Long Woman’s Grave : 2
‘Dear Charles, you have won my heart
My first love and my vow’ :
He pressed her closely to his breast
And kissed her lovely brow:
Long Woman’s Grave
We promised an explanation of The Long Woman’s Grave. Here it is in verse (abbreviated! Original attributed to P Fox of Hill Street). First, an explanation.
The prodigal son and heir to a princely estate in Glenmore, above Carlingford, grew weary of waiting for his inheritance and sailed to Spain to seek his fortune. He made no fortune but won the favour of a beautiful and exceptionally tall Spanish Princess. She, won over by tales of the beautiful country of Ireland and its friendly people, prevailed upon him to return and if she met with the favour of his parents, she would marry him and settle in Carlingford. He agreed.
……
‘Ah Love but say you’ll be my bride
And bid farewell to
Peggy wins!
Now the childer drew back just to look at the fun
And to watch if old Peggy would soon make him run
And no one went near him, his can nor his cart
For Peggy had won each young innocent heart.
Peggy Riled!
She’d tell them their voices would far sweeter be
And the Gaelic they’d talk with a much greater glee
When they’d ate her nice jib and the lozengers too –
For she’d made them herself out o’ honey and subh.
Irish Dancing
When first I was hauled unwillingly to the Foresters’ Hall in
No way was I for continuing at this carry-on!! Imagine wasting a Thursday afternoon stuck in this hall. Never mind EVERY Thursday afternoon.
For Carmel!
You remember old Peggy that used have the cart
With the sweets and the jib and the wee apple tarts
Bananas and oranges and pears in a keg
The grapes and the buns and the brown ‘Peggy’s Leg’
Ti Chulainn Weekend
Next weekend (Fri-Sun 17-19 June) features the re-launch of Ti Chulainn Centre, Mullaghbawn with an official Opening Ceremony at 7.30 on Friday evening followed by a buffet supper and a traditional session with award-winning musicians promised.
1959 McKeowns/Manleys
The final in the present series of Manley family snaps. Our picture shows (L-R) Eddie Hughes, Stephen and Kitty Manley (Bernadette’s parents) Alice McKeown (aunt) Josephine Manley (sister) Kathleen Manley (sister) Bridie McKeown Hughes (cousin) Marie Manley (sister) and finally, with the dog, Mickey Rooney (uncle).
Isn’t that the McKeown home on Catherine Street, facing St Joseph’s School entrance?
Fews Glossary: W
Dialect ‘W’
Wabbley (Wobbly) unsteady
Wabbler ‘he tuk a wabbler’ he suffered a fit, a ‘turn’
Wad handful, i.e. of money, rags, straw etc.
Waited on dying, ‘she’s being waited on, God spare her!’
Wag n. comic fool: v. to beckon, wave finger threateningly
Magennis St Children
This time – finally – Bernadette has produced a photograph which includes an image of herself. Mind you, she’s quite young in it! That’s her in the back row with a bow in her hair and a hanky in her hand!
The whole list is:
Back from left: Kathleen O’Hagan: Anne McKeown: Bernadette Manley: Kathleen Manley:
Sean Rogan: Gerald Connell: Maureen Connell: Noel Connell: Ethna Manley
Ring Again…
From its centre the Ring of Gullion seems almost impenetrable past the rugged hills that surround its lowlands. Within the plain (Maigh) the curving elongate Gullion deceives the eye so that you seem always to be at the centre of a Ring.
The road traveller may note conflicting milepost directions: for example to the left it’s eight miles to Newry; to the right, nine miles to Newry! The northerly route takes you round Gullion on the Camlough side, the other skirts Gullion’s tail at Dromintee.
My advice? Take both roads! You cannot afford to miss either view!
Agnes oiled and in heat!
Dear Agnes,
My mother should have prepared me better for the onset of this menopause! ‘Every time you ‘go warm’, she suggested, ‘is worth a guinea!’ What on earth did she mean? I’ll be ready for the 2,000
I feel like a Bunny ‘in heat’.
The Ring of Gullion
The Ring of Gullion, measuring roughly twenty-six miles by eleven and comprising some 15,000 hectares is defined topographically by the hills of the ring dyke.
The formation is practically unique globally and is thought to date originally to at least fifty million years ago at a time of great plate tectonic movement, when a collision of two massive plates may have dislodged into the earth’s mantle an enormous pluton that had intruded into the bottom of the crust at this point.
Magennis Street Kids 1950s
The photo below with the list of names was e-mailed to the Editor by Bernadette Manley who presently lives in the USA. We are confident that many of you will remember …
Maurice Connell: Thomas McKeown
Anne McKeown: Kathleen Manley: Anne Kane: Eithne Manley
Yvonne Connell: Hazel Smith: Theresa Kane
(P.S. A second photo is awaited!!)