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Extracted: A City Imagined - Belfast Soulscapes by Gerald Dawe rte.ie - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from rte.ie Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
When I was a teenager I spent several months on a farm near the village of Kilmoganny Co. Kilkenny, situated just five miles from the nearest town, Callan. Duri. ....
Via Sunday Miscellany on RTÉ Radio 1: A beloved family friend, and Belfast in a certain time and place - listen to In Love with Anne by Gerald Dawe above. She was the first woman I fell in love with. Love at first sight. Unquestionably. I would have been about five or six years old and living in a house of women; the only boy. Anne was a friend of my grandmother s and when she died my mother inherited the friendship though there was a significant gap in years between them. In Fifties Belfast Anne cut a dash. She would arrive into the house for evening soirees, or to collect my grandmother, or simply to have a chat. There was a breathless ease to her arrival. Her soft-spoken voice always intimating something special was about to happen or had just happened. ....
Doireann Ní Ghríofa's new collection - Poetry Programme preview rte.ie - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from rte.ie Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Why Irish literature needs to let the navvies into the Big House Updated / Friday, 5 Feb 2021 06:53 Opinion: it s timely to re-assess the contribution agricultural labourers have made to Irish literature both directly and indirectly Between the Famine and the establishment of the Free State, land reform and changes in agriculture dramatically transformed rural Ireland.This transformation impacted most on the landlord class and on those whose principle means of support involved selling their labour on farms or other agricultural operations. The number of landless agricultural labourers in Ireland fell sharply as a result of the Famine itself and continued to drop as grazing increasingly displaced a more labour-intensive tillage farming in the latter half of the 19th century. Some casual rural workers were still selling their labour in hiring fairs in Donegal and elsewhere well into the 20th century, but in the post-Famine period long-term emigration was one of ....