Thursday, March 31, 2016

FILÍOCHT: Eavan Boland



Mise Éire
I won't go back to it –
into old dactyls,
oaths made
by the animal tallows
of the candle –

land of the Gulf Stream,
the small farm,
the scalded memory,
the songs
that bandage up the history,
the words
that make a rhythm of the crime

where time is time past.
A palsy of regrets.
No. I won't go back.
My roots are brutal:

I am the woman –
a sloven's mix
of silk at the wrists,
a sort of dove-strut
in the precincts of the garrison –

who practises
the quick frictions,
the rictus of delight
and gets cambric for it,
rice-coloured silks.

I am the woman
in the gansy-coat
on board the 'Mary Belle',
in the huddling cold,

holding her half-dead baby to
her as the wind shifts east
and north over the dirty
water of the wharf

mingling the immigrant
guttural with the vowels
of homesickness who neither
knows nor cares that

a new language
is a kind of scar
and heals after a while
into a passable imitation
of what went before.

©Eavan Boland
Playlist
Mise Éire
Cross Border Orchestra of Ireland with Sibéal Ní Chasaide





ROYAL HOSPITAL



 




 



MOT DU JOUR: jonquille - lus an chromchinn



King Alfred
Nuair a mbíonn an grian ag taitneamh níl áit níos fearr ar fud na cruinne ná Baile Átha Cliath.
Sa Fraincís, is é "jonquille" an focal a úsáidtear le "lus an chromchinn" a rá. Ciallaíonn "jonquille" ná "luachair" agus tagann sé ó thús ón bhfocal Spáinnise "junco".

Wednesday, March 30, 2016

GRIANGHRAF AN LAE



Níl mórán príomh-chathracha ann inar féidir teacht ar capall ins an tsráid.
Tháinig mé ar an each seo i lána taobh thiar de Henrietta Street.
Baile Átha Cliath: Cathair Faoi Leith!

Monday, March 28, 2016

GRIANGHRAF AN LAE



Bratach na hÉireann agus Bratach Átha Cliath ar maidin Luain na Cásca



Sunday, March 27, 2016

CÉILIÚRADH 1916







GRIANGHRAF AN LAE



'SÉ MO BHÁRÚIL
I measc na laochra a throid ar son na saoirse i 1916 bhí thart ar 100 mná, cathlann iomlánn scaipthe fríd na garastúin uilig.
Ach le céad blian anuas, tá an fhirinne sin cailte againn. Le linn céiliúradh an caoga blian i 1966, ba í Constance Markiewicz an t-aon bhean amháin a bhí trácht uirthi, an SuperWoman a cuir brístí uirthi fhéin chun dul in éadan forsaí na hImpireachta.

Bhí mé ag macnamh ar sin is mé ag amharc ar clár teilifíse "Queen of Ireland".
De réir dealraimh, ní raibh duine aerach ar bith in Éirinn go dtí gur chuir Rory O'Neill gúna "uirthi fhéin" chun dul in éadan homafóibe. Nílim ag caitheamh scath ar an méid atá bainte amach ag PantiBliss, go háirithe an ról ceannródach a bhí aici san sracadh ar son comhionnais pósta. Ach bhí daoine ann roimpi. Daoine cosúil le Kathleen Lynn a chuaigh amach ar maidin Luain na Cásca chun sochaí níos fearr a tógáil dúinn. Glacaim buíochas le PantiBliss ach táim iontach bródúil as Kathleen Lynn agus a deirfiúracha.

AMHARC EILE
ffrench-Mullen and Kathleen Lynn
ffrench-Mullen met Kathleen Lynn through Inghinidhe na h-Éireann. She moved into Lynn's Belgrave Road, Rathmines home in 1915, and they shared a life until ffrench-Mullen's death in 1944, living together in Rathmines for 30 years.
ffrench-Mullen recorded in her prison diary in 1916 that she could face prison without fear once Lynn and she were together. Katherine Lynch of the Women's Studies Centre at University College Dublin describes them as partners, calling them part of a network of lesbians living in Dublin—which included Helena Molony, Louie Bennett and Elizabeth O'Farrell—who met through the suffrage movement and later became involved with the national and trade union movement.

FOINSE: Wikipedia

Saturday, March 26, 2016

Friday, March 25, 2016

PAROLES: Banna Strand



'Twas on Good Friday morning,
All in the month of May,
A German Ship was signaling,
Beyond out in the Bay,
We had twenty thousand rifles
All ready for to land,
But no answering signal did come
From the lonely Banna Strand.

"No signal answers from the shore",
Sir Roger sadly said,
"No comrades here to meet me,
Alas, they must be dead,
But I must do my duty
And at once I mean to land",
So in a small boat rowed ashore
On the lovely Banna Strand.

Now the R.I.C. were hunting
For Sir Roger high and low,
They found him in McKenna's fort;
Said they: "You are our foe",
Said he: "I'm Roger Casement,
I came to my native land,
I mean to free my countrymen
On the lonely Banna Strand.

They took Sir Roger prisoner,
And sailed for London town,
And in the Tower they laid him,
A traitor to the Crown;
Said he "I am no traitor",
But his trial he had to stand,
For bringing German rifles
To the lonely Banna Strand.

'Twas in an English prison
That they led him to his death,
"I'm dying for my country"
He said with his last breath,
They buried him in British soil
Far from his native land,
And the wild waves sing his requiem
On the lonely Banna Strand.

They took Sir Roger home again
In the year of '65,
And with his comrades of '16
In peace and tranquil lies,
His last fond wish, it is fulfilled
For to lie in his native land,
And the waves will roll in peace again
On the lonely Banna Strand.

Playlist
Lonely Banna Strand
The Wolfe Tones

AG LÉAMH: A Brief History of Seven Killings, Marlon James



Smile Jamaica Concert
The set list for the show was as follows:
1. War/ No More Trouble/ Get Up Stand Up 
2. Crazy Baldhead/ Positive Vibration 
3. Smile Jamaica 
4. Rat Race 
5. TrenchTown Rock 
6. Keep on Moving 
7. Want More 
8. Them Belly Full 
9. Jah Live 
10. Rastaman Chant 
11. Rebel Music 
12. So Jah Seh


60 Minutes
Australian Broadcasting Corporation

AN RADHARC ÓN ÓSTÁN: GreenTrees Road

If you can see the Dublin Mountains, it's a great day to visit GleannDáLoch

Saint Peter's

The Fence Wot Fell Down

An chéad lá gan tinneas taistil agus mé réidh chun cuairt a thabhairt ar an bPríomhChathair agus an féile a chéiliúradh.
Os rud é gur inniu cuimhniú an lá ina bhaisteadh mé táim chun tús a chur leis an turas ag Saint Andrew's i Westland Row.