Poet’s
Corner- Seamus Heaney Passes –Take Two
On The Passing Of Seamus Heaney
From The Pen Of Frank Jackman (nee
Francis Riley)
A word. He came from the land of
poets, porridge, potatoes, publicans, paupers, prayers, pissers and peat, the well-known
eight p’s (a ninth, protestants, will be
left unspoken). He spoke the mother tongue, nay, the grandmother’s tongue never
quite the King’s and then time passing the Queen’s English but that surly
brogue that bespoke of ancient sorrows, ancient oppressions, ancient dreams
against the hard seas surrounding dear mother. Dear green earth mother born of
sorrows, sea-borne easy prey for reckless adventurers seeking simple riches and
too easy passage to points east and west when the troubles come.
Grandmother, gone to Amerikee, gone
to easy sea-borne passage east or west when the troubles came, famine, field
rot, rack-rents and imperial decrees, spoke unto death, and maybe beyond the
grave too, spoke in brogue too (and not just grandmother in her generation, her
Dublin “shawlie” generation transported to M Street, Southie and Ashmont Street,
Dorchester) defiant against vanilla Americanization, against tarnished green,
against some lost old sod memory. And so DNA-wired her sprawl unto the third
generation learned, prosaic and poetic both, the swirl of language, the
twisting of a word upon the tongue, the savoring of it, and the blarney and
insincerely of it too when needed, and the delight in catching just the right
breeze of a phrase as it passes in some bay (always some bay present, these
were a sea-bound, sea-faring people, if only to diaspora) drifting back across
the seas. Across the seas to that good green earth.
And grandmother’s tongue, speak
plainly brother, grandmother’s brogue bespoke not just of flailed language, and
of savorings, but as repository of other sights, smells and sounds, and ancient
clan customs. Eternal white sheets, pillow cases, towels, underwear (men’s,
women’ s hung somewhere, some modest somewhere, hidden from sex-distorted youth
and lecherous old men) flying in the back porch triple-decker wind trying to
make due for the umpteenth time although one and all can almost see though the hand
wrung bleached whiteness of the things. The sound of the trains belching coal dust
fumes almost in the back door as they ferry THEM to their busyness.
The smell of oatmeal bread, oatmeal
set aside from the daily ration, fresh baked from widow lady Ida’s Bakery
(really the downstairs part of her house converted of necessity into a money-producing
operation since Mister’s passing), and Friday buns (yes, yes too, Lenten
hot-cross reprieve buns I hadn’t forgotten). The no smell of the boiled dinner
(non- descript meat, someone’s leavings, yes, yes, potatoes, cabbage and so on,
boiled to perdition by the time the damn thing boiled, got boiled down). The
smell of whiskies (and Uncle Sean, named after Sean Flynn, whisky breathes) cheap
low-shelf whiskies, the cheapest Johnny Walker could bring forth, to make the
pennies go farther, and of stouts and ales too when whiskey credits were short.
The acrid smell of sweaty barrooms, men only, ladies by invitation, just before
last call, just before a whole slew of grizzled fathers, uncles, older brothers
crabbed their ways home to some sullen sleep. The smell of sunken sunrise Sunday
church (Roman Catholic, naturally) all dank and foreboding, faint wisps of wine
sand incense left from some past ceremony, and young innocent boys (and girls
too but they can speak for themselves, them and their rosary-saying, stations
of the cross praying ways all dressed in white, damn them) filled with wonder
about hell, heaven and that hope, the high hope of purgatory as a
way-station,
Spoke too of eight hundred year
oppressions and scratching on hard rock earth against foreign slayings. Of 1916, always of the men of ’16, eternally
of the men of ’16, of James Connolly and his pipedream workers’ republic above
all, who was right and who was wrong when Mick Collins and Harry Boland had it
out, and later the boys in the North when they came under British guns and that
unnamed unadorned tin can sitting atop the Dublin Grille counter filled with
dollars and nobody, no matter what their thirst and no dough, touched that
under, well, under penalty of death so not touched. Yes, the boys in the north, and never quite
getting the whole thing settled.
Of shame, of shanty shame, also
DNA-etched from time before mist. Of
keeping one own counsel, also known as not airing the family’s linen in public
unlike those threadbare sheets flailing away on the back porch. Above all spoke
of the “squawlie” net-work that ran amok over every tenement block and kept the
whole wide world informed, kept young and old in line under the threat of
terrible shawlie justice (not until later was it understood as sham). Informed
not in the language of the poet by the way. All past now. So too Seamus Heaney passes.
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