An Irishman’s Lament…..
(Tenha um
Natal maravilhoso e um Feliz Ano Novo tranquilo....)
"Just a
couple of more nights, please God, then I will lay me down to rest in
peace".
Sheamus McSweeney
lay on his dying bed with not a single friend in the world, let alone in London to see him on his final journey. "Sure ‘twas the curse of the drink" he said aloud as if someone was listening to him. Even his
landlady did not want to come near him for fear that she might catch something
or other.
For a man of 52 he
looked older and more decrepit than many a man of 75 did. Yes indeed, it was
the curse of the drink and the hard living that brought him to this – "But sure now, doesn’t it come to everyone in the end, whatever
his age" he again spoke out loud.
It was a different
man from the one who had left his native home in Carrickfergus, County Antrim at the age of 18 and took the ferry to Liverpool. He had worked on the shovel for the first ten
years or so and although he earned top wages, he failed to save a single pound
note. He then moved into labouring on various building sites throughout the
whole of England never staying
more than a few months in a single place.
It was as if he was
running away from something – or someone.
When leaving home he
had promised to write to his childhood sweetheart Margaret but never seemed to have had the time or the
inclination to do so. He was too fond of looking after himself and not worrying
about anyone or anything else. In fact he did not know whether his father and
mother or his two brothers and two sisters were still alive or not. In the 34
years he had been in England he had not sent as much as a postcard to any of
them. In fact he spent all of his time in public houses drinking himself into
oblivion.
He knew that he was
an alcoholic but never dared admit it.
Oddly enough, he
still dreamed of strolling down the coast road for a night out with his friends
in the seaside town of Ballygrand. He could even, during the same dreams, smell the sea. "Sure now, weren’t they the grandest times" he would always say when he remembered his youth.
He had courted Margaret
for two years and they had an ‘understanding’. When he could not get any employment in or around Carrickfergus he
decided to go to England. He had
promised that he would save up as much money as he could and return home within
a year or so when they would be married.
"Castles
in the air" someone once said to him when he
told them of his lost plans.
Even when he met a
fellow Ulsterman and they
formed a loosely called partnership in the building trade, he could not stay
off the drink for two days in a row. He had been made foreman and was earning a
fantastic wage but when he was unfit for work several days in a row after he
had been on a ‘bender’, the two split up
and went their separate ways. It was rumoured that the partner was now the
owner of a multi-million pound operation. The thought of it just added to
Sheamus’ bitterness.
"How come
fate dealt me such a rotten hand" he would regularly complain to any fellow drinker who bothered to listen
to him in the pubs. He never once admitted that every problem he ever had was self-made.
Even when he ended up several times in hospital having had blackouts, he blamed
something else other than the alcohol for putting him there.
As for religion, he
had not been to Mass for over thirty years. "Me old
mother would turn in her grave" he said aloud
at the thought of it. Considering he did not know whether or not she was alive
or dead made no difference whatsoever to him.
At the thought of
religion, he began to try to remember some of the prayers he knew as a boy.
They were all jumbled up and bits of one led into another. You see, the bold
Sheamus knew only too well that he was dying.
He fell into a deep
sleep and began to dream once more of Carrickfergus and Margaret. He was
healthy once more and in his mind’s eye, he was also sober. Within his
nightmare he began to dream of tombstones and graveyards and it frightened him
into wakefulness. He sat up in bed and decided that he was fit enough to go
down to the pub for one last drink.
As soon as his foot
touched the uncarpeted floor of his little room and he put his weight on his
feet, he collapsed in a heap. Ten seconds
later he was dead.......
At precisely the
same time, in his hometown of Carrickfergus, his mother, now 73 years old was
talking to a woman in the market place. As she put her hand to her forehead,
she declared "Good God Almighty Margaret, but someone has
just walked over my grave. I had the shivers for a second. It must be the ghost
of someone passing over. Now tell me girl, how are your
grandchildren?"…………………
---------------------------
There is a
beautiful version of the Song, Carrickfergus
by a
Dubliner, Paddy Reilly, on
Carrickfergus.
I wish I was in Carrickfergus
Only for nights in Ballygrand
I would swim over the deepest ocean
The deepest ocean, my love to find.
Only for nights in Ballygrand
I would swim over the deepest ocean
The deepest ocean, my love to find.
But the sea is wide and I cannot swim over
And nor have I the wings to fly
If I could find me a handsome boatman
To ferry me over my love and I.
My childhood days bring back sad reflections
Of happy time there spent so long ago
My boyhood friends and my own relations
Have all passed on now like the melting snow.
So I’ll spend my days in this endless roving
Soft is the grass and sure my bed is free
But to be home now in Carrickfergus
On the long road down to the salty sea
Aah but in Kilkenny it is reported
On marble stone there as black as ink
With gold and silver I would support her
But I'll sing no more ‘till I’ve had a drink.
For I'm drunk today and I'm seldom sober
A handsome rover from town to town
Ah but I am sick now my days are numbered
So come all ye young men and lay me down.
-------Mike---------
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