My daughter sent me a link to a Plain Dealer piece; a
grandmother whose still illiterate grandchildren could bellow the lyrics of any
Irish song from the back seat. She tried to steer them off the whiskey, onto
ships and love songs, threading her way through the minefield of the
implications of “bottom of the sea.” To quote Sheridan, the land of happy wars
and sad love longs. Or Freud, with whom this grandma ended her piece, one race
of people for whom psychoanalysis is of no use whatsoever.
“Sound familiar, Ma?” my daughter asked. I wrote it up a
couple of years ago; here it is again.
I unpacked my folk albums when I divorced, and the girls and
I did a lot of Saturday morning housework to the beat of an Irish group
downstairs on the stereo. Along came the
magic of 8 track tapes and recording equipment, and I was in business; all my
albums could be played in the car. The
drive to work was a lot shorter.
My girls liked the music, too, apparently. At least they
didn't complain. There often was a third
girl in the car, too, Chrissy, who lived next door and was Beth’s good friend.
Here’s an old 110 film snap. You can see
Beth’s black Irish hair, Shelly’s Teutonic blond hair, and almost make out that
Chrissy and her brother Mark have beautiful red hair. I turned heads when I walked through a store
with those three girls! I could hear
minds turning and opinions forming.
The girls each were a year apart and their average age was
about eight when Chrissy’s mother dropped by one day to tell me I was enabling
the girls to form good opinions of reprehensible behavior. The three of them were enamored of the Clancy
Brothers version of William Bloat and
could be found and heard singing it in both back yards and out on the
street. “It glorifies murder and
suicide,” Mary said.
I told her I’d heard worse versions that included clotted
blood and thought it could even be considered an early advertising jingle. Or, heavy handed chauvinism. In any event, the girls didn't unlearn the
song and Chrissy was still allowed to come over.
In
a mean abode
On
the Shankell road
Lived
a man named William Bloat
And
he had a wife
The
bane of his life
Who
always got his goat
And
one day at dawn
With
her night dress on
He
slit her bloody throat
Now
he was glad
He
had done what he had
As
she lay there stiff and still
Till
suddenly all of the angry law
Filled
his soul with an awful chill
And
to finish the fun
So
well begun
He
decided himself to kill
Then
he took the sheet
From
his wife’s cold feet
And
he twisted it into a rope
He
hanged himself
From
the pantry shelf
Was
an easy end let’s hope
With
his dying breath
And
he facing death
He
solemnly cursed the pope
But
the strangest turn
Of
this whole concern
Was
only just beginning
He
went to hell
But
his wife got well
And
she’s still alive and sinning
For
the razor blade
Was
German made
But
the rope was Belfast linen
Oh, you have to love Irish music. They usually involve death, wars (the troubles), and drink. The Clancy Brothers, along with the Irish Rovers were played constantly in my house. I did not realize till I was much older that the themes of their music was the reason that Irish drank. Depression and guilt are are part of our DNA, but my, oh my, we know how to celebrate it.
ReplyDeleteWhat a hoot. And folk songs, and folk stories have always dealt with the big (and all too often) hidden issues. Which is as it should be.
ReplyDeleteHari OM
ReplyDelete...and begorrah, but that's a testament to quality cloth! Hope you're having a bright one. YAM xx
On St Patrick's Day, I love Irish music too.
ReplyDeleteOh my...that is some song.
ReplyDeleteWell, well, I have not heard that song since I was a teenager in Northern Ireland. I had quite forgotten it till I read it here ! :)
ReplyDeleteOnly marginally more graphic than the nursery rhymes we all learned!
ReplyDeleteJane x
Never heard that one. The ending is great. Irish humor - good craic
ReplyDeleteI love those lyrics. They're hilarious. Today is (was) my dad's birthday, and my children have Irish red hair. When The Hurricane lived in England, everyone assumed she was Irish. She said even when she opened her mouth and an American accent came out, they still thought she was Irish. Happy St. Patrick's Day!
ReplyDeleteLove,
Janie
My mom and sister got the red hair... but I got the Irish temper ;-) Happy St Patrick's Day to ye!
ReplyDeleteLoved the ending and the last two lines.
ReplyDeleteThe last two lines are priceless, Joanne.
ReplyDeletelove and hate all in one; are those iceles in the top photo?
ReplyDeleteMy dad was Irish and 2 of my 3 children have the red hair. The third got the dark hair and blue eyes. We love Irish music, but have never heard those lyrics. And they are certainly no worse than some around now.
ReplyDeleteand I have on my green Irish thigh socks with the lace tops-under my long underwear. I thank you for both Joanne and am thinking of having a green beer right now.
ReplyDeleteAnd I thought I knew all the dark drinking songs. Now to dig up our boxes of every Irish song going.
ReplyDeleteA jolly little number.
ReplyDeleteOne summer when the kids were still young, somewhere between 7 and 10 and the neighborhood kids as well, we had a maid come in to clean house and cook dinner as we were very busy in the shop. They were watching a movie we had rented, I don't really remember what now, but the maid took me aside to tell me that she didn't think it was appropriate got the kids. I disagreed, especially since they had already seen it, and the show went on.
ReplyDeleteWhen the oldest was around 5, I remember the sinking feeling when once we had guests and she started singing "Who's that knocking at my door, who's that knocking at my door....."
ReplyDeleteSome kids grow up quicker than others :)
ReplyDeleteIrish music gets often right into the legs. Hahaha - what a song! Children love cruel ballads (more than once I had to listen to the complete "The little Mr. Ranunkel from Brabant" by Francois Villon - declaimed by heart by son...)
ReplyDeleteThe film picture is lovely - I can imagine that people were - surprised - to see three different beautiful hair colours.
Ah, Joanne. You've made me very happy. :-)
ReplyDeletePearl
Ha! What a righteous piece! And the end! Perfect!
ReplyDelete