Tales Around an Open
Peat Fire.....
It was late 1947 and I guess that mum, (God Rest her soul), must
have been pregnant once again. That was nothing unusual for it
seemed to me, a seven year old, that she was always either just
about to have a new baby, just had one, or she and the old man were thinking of
having another. In any case, off we were sent – and
I must say not reluctantly – ‘down the country’ to the
village in the centre of Ireland to stay with Granddad
and Granny Gorman for a week or ten days.
Winter was coming on and when the wind blew
across the local bog with rain coming down like stair-rods, there was little to
do especially during the dark evenings. In the summer it
was the most wondrous place for a young boy and at such times, we, that is my
brothers Ger and Jackie, would spend from dawn to
dusk playing in the fields getting up to all sorts of
mischief. We drank water from the bog-holes or little
stream and ate anything that we considered edible. How on earth
we never poisoned ourselves, God only knows........................
I suppose we survived on the principle that
Granddad had taught us – ‘that anything a bird can eat, so also can humans’. Proving
his theory at times took some great willpower as I, as the youngest, was always
the taster. Anyway, we always had Granny Gorman’s doorstep
cheese or jam sandwiches to fall back on.......
Well, as I say, there was little of that this
time of year and we spent most of the darkening evenings sitting around the open
peat fire singing songs, reciting poetry and telling
stories. Leastways, the older ones, especially Uncle
Mick or Uncle Paddy told some of the most gruesome horror stories that
I have ever heard and I would have been quite ashamed of myself if I had not
been sitting in my favourite spot – the hob, right up against the fire
under the chimneybreast.
You see, some of Uncle Mick’s stories used to
frighten me so much that I sometimes peed in my
pants. Luckily, the heat from the fire usually dried me
off before it was time for bed.
With the oil lamp flickering and throwing its
dim light and shadows across the room and the fire cracking and spitting from
the damp turf that was on it, it is now obvious why we as children could be
frightened out of our wits with some of the ghost stories that were told.
“Hold your tongue now Mick” Granddad
spoke aloud after Uncle Mick had finished a most horrible yarn, “sure I’ll
tell the lads a more gentle tale”.
He paused as he lit his pipe and began
puffing the smoke towards the chimney. We of
course sat as if transfixed in anticipation for some of Granddad’s stories told
of beauty, love and magic with not a trace of horror unlike those of my uncles...................
“If you all stay as quite as mice, I’ll tell
you about the Oillipheist he began in that wonderful accent he had. This
animal or whatever you want to call it was a bloody big odd looking character
with a body like a big snake and a head of a dragon that could breathe flame
and smoke”.
He paused and looked around as if someone was
listening from outside the front door. “Oh Lord” I
thought to myself “I better be careful because I think this might be a
little bit of a horror story after all”. Granddad
must have guessed what I was thinking, as he always seemed to be able to do, then
added “There’s no need to be frightened Mick, sure ‘tis a lovely
story”.
“Anyway” he continued, “who can
tell me when Saint Patrick came to Ireland?” Both Ger and
Jackie came out with the reply “432” – whilst I did not have the
slightest idea. “And what was he famous for besides the
religious things he did?” Granddad again
asked. “Snakes” Jackie shouted, “He got rid of
all the snakes out of Ireland”.
Personally I had never heard about that but
Jackie was the one who knew all the gory bits about such things.
“Bedad, sure you’re dead right”
Granddad congratulated Jackie. He puffed on his pipe
then continued. “And like I said, when his holiness Patrick
heard of this big fellow swimming around in the river Shannon, sure didn’t he
say to himself ‘Begob now, sure I’ll not leave that so-and-so to spoil
everything’. He did nothing more but left the church he
was building in County Clare and head straight for the river just above the
town of Limerick”.
Granddad relit his pipe and looked around the
room. He cocked his head towards the door and window as if
listening for someone or something. I moved
further into the alcove where I was sitting whilst Granny Gorman stoked the
fire.
“Now sure wasn’t the old Oillipheist a
clever and wise old bugger and realised what Patrick was up
to. He moved into the shallow water by the river’s edge
and waited patiently for the good man to arrive”. Once again
Granddad cocked his head towards the door and window. I was
getting a little more nervous by the minute..............
“Now guess what happened next?” Granddad
asked. I did not have the faintest idea but hoped beyond
hope that St. Patrick would not arrive and be eaten.
Again Granddad read my mind and
continued “No, not that. He just waited and waited for you
see it was a long walk for the holy man to get from Clare to
Limerick. Anyway, now as it so happens, there was a famous
bagpipe player in the town called Seaneen O’Rourke. When I say
he was a famous player I mean it, but only when he was sober and sure didn’t he
have the curse of the drink upon him. He had been on the
poteen whiskey for the best part of a week and was as drunk as a
lord.
He insisted on playing his bagpipes but after
some very deadly threats from his neighbours, he made his way down to the
river. Lo and behold, sure now didn’t he choose the
river bank exactly close to where the Oillipheist was waiting for Patrick”.
Jackie was getting impatient to hear the
gruesome bit that was expected and called out “Go on Granddad, tell
us what happened. Was he gobbled up by the snake?”
“Hold your whist now Jackie and I’ll tell
you. O’Rourke began playing his pipes and it sounded like
half-a-dozen cats being skinned. It was horrible and sounded
more like a banshee screeching than music”. “Oh
lord” I said to myself, “here we go – I knew there were
ghosts”.....................
However, Granddad continued, “His music
was so bad that the Oillipheist had enough after about five
minutes. He did nothing more than slither up onto the bank and
swallowed O’Rourke, his bagpipes and his bottle of poteen all in one big gulp”. He
then slid back into the water....................
“Seaneen O’Rourke was so drunk that he did
not know where on earth he now was and was not in the slightest bit worried” Granddad
continued picking up the pace of the story. “He took a couple
of more swigs of his homemade whiskey and began to play the pipes again as
badly as before. Well now, let me tell you” Granddad
paused “the poor animal could stand it no more; he slithered back up
onto the river bank and threw-up O’Rourke and everything with
him. At the precise same time, who do you think should
arrive on the scene but Saint Patrick himself”? Granddad
paused to light his pipe once more then continued his story.
“Begone from these shores ordered Patrick and
waved his staff – that’s like a big stick - at the evil serpent, begone from
these shores forever” Granddad used a deep voice to tell this part of
the story as if he was imitating Saint Patrick. “With
that” he added “the snake grew a set of wings and breathing smoke
and flames from his mouth flew up into the clouds never to be seen in fair
Ireland ever again”. That was it I thought, I
managed to stay calm for most of the story which I now believed to be
over.......
“At the same time” Granddad added, “Sure
didn’t all the snakes in Ireland, gather up in a ball and on Saint Patrick’s
command, slid into the sea, never ever to return. That’s why we don’t have a single one left
in Ireland”.
Once again, and I never figured out how
Granddad managed to do it, he read my mind and added “Not quite the end
of the story yet Mick, you see, the Oillipheist only flew away a few hundred
miles and landed in a lake in Scotland, sure isn’t the lake called Lough Ness
and the snake is now called the Lough Ness Monster”..........................
Granny put down her knitting and looked at me
with that wonderful great big smile she always had for me and me
alone....................She winked..............
-------------Mike------------
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