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A Once Irish Tradition On All Souls’ Night, November 2nd.


In Latin America – “Día de los Muertos” (Spanish – Day of the Dead).

Celtic nations firmly believed that at certain times of the year the boundaries between the mortal and unearthly realms briefly thinned or broke down. It was further accepted, as being true, that this veil between the two worlds was at it’s thinnest at this time of year; on Halloween (Samhain), All Saints’ Day, and All Souls’ Day.

“All Souls’ Day”, a painting by Czech artist Jakub Schikaneder, 1888

All Souls’ Day is a day to honour and pray for the dead, especially those who are believed to be in purgatory. It is believed that Saint Odilo, Benedictine Abbot of Cluny, France, (son of Berald de Mercoeur and Gerberga) first designated a specific day for remembering and praying for those in the process of purification or temporary punishment in which, according to medieval Christian and Roman Catholic belief, the souls of those who die, in a state of grace, are made ready for acceptance into heaven.

On All Souls’ Day, those who have left us can come back for a brief visit on this night. As they pass through your home, they leave their love and blessings, and take away your troubles. Your personal energy and love for them is the path which attracts them back amongst the living.

Ancient Irish people believed that the souls of the dead would return to their family home. The dead were believed to be repositories of wisdom and lore and that during this blessed period they would return to speak to their descendants here on earth.

Great care was taken, therefore, on All Souls’ Night to ensure they felt welcome. Returning ancestors, it was believed, would bestow two main gifts; (1) the ability to remember old days and traditions and (2) the ability to hold a deeper understanding of how we are forever linked to our bloodline.

To this end, earlier in the day graves would be visited and cleaned, with a candle left to burn. At home, to prepare for the arrival of the dead, Irish families would light a warm fire, sweep the floor, put a place setting of available cutlery on the kitchen table for each current generation deceased relative. A bowl of spring water and a container of salt was also present, latter representing the meal you would have prepared for them, when they were on this side.

With the door to the house left unlocked for the night, a candle, for each of those who had passed over, was lit and placed in the window that faced in the direction of the cemetery. When evening prayers were said before bed, these candles would be extinguished, with possibly one allowed to burn out.

Many of these traditions have now died out in Ireland, but today on our island, All Souls’ Day still remains a day of commemoration when prayers and Masses are said for those dearly beloved who have passed on.

November 2nd, “All Soul’s Day”

Perhaps it’s being caused by climate change, global warming, or the current mild weather being experience here in Ireland. Either way, it appears that some ghosts, phantom ghouls and wandering souls are reluctant to return to that place of departed spirits, as I experienced and photographed, while passing a local graveyard tonight. [Thank goodness the gate was locked.]

In earlier times people would dread being out late on the eve of November 2nd, “All Soul’s Day” as ghosts were said to be observed in the most isolated of places, especially in rural graveyards.

People would remain at home and would refrain from going out after dark, thus avoiding walking on or indeed with the dead.

So deep was the belief that households would sit around a blazing fire, relating stories about their memories of ancestors, before retiring early to their beds.

However, going early to bed would not take place before leaving the house ready for any visiting dead. The door on this night would remain unlocked in rural areas; while in larger towns and cities a window was left open instead, and for obvious reasons. A big fire was put down before going to bed and hot ashes (Irish -gríosach) were never raked out on that night.

No water could be thrown outside on All Souls’ Day, as they could be accidently throwing it into the faces of invisible wandering soul’s.

If people gave money to a poor man calling to their door on All Souls Day, the householder could expect great luck within the next 12 months.

Maybe This Christmas.

Maybe This Christmas.

Vocals: American singer/songwriter Carly Pearce and Canadian singer/songwrite Michael Bublé.
Songwriters: Michael Steven Buble; Canadian singer-songwriter and author Jann Arden; songwriter Chase McGill and Canadian record producer, songwriter, multi-instrumentalist and mix engineer Gregory William Wells.

Maybe This Christmas.

I’ve been running all my life,
I’ve been trying to get it right,
Sentimentally, the thing I do well,
But it’s Christmastime again,
And I’m missing all my friends,
A million miles away, a toast to their health.
Now it’s a shot out in the dark,
I’m just wishing on a star,
And I wish I knew just what to do.
Lord, I think I need your light,
On this cold and silent night,
I’m just hanging on, it’s all that I can do.
And all the snow
Falling down on the city, and the good souls below.
It ain’t the same,
When it comes down and turns into rain,
‘Cause it’s Christmastime,
I can’t be alone again.
You’ve been running through my mind,
And no matter how I try,
When the bells of Old St. Pat’s start to ring,
And it’s so hard for me to hear,
You’re alone this time of year,
And the bitterness that that cold must bring.
And when you’re sitting in the dark,
And it’s falling all apart,
I’ll be lighting up a candle for you.
I know it’s sad to be alone,
I wish you joy and peace and hope,
Wish you all the love that your heart can hold.
And all the snow,
Falling down on the city, and the good souls below.
It ain’t the same,
When it comes down and turns into rain,
‘Cause it’s Christmastime,
Shouldn’t be alone again.
Maybe this Christmas,
Don’t have to be alone again.


END

No Business Like Show Business.

Short story from the pen of Thurles author & poet Tom Ryan ©

When Noel Coward tunefully advised Mrs Worthington to never put her daughter on the stage, he might have usefully told my late mother, Bridie, to do likewise with regards her eldest son, Tom.

Despite having a lifelong association with theatre, both amateur and professional, Thespian glory has eluded me. More often than not I have convinced the wide world that ‘Oscar material’, I ain’t.

Yet, despite the wry observation by the late, great Shakespearian actor, Anew McMaster, that Thurles is the “Graveyard of Drama”, (when he found himself playing to an audience of just two or three in Delahunty’s New Cinema many years ago), I am from a theatre-loving Thurles.

This home of the GAA, has produced many playwrights and many top actors and has featured with great honour at many of Ireland’s 36 Drama Festivals annually, including both the All-Ireland Open Drama Festival at Athlone and the All-Ireland Confined Finals in Rossmore, Cork and elsewhere.
Top Thurles Thespians include Margaret McCormack Purcell of Littleton, a village once referred to by Lord Haw Haw in his broadcasts from Germany during World War 2, and home town of leading musician, Warrant Officer Larry Slattery, latter first British Prisoner of War captured during that same war.
Margaret, a product of the Brendan Smith Theatre Academy, acted with the late great Siobhan McKenna in a professional production of Synge’s “The Playboy of the Western World”. Margaret has produced and acted with both Thurles Drama Group and Holycross/Ballycahill Drama Group in Thurles, latter which hosts the popular annual Tipperary Drama Festival.

My own theatrical debut was at nine years of age, when at the invitation of a magician, I climbed up onto the stage of Delahunty’s Cinema. I was the only brave child to take up the invitation. However, I was no supporting actor for the strangely dressed and quite awesome looking showman. I was all cockiness and cheeky initially on stage until the magician handed me an illuminated skull in a glass jar. It frightened the wits out of me and I jumped off stage having first, cried “Mammy!”. Not the most memorable or indeed edifying of stage debuts. Though the magician mentioned my bravery as the only volunteer that night was to be noted by the heckling and hissing juveniles in the pit. No doubt some of these chappies are making it hot for politicians now.

Years later I was asked once again to take to the stage of a Dublin theatre, by a professional producer. I was nineteen years old and thought my play, “The Man of Principle” (or was it “The Plan of Battle”) was a masterpiece which any professional should feel obliged and thrilled to stage for heavens’ sake.
So I left it with the producer for a week. When I returned for his comments, he asked me up on stage and handed me the script of “Lady Chatterly” and asked me to read some lines. I think the lines indicated to the pretty young English actress opposite me that we should “go upstairs, darling.”

Well, imagine a harmless young man from the heart of rural Ireland back in the Nineteen Sixties featuring in that scenario? Sure, if they ever found out back home; I’d be read off the altar. So I was no “Lady Chatterly’s Lover” on this occasion.

Far from “Lady Chatterly” you were reared, boy. I laughed out loud and nervously, quite red-faced and embarrassed and as on the previous occasion, aforementioned, also jumped off the stage into the pit.

I declared this time, “It’s easier to write plays than act in them”, much to the amusement, I’m sure, of a puzzled producer who must have thought I was either there for an audition or was a nuisance fantasist. This happening was to be my first and last professional “audition”.

On a stage in Boherlahan I was a Redcoat disguised as a priest in ”The Croppy Boy.” At the decisive moment when I was to draw my wooden sword and arrest the “Croppy Boy”, I stumbled and I stabbed myself. It wasn’t the Croppy Boy who came a cropper on this less than august occasion on which self esteem of yours truly, suffered a gigantic setback.

On a stage in Templemore Town Hall, when musicians failed to turn up for a concert a few of us, in the absence of a script or indeed common sense, put on a play at a moment’s notice (literally), as a large audience, wondered when proceedings would truly get underway.
We wrote acted and sang Irish ballads, as we performed in impromptu fashion. All I can remember is uttering the immortal word, ‘Aye’, over and over again at every opportunity and prayed the show would soon end. People laughed all the time, anyway and to this day I am greeted by many in Templemore with that now famous one liner, “Aye”. Not exactly ‘Actors Equity’ glory, but fame of sorts.

Of course I think my acting career really began in the Thurles Boy Scout Troop. In my short- trousered days and wearing my blue cravat, tan and merit badge-covered shirt, to show off to the girls; I wrote what was intended to be a grim tragedy about the goings on in a farmhouse in a storm. You know – The cows mooed’ (cue for me to do likewise), the ‘thunder flashed’ (Start lighting the match now, Sean) and so on and so on.
The idea was to strike immortal terror into the audience of parents, carol singers and fellow scouts in that darkened hall. Alfred Hitchcock was only trotting after us. However, imagine my utter shock and horror when those insensitive and unappreciative souls burst into uproarious and outrageous laughter. It pains me still to recall the utter humiliation of it all. I was too ashamed to show off my merit badges to any young ‘wans’, on that night. In fact my body still quivers and shivers when I observe Christmas carollers, every year, in the town’s Liberty Square, in Thurles.

I do, however, have happier and more sane theatre memories. I recall when a decent wise and multi-talented farmer friend, the late TK Dwyer of Littleton Muintir na Tire, staged my play “Children of the Nation”, which on this occasion brought tears to the eyes of the audience (for the right reasons, I add) at the Tipperary One Act Drama Festival, adjudicated by Niall O’Beachain.
Before taking to the stage TK, a playwright /poet also, presented me with a postal order “If we put on anybody else’s play we would have to pay royalties”, he said. Now, there was a wise and thoughtful man, encouraging an aspiring young writer. Treat a young person with dignity and they’ll respond. I like to think I have never forgotten the kindness and example set by that wonderful human being. I served with Thurles Drama Group as their Public Relations Officer once and also with New Malden Theatre Group in Surrey UK and even worked as a stage hand with Wimbledon Theatre in South West London, UK, where of in another era, I met Ralph Reader who wrote the songs for Bud Flanagan and the Crazy Gang.

Nowadays, I still carry on “covering” the Tipperary Drama Festival in Holycross for the “Tipperary Star”. Holycross Drama Festival once hosted my comedy, “Three to Tango”, as did a number of Macra na Feirme groups in Tipperary.
Certainly all the world’s a stage and every stage a world of wonder, of laughter and even a few tears.
No sir, no business like show business and no people like show people.
Break a leg, folks! Not literally, though!

When Are You Going Back? – Poet & Author Tom Ryan Recollects.

When Are You Going Back?

It’s that time of year again and pretty soon we shall be meeting our townspeople who now reside in distant places; from London to Manchester, from New York to Houston Texas; some absent for nigh on 50 years or more. No sooner will we lay eyes upon them, then we’ll ask: “When are you going back?” and that’s the essential difference between an exile’s holiday and that of the unknown tourist from abroad.

My first memory of emigration was as a boy in the 1950s, going up from the Watery Mall to the railway station in Thurles, to meet my uncles, aunts and cousins, all coming back home for a couple of weeks.
One of the reasons, at seven or eight years of age, I enjoyed their coming was because they were such lovely people; decent, down to earth plain souls, who had worked hard in order to be able to return for their holidays.

Old picture of Thurles Railway Station

They, during scarce times, would bring home comics, like Rupert Bear and give me chocolate and money for the pictures in Delahunty’s Cinema down the middle Mall (“The Wan Below) or McGrath’s Capitol Cinema (“The Wan Above”) or that spin in a motor car that they would hire out some days, to go to Holycross Abbey, to Killarney, or to visit my relatives in Co. Cavan.

The car was a scarce enough commodity in Thurles in the hungry days of the 1950’s. This was a world with no television, only that radio with the dry and wet battery we had purchased up in Donoghue’s electrical shop on Friar Street.
But there was the Sunday ‘Coordeek’ (from the Irish ‘cuirdeach, meaning a house visitation) in my uncle Mick’s house in Fontenoy Terrace, where Mick, who worked on the Council, played the accordion and songs such as Moon Behind The Hill, The Rose of Arranmore, Irene, Goodnight, Irene, etc.
I can clearly picture my father; John Joe Ryan (and a bed in Heaven to him, as the old folks say), in his white shirt, peaked cap and dark trousers, leaning up against the kitchen door in my uncle Pakie’s House in Cabra Terrace, Thurles, singing his perennially favourite party piece, The Rose of Mooncoin.
It was only on my father’s death that I realised why I had hummed that Kilkenny hurling anthem every morning for years.
My uncle, Danny who lived in Caterham, Surrey, UK and worked with British Rail, used to bring all the suitcases up to nearby Cabra Terrace from the station on a fine strong ‘High Nelly’, bicycle belonging to my father. It was a ritual he insisted upon. No taxis then for Danny Boy who, like his brother, Tommy in Caterham, was also an ex RAF man.

Then, for all, a quick visit to Bowes’ bar to quench the thirst caused by those hot summer days, after the train journey, before facing into the re-unions at home.
I remember the joyful laughter and camaraderie and the rousing music of those days quite vividly still and the trips hither and yon in the leather upholstered motor car.
I thought my uncles and aunts must have been all millionaires, and that England must be a great country entirely. But whatever envy I might have had in that respect, soon faded on the night before my relatives departed for England once more.

On the night of that “American Wake” we would be up above in Leahy’s Field not far from the Thurles Clonmel railway line, where kids put pennies on the railway tracks to be flattened by the wheels of the trains approaching from under Cabra Bridge.
I recall my uncle Danny, a bit of a joker, always trying to get some folks not in the know about it, grabbing with their fists the electric wire fence for keeping the cattle in their place. But not on that particular evening, when a terrible loneliness would descend like a mist on the rich hay-scented fields, as I would
sit on the wooden plank spanning the cart and hold the reins of ‘Jenny the Jennet’ (pronounced jinnit), which I used to drive up and down from Cabra Terrace to Leahy’s Field.

It’s strange how some of the most defining moments of my life featured a field, and even on his death bed in 1990, my father lifted his eyes from the pillow of his bed in the Hospital of the Assumption, in Thurles, towards Semple Stadium and said quietly: “They’re all over in the field now”, Being himself an old Sarsfields hurler, ex hurley- maker and an ex steward, that field meant a lot to him.

Up in Leahy’s field, which was, at that moment in eternity, my whole world. I felt like bursting into tears at the terrible unfairness of the end of this wonderful idyll. I would miss my aunts and uncles and cousins.
I would not really know why until many years later. Emigration, for those who did not wish to go, was definitely an evil and in all the homes of the terraces, roads, streets, avenues in Thurles and all over this land, there are similar bittersweet memories of our dearest summer visitors.
But our hearts are in a hurry again for their coming and please God, come next summer God will be in his heaven sure as water runs and grass will grow.
There will be dust on the roads again … and we will look forward to meeting our Ould Townies, the Real Ould Stock, once more.
END

Tom Ryan, “Iona”, Rahealty, Thurles, Co. Tipperary.