Tuesday, January 7, 2025

Some Lesser-Known Irish Phrases

It's surprising how much flies under the radar when it comes to national differences. (Such differences as remain, I must gloomily add.) Whenever we discuss, for instance, Irishisms (or Irish idioms), it tends to be the same few that come to mind. Everybody knows "eejit" and "craic", and these are indeed used all the time in everyday life.

But there are many others that are so less-remarked that, frequently enough, I don't even realize they are Irishisms until this comes to my attention, for whatever reason.

I've been collecting these for a few months. Finding myself using one in a comment I left on the most recent post on the Some Definite Service blog, it occurred to me to share them. So here goes.

You’re some flower (or "you're some boy"): You're a piece of work! (Usually said in a tone of reluctant admiration.)


O'Reilly, the builder with the blarney from Fawlty Towers

Sent from Billy to Jack: Sent from pillar to post. "Your customer service department has sent me from Billy to Jack." Somewhat dated and rare, but I used it myself for a long time before I realized it was purely Irish.


You’re a star: You're a mensch, you're a brick. Very, very common, to the extent that it's the title of an Irish talent show on TV.


Tell me this and tell me no more: Rather old-fashioned, and now used more ironically than otherwise. Usually used in the context of something one has puzzled over for a long time, or finds baffling. I think it's more a Dublin usage than a general Irish usage, though I might be wrong. I can only "hear" it in an old Dublin accent.


Get out of that garden: Similar to Kenneth Williams's "stop messing abaht!". Used more ironically and self-consciously in my experience. Very much a Dublin usage.


You’re very good: "Thank you, you're very kind." This is probably said millions of times all over Ireland every day. It's so common I was surprised when I realized it was an Irishism.


At all at all: An emphatic ending to a statement. "He doesn't know what he's doing at all at all." Generally used for humorous effect, and even affecting a "culchie" or rural accent. I used to find this very irritating, rather randomly. The dropped comma is crucial; there's no pause.


Goodbye goodbye goodbye: This is almost the standard way to end a phone-call in Ireland. It's a form of insurance against not responding to somebody else's final "goodybe": to simply keep repeating the word until you hang up. Generally just three, though. I've observed this is especially common among women, but it's widely used by men, too.


He's a total looper: He's nuts.


In the ha’penny place: Doesn't hold a candle to. "I'm only in the ha'penny place to you when it comes to mischief." Used in the movie Michael Collins: "


No bother to you! You could accomplish that easily. Generally a compliment or an encouragement. "You should go up and sing a song. Go on, no bother to you!".


Saturday, January 4, 2025

A Short Story for the New Year: The Second Hand

Happy New Year! I'm going to be very busy in the next few weeks, so I probably won't have time for blogging. To keep the blog ticking over, here is a horror short story I wrote a few months ago. A few of my regular readers have read it already. Nobody is predicting I'm going to be stealing Stephen King's crown any time soon, but I hope it's worth a read.

I love being a family man, but I still hanker for time on my own. So when Marion and Eamonn flew off to my niece-in-law’s wedding, and I couldn’t go– it was the weekend of the Yeats conference, and I’d already committed to give a paper– I’ll admit I was looking forward to the time away from them.

Don’t get me wrong. I love my wife and son more than I’ve ever loved anything. Would I sacrifice myself to save them from a fire, or a terrorist attack, or some such situation? Without a moment’s hesitation. I’ve been in love with Marion since we were both fifteen years old, and my whole universe changed when Eamonn came into the world, that blizzardy January evening six years ago.

But…well, I can’t help it. Sometimes I hanker for brief but total isolation. I like pottering and daydreaming and looking at the reflection of a lightbulb in a cup of coffee. I like listening to the ticking of a clock, the whistle of the kettle. Marion is always listening to the radio, and Eamonn is already enraptured with the computer screen— something I’d resolved to protect him from in my idealistic days of early fatherhood, but which became (to be honest) an all-too-convenient pacifier before long. Really, I don’t think I’m any more indulgent with technology than most harried parents. At least I can say he’s well ahead in his reading age.

I drove them to the airport around eight. Eamonn was excited, but I wonder how he’d hold up on the six-hour flight to New York. Or, for that matter, on the hour-long stopover in JFK, before they fly to Rhode Island. I was glad he was having an adventure.

He’d had a tough year of it, with the fall and the broken leg this time last year. He’d fallen down the stairs one night, making his way to the kitchen to get a glass of water. It must have been hereditary, as I’d done the same thing about ten years ago, breaking my wrist.

And, in the meantime– the house was all my own, for two glorious evenings! I could do anything I want– watch any of the DVDs Marion never wanted to watch (mostly historical dramas), read uninterrupted for hours, or just soak in the bath all night and listen to some podcast. Actually, that sounded like just the thing.

So, ten minutes after I’d got home from the airport, I was laying back in a just-hot-enough tub while half-listening to a podcast on Yeats. I’d decided I should make it a Yeats podcast, given the conference this weekend, but I made it something as light and frothy as the bubble bath– a fairly middlebrow account of his unrequited love for Maud Gonne.

Lying there, feeling my body responding gradually to the warmth, I realised that I'd always felt sorry for Yeats. No, not just sorry….but a little bit condescending.

I was convinced that winning the love of your life was the jackpot prize in life, by far the best thing that could possibly happen to anybody. Even genius and fame and a Nobel Prize paled in comparison. I would never say such a thing out loud– it sounds horribly smug–  but I couldn't help my conviction that I was a member of a very small fraction of amazingly lucky people. From the first moment I'd laid eyes on Marion, I knew she was It. Yes, I've had plenty of other crushes down the years, both before and after we’d married. But it wasn't the same, it wasn't even comparable. 

I'd never had to settle, like most people had to settle. I never had to lie awake at night thinking of “the one that got away”. Poor old Willie Yeats! Poor everybody that ever had to do that!

All this gushing about my wife-- what about Eamonn, you might ask? Well, my feelings for Eamonn seemed like a natural overflow of my feelings for Marion. The two loves were like the light and heat of a flame (to take a comparison I would probably dismiss as hackneyed in my professional capacity).

I sunk deeper into the tub so that the water was up to my ears. I found myself enjoying the podcast, not for its narrative of Yeats's great passion– that was old hat to me, and the podcast added nothing new– but for its description of the love-letters he wrote. All of a sudden (this kind of reaction was quite common with me) the very idea of handwritten, personal documents seized my imagination; each one a unique expression of a distinctive personality, a moment in time and place. Not living in a computer server somewhere, in the digital ether, but in satisfying, tactile paper and ink.

So strong was this impression that I had a hankering to put my hands on handwritten documents at that very moment.

It only took me a few moments to remember the filing cabinet in the attic. It was full of my parents’ old papers, and I probably hadn’t looked into it (aside from the odd cursory glance) in over ten years.

Within moments I was in my bathrobe and slippers, and making my way upstairs.

The attic was a place I rarely entered, and the panel opening onto it was stiff. It took some effort to push it open, after finding the wooden stepladder to make my way up there. But I hoisted myself up without great difficulty. It was a fairly roomy attic, though nowhere near roomy enough to be converted to a bedroom. We had left an electric lamp up there, which I found after a little groping. It threw a pale white light in the little space, though it wasn’t bright enough to reach the corners.

Aside from boxes of books, there wasn’t much in the attic other than the filing-cabinet. Neither Marion nor I were clutterbugs– although we were both voracious readers.

The filing cabinet was small, metal, and olive-green. It had a very seventies or eighties look about it. It was mostly full of my father’s papers. A professional historian, his one book The Irish Huguenots was still a standard text in universities. There had been three different editions, and with his typical perfectionism he’d written draft after draft after draft of each one; I’d proofread the last one. In all honesty, it was a solid but dull piece of work; my father saw books as receptacles for knowledge. He was baffled by my love of poetry and literature.

My mother was no great writer, either, but she was a fairly dutiful correspondent. There were dozens if not hundreds of letters to her sister in Australia and her parents in Cork, written in her characteristically spiky writing.

I spent about two hours going through the papers in the filing cabinet, savouring the smell of the old paper and the dusty air. The only sound was the ticking of the second hand of my watch. It was such a soft sound, it only made the silence seem deeper, more peaceful.

I smiled at my mother’s frequent references to my health. I’ve never been seriously ill in my whole life, but she was a confirmed hypochondriac. I found it irritating at the time; now, with both my parents gone, their foibles suddenly seemed endearing.

It was then that I found it.

It was standing on its spine against the left-hand edge of the bottom drawer, hidden behind piles of other documents. It was a hardback copybook with a marble-effect cover.

The first page read The Personal Diary of S.J. Ward, 1995.

I was taken aback. I vaguely remembered having written a diary once– not for very long– but I’d assumed it had disappeared forever ago.

I turned the page, and there was a notice on the next one, in block capitals: TURN BACK, UNWELCOME READER! NOTHING GOOD WILL HAPPEN IF YOU KEEP ON READING!

Smiling at my teenage self’s sense of drama, I turned the page.

The diary was from my sixteenth year. It was written with the intensely self-conscious purple prose of a teenager just discovering the magic of the written word. There were three whole pages describing the rock of Cashel during a school visit.

A little later, on the tenth of March, there was this entry: “Went to see Outbreak with Marion Treacy. Pretty hokey. Eddie Rocket’s afterwards, hot dog and milkshake. Kept talking till seven p.m., walked her home. She seemed to have a good time.”

I couldn’t help smiling at my adolescent understatement. This was a truly life-changing day, our first date. There was a sense of unreality about it, a sense of unreality that endured for weeks afterwards, as I waited for her to discover what a dud I was. It never happened, miraculously. I’d probably been so matter-of-fact because I didn’t want to jinx it, or some such notion.

For the next few couple of days, there was nothing other than the trivia of the school timetable, television, and my first encounter with Hamlet, reading it off my own bat.

Then, on the thirteenth: “Shocking news this morning. Finn Marlowe was hit by a truck in the early hours of the morning. Dead instantly. Very weird atmosphere. Lots of whispering, girls crying. All sorts of rumours.”

All sorts of rumours? I strained my memory, trying to recall them. Oh yes…Finn was supposedly on LSD when he was hit by the truck. Or magic mushrooms. Or something.

It wasn’t hard to believe, because he was a bit of a weird kid. He didn’t speak much, and when he did speak, it tended to be a long monologue. He was ordinary height, thin, and always seemed very stiff. He had very fair hair, almost white-looking, and a sort of whiny expression. He always did up his shirt’s collar button, which most of the boys (including me) left open.

He wasn’t really bullied, that I know of, but he wasn’t popular, either. He didn’t seem to want to be popular. I do remember girls crying that morning his death was announced, but I’m pretty sure it was from shock rather than grief. 

Finn was fairly bright, and unquestionably talented when it came to art. He was always drawing between classes, but his pictures tended to the weird and macabre: the Grim Reaper, gargoyles, that sort of thing. I think he was into heavy metal or something.

Marion told me about a time he’d actually shown her his sketch-book, out of the blue. They were alone in the art class at the time, just after putting their portfolios away, and everybody else had cleared out. He seemed excited, she said. There were a few normal pictures, like studies of birds, but mostly it was really dark stuff. She remembered a picture of a witch being burned at the stake; the witch was a beautiful woman and flames were barely obscuring her abundant bosoms.

Marion remembered telling him his drawings were were great, then clearing out as quick as she decently could, embarrassed.

Of course I remembered Finn dying– a kid dying at school seems like a radical departure from the script of normality– but I had no idea it had happened so soon after I’d started dating Marion.

The funeral didn’t come till the 26th. My entry was: Finn’s funeral today, in St. Laurence’s. As ever, death comes along with a stream of platitudes, the horror masked by conventions, not to forget the inevitable sick jokes. 

The memories were coming back to me, clearer now. 

Decades later, I could admit to myself something that I was barely aware of, at the time; that death, especially premature death, gives a certain added relish to life. I noticed the same thing in the wake of 9/11. The shock and horror  were quite genuine; but, somehow, daily life around that time seemed sharper, heightened, more palpable. (I suppose if my work as an English academic has done anything for me, it’s made me more sensitive to atmospheres, even atmospheres we don’t like to admit to.)

The silence of the attic was broken by the jingle of an ice-cream van, coming from streets away. It’s always seemed to me a perversely melancholy sound. I found myself, randomly enough, remembering the refrain of the Wallace Stevens poem: The only Emperor is the Emperor of ice-cream.

I turned back to the diary. A sixteen-year-old in love took death in his stride, to say the least. I could watch myself, in entry after entry, becoming more confident that Marion (miracle of miracles!), actually liked me. 

On July the ninth I wrote: “Long conversation with M. outside the library, all about life and joy and honesty with yourself. She told me she can speak to me better than she can speak to anyone. Joy unsurpassed!”

As the diary went on, and aside from the ever-pressing business of tests and essays, my mentions of Marion became more lyrical, sometimes not even tied to any incident.

Then, when I turned the page to August, there was a shock.

Under a description of a morning’s browsing in bookshops with Marian, I’d written: “I have to admit, I can’t imagine feeling about anyone the way I feel about M. And– can it be true?-- I think she feels the same about me!!

Written underneath, in somebody else’s handwriting, were the words: Scum scum scum.

Incredulously, I examined them. They were unmistakeable. They were so neat and even, they looked almost like print at first, but a second look showed them to be handwritten.

I stared at them for minutes on end, baffled. Who on earth could have put them there? Why? My brother or sister? I couldn’t imagine it. They were always absorbed in their own lives. It was hard to imagine them ever reading my diary, much less writing a nasty comment. Besides, it wasn’t their handwriting.

I sat there, staring at the light from the electric lamp, listening to the gentle ticking of my watch.

Could it have been me? Could I have written it? Was I harbouring some kind of sub-conscious self-hatred that manifested itself in the very place where I finally admitted Marion liked me? Pop psychology, codswallop, I would have said at any other time…but how else to explain the thing?

I began to scan through the pages more urgently.

A few pages on, I had written: “How is it possible to feel this happy? It’s a horrible cliché to say it feels like a dream. I would never stoop to such cliché. But it feels like a dream!”

And, to the edge of those words, in the same block letters: Scum filth die.

Feeling cold all over, I thumbed through the rest of the diary. There wasn’t much left of it; it ended in early May. And there were no recurrences of that weird, horrible writing.

Tucked into the middle of the hardback copy, however, were some photographs.

About half of them were of me and Mairon; at the beach, on a park bench, just hanging out in her parents’ gardens. The others were all sorts: Christmas, the school production of The Tempest, a sports day.

One, however, showed a group of us on the school trip to the Rock of Cashel, standing with it in the background, on a sunny day.

There were about fifteen of us. I was standing towards the left of the group, smiling dutifully but not very enthusiastically at the camera.

The second from right from Marion, who looked like she had been laughing.

And right beside her was Finn. 

For once, he was smiling. It was as though all the sullenness had dropped for him, and he looked like a normal, happy-go-lucky kind of kid.

I felt a twinge of pity, of sympathy. Had he positioned himself just there for the group shot? He was grinning into the camera, with no idea that he only had weeks left to live. Ecstatically happy just to be standing beside the girl he liked, I guess. I knew how that felt.

Downstairs, I heard a thud. My heart began to hammer.

I looked around the attic for something heavy, something I could have in my hand as I went down to investigate. I couldn’t. Wildly, I found myself imagining a brass candlestick.

Then I heard a beautiful sound– the miaowing of Barty, the cat from 38.

I must have left the kitchen window open, and the cat must have knocked down– a book from a table, most likely. Barty frequently wandered in when he could find a way, looking for strokes and attention.

For now, he’d have to be disappointed. I was too intent upon the mystery of the diary.

I looked at those two grotesque entries again, trying to convince myself it was some kind of sick joke. But by what hand? When? And why?

I’d always considered myself a sceptic, more or less. I was grateful that a great man like Yeats could believe in his fairies and spirits, since it resulted in such great poetry– something that was rarely created by rationalists. But they weren’t to be taken seriously.

Or were they?

I flicked through the copy-book again, drawn back towards the morning where we’d heard the news that Finn had died.

March the thirteenth.

March the thirteenth!

The very day Eamonn had fallen down the stairs, a year ago. I remembered now.

I looked at my watch, which had a date reading just below the six on the dial.

Today was the twelfth.

I felt cold all of a sudden, a coldness that had nothing to do with the temperature in the attic.

The early hours of the thirteenth of March. Eamonn falling down the stairs. Finn walking under a truck.

I had fallen down the stairs in the early hours of the morning myself, all those years ago. I couldn’t remember the date, but I was pretty sure it was spring.

Then I started remembering other things.

One day in my twenties, walking home from the chipper after a night out, well after midnight, a motorbike skidded and slid into a tree just in front of me. The guy wasn’t hurt, and neither was I, but it was a close thing.

And then there was that holiday in Salzburg, where I celebrated St. Patrick’s Day with Irish students and emigrants. The tile that had slid from a roof just as I was walking under it, in the early hours of the morning. A freak accident, everybody said. It missed me by inches.

My mind was racing now, trying to think of every possible misadventure that might have struck me, Eamonn or Marion in the early hours of March the thirteenth. It was ridiculous, but I couldn’t help myself.

I couldn’t think of any others.

But the thing was, I had always been one for an early bedtime, and so was Marion. So I guessed that, most years on the thirteenth of March, in the early hours, I was fast asleep in bed. And so were Eamonn and Marion.

I sat there in the pale white light, staring at the face of the boy who had loved my wife, and trying to convince myself that he was now consigned to oblivion. Or, at least, to some other world, safely distinct from this one.

Then something occurre to me. It didn’t even make sense. If I was really onto something, if this boy could reach beyond the grave in the early hours on the date that he had died– because that’s what I was contemplating, insane as it seemed– why would I be safe even in bed?

Why wouldn’t he just block an artery in my heart, give me a brain aneurysm, make the ceiling fall on top of me, something like that?

That’s unanswerable, I thought, feeling a slow release of tension from my body. If this kid from the forgotten past really had the power to get to me, even one day a year, I would have been dead long ago.

But then…I flicked through the pages, looking at those horrible words again.

Scum scum scum.

Scum filth die.

They seemed barely coherent, like the welling up of some volcanic disembodied rage.

What did I really know about such things? How did I know what this force could do, what it couldn’t do? Whether it was Finn as we had known (or barely known him), or some horrible remnant of unreasoning hatred, jealousy and rage?

Why did I assume it made any sense, that it had any consistency, that our human logic applied to it at all?

A line from “The Dead” by James Joyce came to my mind. What was it? Ah, yes: “Some impalpable and vindictive being was coming against him, gathering forces against him in its vague world.” I’d always loved those words. I didn’t love them now.

And then– only at that moment, somehow–  the worst thought of all occurred to me.

In the early hours of March the thirteenth, Eamonn and Marion would be exactly where they were right now: tens of thousands of feet above the Atlantic Ocean.

I looked down at my watch. It was a little over two hours to midnight.

The sound of my watch’s second hand, counting down the moments with horrible precision, filled the shadowy attic. They stretched ahead of me, filling the horizon with dread.

Wednesday, December 18, 2024

Nollaigh Shona Daoibh

I don't plan to post again between now and the New Year, so I'm wishing everybody who reads a spiritually fruitful end of Advent, a wonderful Christmas, and a hopeful and happy start to 2025.

Thanks for reading, commenting, and giving life to this blog in 2024.

The picture is the crib in St. Teresa's Carmelite church in Clarendon Street. (There are two Carmelite churches in Dublin city centre and they are both named after streets that either don't exist or barely exist!)

Monday, December 16, 2024

What Were They Thinking? The Hundred Dumbest Events in Television History

I've been going through the drafts folder of my gmail account. I found this book review, which might be of interest. It was actually an Amazon review. I still regularly dip into this book. I keep it in the staff room bookshelf at work.

Christmas is frequently associated with bad television, so it's quite seasonal, right?

This is one of the most enjoyable books I've ever read! I read it slowly, to make it last, and I've often picked it up to dip into it ever since. I sometimes bring it to the supermarket or post office to read it in the queue. I love this book!


I heard about it on TV Tropes, a pop culture website that I read compulsively.

The great thing about this book is that the writer, David Hofstede, obviously loves television, and has spent a great deal of time looking at all kinds of TV shows. As he announces in the introduction, he is not an intellectual snob, and he's happy to admit to a liking for what other writers might consider trash. He doesn't dismiss talk shows or game shows on principle; if he trashes a talk show, a game show, or televangelist show, it's because it's a bad specimen of its kind. He really knows his stuff and he loves his subject.

I also liked the fact that he doesn't really have a social or political hatchet to grind. He's very fair-minded. He's rather more anti-censorship than I would be, but he even admits that some censorship is necessary.

But I'm beginning to make this book sound a little too earnest. It's a smart book, but it's also a fun book-- an awful lot of fun. I laughed out loud on many occasions when reading it. Hofstede is quite a wit, and he surveys these televisual car-crashes with considerable glee (although he is never cruel, and is even quite sympathetic towards many of the transgressors). Having said that it's fun, I should also add that Hofstede can sometimes write seriously, and I do like that. He's not permanently on giggle-mode. This is the tone of some "worst of" books, and it becomes very fatiguing.

As an Irish person, albeit one maried to an American, I found this book fascinating as a window onto US televisual and social history. I learnt a lot of new things, such as the nicknames of the various TV networks. I didn't know what a big deal some shows such as the Dick Van Dycke Show, Gilligan's Island, or The Brady Bunch were to Americans. I'd heard of these shows, but this book gave me a better knowledge of their standing in the USA.



I'd heard about many of these "worst moments" before-- Supertrain (a disastrous drama set on board a super-fast train), Coy and Vance Duke (the ill-fated replacements of Bo and Luke Duke for one series of The Dukes of Hazzard), and Chuck Cunningham (a member of the Cunningham family in Happy Days, who disappeared in an early instalment of the show and was soon completely forgotten).

But there's lots of other gems I learned about for the first time in this book. For instance, the Poopin' Moose, a bizarre but popular item on the QVC network (it was a wooden moose which excreted chocolate), the ill-advised efforts to remake Fawlty Towers for the American market, and Chevy Chase's quickly-cancelled talk show.

One thing I really like about the book is that it's not just a collection of dodgy moments from TV. It also includes trends and practices-- for instance, one of the "events" is the loss of so many recordings of vintage TV shows, which were frequently taped over by networks.



I'm as interested in the author's background-painting as I am in his main focus; for instance, the section on the Poopin' Moose includes quite an interesting history of the QVC shopping network.

Finally, a word as to why I find myself reading a book like this in the first place. Not only am I interested in the history of TV (which is in itself a huge part of social history), but I enjoy reading about the unpredictability of the creative industries. In a duller parallel universe, nobody ever greenlights a crazy idea, focus groups and test audiences always predict the reaction of the general republic, and making TV shows is an exact science. Thank God we don't live in that universe! 

Reading about catastrophes in the history of TV might be seen as voyeurism; taking pleasure in the failures of others and sneering at their misfortunes. But I think the joy we take in books like this comes from a purer source; they reassure us that the world is utterly unpredictable, and full of surprises. In a way, we celebrate the human condition by saluting its most hilarious mishaps as well as its most brilliant achievements.

Wednesday, December 11, 2024

A Hoary Christmas-Tide Tradition

Traditions! I never shut up about them, do I?

Indeed, I briefly had a blog called Traditions Traditions Traditions!, which lasted only four posts, but which I sometimes think of reviving.

Well, this blog has its own tradition of posting "The Burning Babe" by Robert Southwell at Christmas. I've just checked and I've done this every year since 2015!

I did a quick search for critical literature on the poem, and discovered that it's inspired a whole book, written by Anne Sweeney and published in 2006. It's titled Robert Southwell: Snow in Arcadia: Redrawing the English Landscape 1586-1595.


Here's how it begins:

‘The Burning Babe’ is probably the only poem most readers will know of Robert Southwell’s. I recall reading it as a child; it seemed pleasantly atmospheric to a childish imagination, the holy Babe appearing like a bright bauble against the dark of a snowy English Christmas evening. It is homely, yet cryptic in the Elizabethan style, and blessedly short, a silly sentimental thing that manages, apparently on these merits, to make its way into most anthologies of the English poetic canon. It came as something of a shock to me as an undergraduate to learn that Ben Jonson, with his reputation as a hard man of letters, had singled out this bagatelle for admiration – indeed, he wished he himself had written it; there can be no greater possible encomium from a great ego. What did he admire in it? There have been some fine commentaries on Robert Southwell’s life and work, but none of them has explained to my satisfaction why a man like Jonson would have admired this poem so. This book is an attempt to answer that question.

A "bagatelle", really? Presumably Sweeney is provocative in her choice of words, and she doubtless revised her estimation of "The Burning Babe" if she wrote an entire book on the subject. (I guess I'll find out, since I've put the book next on my reading list.)

Anyway, decide for yourself. Here it is:

As I in hoary winter’s night stood shivering in the snow,
Surpris’d I was with sudden heat which made my heart to glow;
And lifting up a fearful eye to view what fire was near,
A pretty Babe all burning bright did in the air appear;
Who, scorched with excessive heat, such floods of tears did shed
As though his floods should quench his flames which with his tears were fed.
“Alas!” quoth he, “but newly born, in fiery heats I fry,
Yet none approach to warm their hearts or feel my fire but I!
My faultless breast the furnace is, the fuel wounding thorns,
Love is the fire, and sighs the smoke, the ashes shame and scorns;
The fuel Justice layeth on, and Mercy blows the coals,
The metal in this furnace wrought are men’s defiled souls,
For which, as now on fire I am to work them to their good,
So will I melt into a bath to wash them in my blood.”
With this he vanish’d out of sight and swiftly shrunk away,
And straight I called unto mind that it was Christmas day.

And here is a fine spoken rendition of the poem, by a chap who modestly refrains from giving his name.



Thursday, December 5, 2024

Excellent Three-Part Series on Medjugorje from Jimmy Akin's Mysterious World

Jimmy Akin's Mysterious World is undoubtedly my favourite podcast of all time. I've been following it since it began, and it's now up to episode 340. I haven't listened to all of them, by any means, but I'd say I've listened to most of them.

Recently, they did a good three-part series on Medjugorje. (I'm not a believer in Medjugorje, though quite a few people I respect are, but it's very interesting nonetheless.)

The first part is here.

The second part is here.

And the bonanza, two-and-a-half hour third part is here.

While we're on the subject of Marian apparitions, the episode on Our Lady of Zeitoun is also excellent. (I find that one much more convincing!)

I can't claim to be a very enthusiastic podcast listener. I like the BBC podcasts In Our Time and Great Lives. (Though I haven't listened to that second one in a good while, and honestly I would find it hard to do so after the presenter Matthew Parris's contribution to the euthanasia debate.)

During Covid, I listened to the Secret Life of Prison podcast, having some fascination with the human situation of incarceration (especially at that time). But I haven't followed it in more recent years.

It's not really a podcast, but quite a few years ago I spent many a pleasant night listening to old horror-themed radio broadcasts. I think this was the website. It looks very different now, if it is.

On the subject of horror (and again, it's not really a podcast), I've recently discovered The Cobwebs Channel, in which an enthusiastic and likeable movie enthusiast talks about his favourite horror movies, and and movies in general.

What podcasts or YouTube channels do you like?

Tuesday, November 26, 2024

A Christmas Timeline in Ireland

 


The Christmas special of Ireland's Own features my article "A Christmas Timeline in Ireland", in which I present snippets from every Christmas in Ireland since independence in 1923. News stories, quotations, TV listings, sports results-- I tried to mix it up, but while keeping it suitably festive. There's a whole six pages of it (in three different parts, spread through the magazine) and I'm very pleased with it. I had great fun writing it.