whistle a rattling randy tune beside

A wren wrung river, or a lark bossed lawn.

Go ndéana Dia Uilechumhachtach trocaire ar anam uasal dílis ár gcara Paddy Fitzgibbon. Braithfimid uainn é. Cinnte ní bheidh a leithéad arís ann.

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Bertie Ahern in St. Michael’s, Art in Pierse and Fitzgibbon

Sundown in North Kerry

Photo: Mike Enright

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Tongue in Cheek poem of advice for Poets


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When the taoiseach came to town


When Bertie Ahern who was the taoiseach of the day opened the extension to St. Michael’s, the media were out in force. That’s Pascal Sheehy with the furry mike.



Local politicians were out in force as well.

2010 I think

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If the cat had kittens, I’d be blamed…….

This was a favourite saying of a lovely old man I knew one time. He felt that he could never do right for doing wrong. Don’t we all feel like that some times?

I brought you last week a little summer story about the relocating of the Infant of Prague statue in St. Mary’s. Now the poor Infant popping up in a more prominent position is being blamed for the drought…..


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Listowel Visual Arts Week 2018

This was the beautiful still life installation in John R.’s window during the visual arts festival.

One of the lovely events that took place during that week was a tour of Pierse and Fitzgibbon offices in Market Street. Robert Pierse has gathered some incredibly beautiful artworks over a lifetime of collecting. We were allowed to see some of the treasures, including a replica of The Book of Kells.

This is an early mural by Olive Stack depicting a Fair Day scene in Market Street. The works of several local artists are on display on the walls and even the furniture and lighting is by Irish designers.

This beautiful celtic name plate is the work of the multi talented Paddy Fitzgibbon.

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Facelift for Church Street



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Molly at The Dandy Lodge



A Morning walk in The Garden of Europe, Listowel, Co. Kerry

I often walk in the Garden of Europe and I often post pictures of it here. I took it for granted that everyone knew what I was talking about. That is until Joan Quilter contacted me and alerted me to a whole swathe of my readership who have never been to Listowel let alone to this particular beautiful corner of our fair town. So this is for you, Joan and everyone who loves Listowel from a distance.

This is the Tarbert Road out of town. I usually walk to the Garden from this side. You can also access it from the Bridge Road side.

Pass the Topaz Garage on your left.

The local Emmets Clubhouse and grounds is on your right.

Next is St. Michael’s College, the alma mater of so many famous Listowel men.

After St. Michael’s you take the next right turn into Gurtinard.

Straight in front of you is the entrance to the old golf course.

Turn right here into the road behind St. Michael’s and the graveyard.

You are now in Gurtinard Wood.

Listowel Tidy Town Committee have done a great job of laying out trails for us to explore.

At this junction we choose to go left because that way lies our destination, The Garden of Europe.

If we were to go right we would eventually get to the town park and the pitch and putt course.

When we turn left, straightaway we have a choice again. Right leads to the park and left leads to the Garden of Europe.

This is the entrance.

At either side of the entrance some people have been given permission to plant a tree to commemorate a loved one.

Below is the link to the little video I made. (Yes I do know that an acorn grows into an oak and a conker is the fruit of the horse chestnut tree. I wasn’t prepared to do the whole video again because of a slip of the tongue.)

October walk through the Garden of Europe

The Holocaust memorial

The garden is a delightful public tree filled space filled with peace, tranquility and birdsong. Listowel owes a huge debt of gratitude to Paddy and Carmel Fitzgibbon who worked so hard to get this beautiful place up and running. This was once the town of Listowel’s rubbish tip.

When you leave the garden, you may turn left into the path to the river.

This is the entrance to the garden from the Bridge Road side.

We are now beside the River Feale.

The river on a lovely crisp October morning.

Listowel people often refer to this as The Big Bridge.

This tree is magnificent.

The old handball alley is here too.

Beside the ball alley is the area under development by The Tidy Towns people as a community fruit and nut garden.

Then we come to the Millennium Arch, through which we can see Bridge Road.

The path leads us to the Square. Ignore the horrid building on the right (pictured below). That is the old Neodata building which was used for a while by Kerry County Council but is now lying unused. It is earmarked for demolition.

The houses on Bridge Road have a touch of old world splendour about them.

The Town Park is more correctly known as Childers’ Park. It is on our right as we walk up Bridge Road. Kay Caball told me its history and I told you before, so you’ll have to look it up if you want to know all about it and why some local people still call it The Cows’ Lawn.

On our left is the presbytery and St. Mary’s

And now we are back into Listowel Town Square.

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