Among the songs at Brendan Kennelly’s 80th birthday celebration on Sunday was an old one about Molly Malone. No, not that one.
This Molly Malone was from Kerry, north Kerry, “by the mouth of the Shannon”. And the song expresses its narrator’s wish to return from exile and set up home with her, “on the Kerry coast”.
Or “on the Kerry Kerry coast” as the chorus puts it either for metrical purposes, or because, like New York it’s so good they named it twice.
I have no doubt that there are Kerry imperialists who pretend this is the only song about Molly Malone they know. And I suspect it's not a coincidence that it comes from the same corner of the kingdom that produced The Cliffs of Dooneen.
Like many people, I used to assume Dooneen was a local name for the area better known as the Cliffs of Moher.
After all, if you were writing a cliff-themed song based in Ireland’s southwest, you would hardly make it about anything other than those ninth wonders of the world near Lahinch. But no, like the real Molly Malone, Dooneen is in Kerry. And the nearest the song gets to acknowledging competition is in boasting that its cliffs are so high you can see Clare from them.
Bard of Ballylongford
Anyway, the Kerry Molly was an apt choice for a party to acclaim the Bard of Ballylongford, because his home county is not just acclaiming him these days, it has reclaimed him too. After more than half a century in Dublin, where he was nearly as well-known a landmark as the other Molly, he had a long, enforced stay in hospital earlier this year.
Since when, restored to health, he has also been restored to Ballylongford where he is now a born-again Kerryman.
Sunday was a homecoming in reverse, his first return to Dublin since. So a packed Abbey Theatre contained plenty of local admirers, even if he seemed to have brought half of Listowel with him.
Those paying tribute ranged from President Michael D Higgins to a former prisoner, Mannix Flynn. Flynn has become many other things in adulthood but I mention his youthful incarceration only because, of several speakers who attested to life-changing experiences via the guest of honour, his story was the most impressive.
Kennelly, he said, “was the first Kerryman I ever met that wasn’t a guard”.
Formal tributes aside, the event was also a concert, with performers including Mary Black, Lisa Lambe and the last-surviving Dubliner (the band, not the ethnic minority), John Sheahan. As befits the old bardic tradition of handing on torches, the bill also made room for an extraordinary piece of performance poetry from a young Leitrim man, Stephen Murphy, about depression.
I haven't attended many poetry readings that I could honestly claim electrified the room but the end of Murphy's performance was greeted with an "Oh my God!" from a woman beside me, and several other involuntary exclamations from an audience that stood to applaud. Well might the President, speaking later, draw comparisons with Allen Ginsberg's Howl.
Kingdom
Back on more familiar ground, the event ended with a mass rendition of
The Rose Of Tralee,
led by Noel O’Grady. This included the lesser-known third verse, which sets the song “in the far fields of India”. Kerry’s empire, clearly, is one on which the sun never sets.
The sun is not setting on Kennelly either. The keynote of his own appearance on stage was his reading of Begin, a poem in the tradition of those his hero Patrick Kavanagh wrote, when himself convalescing, on Dublin's Grand Canal.
If any closure is necessary in Kennelly’s story, it might relate to a memory he shared about his former involvement in something more serious than mere death, Kerry football. He was a fine player once, by all accounts. Unfortunately, he is still immortalised for some by an incident at the end of the 1954 All-Ireland minor final, versus Dublin.
Kerry were two points up when Kennelly conceded a free from which Dublin’s Vinnie Bell contrived a winning goal. And by the poet’s sad telling, Vinnie Bell has tolled for him ever since, most recently last year when a renewed old acquaintance dismissed the glories of six decades with a query: “Are you the little fella that losht the All-Ireland for us?”
They have elephantine memories in the Kingdom. But maybe, as a late birthday present, the GAA board would consider an official pardon.