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More
Information from :
Michael Lyons, Producer
Cloneen,
Creagh,
Ballinasloe,
Co. Galway,
Ireland.
Tel: +353 (0) 90 9642476
Mob: +353 (0) 86 822 6584
email: michael@oldireland.ie
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If I were to take the easy option to encapsulate the essence of
the 'Old Ireland' DVDs (Part 1 & 2) I would be tempted to simply
quote from the opening narration, the famous Joseph Campbell poem,
'I Will Go With My Father':
"I
will go with my father a ploughing
To the green fields by the sea
And the rooks and the crows and the seagulls
Will come flocking after me." Etc, etc.
However,
that would be far too easy and the danger would be that 'Old Ireland'
might be at a distance or somehow removed from our psyche. Yet,
however hard some may try to blot out the hardships of rural life
of the 1940's and '50s, our early experiences are part of what we
are and what we pass on to future generations. On the other hand,
the romantics among us see rural Ireland of that period through
rose tinted glasses, and, I suppose, somewhere in between lies the
real 'Old Ireland'.
The
'Old Ireland' DVDs, in a realistic way, take us, season by season,
through the transition from the farm horse to the tractor; a transition
that largely took place in Ireland in the period mentioned - though
the horse was still King on many farms right up to the early '70's
and beyond. 'Old Ireland' gives us a detailed glimpse at the annual
labours and joys of the Irish farmer of that period: tilling and
sowing, cutting turf (Ah! - The day in the bog), shearing sheep,
saving hay, harvesting corn, potato picking, etc, etc. Then, of
course there was the threshing!
Threshing
the corn was the 'Thanks Giving', if you like. The neighbours gathered
- the young and the old worked in harmony to the rhythmic drone
of the threshing mill. Orange squash and bottles of stout were in
abundance, all treated with due respect in anticipation of what
was to follow - the Harvest Ball of it's day, the House Dance -
the turf fire, the fresh baked soda-bread, the singing, the storytelling
and, of course, the dancing.
Need
I say more - go on, it's all on 'Old Ireland' Part 1 & 2.
"And
I will sing to the weary reapers
With the wren in the heat of the sun
And my father will sing, the scythe song
That joys for the harvest done."
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