Beyond the Pale
Charting new territory in Northern Ireland,
Executive summary by darmansjah
We find the emerald pastures of great-great-grandfather’s
farm an hour and half northwest of Dublin, just “beyond the Pale” in medieval
Irish terms, near the rural market town of Cootehill in County Cavan, Ulster.
Our road trip begins here, bound for the northerly shorelines of this region,
composed of Northern Ireland plus three counties of the Irish Republic-a region
at times divided by religion, but forever fused by deep roots in ancient
Ireland. With their 85-year-old grandmother, my sons, Mack, 11, and James,18,
pick small cut stones from the ruins of a well, the last vestige of our Beatty
homestead. Mom is humming “Irish Eyes,” as the three huddle from a steady
drizzle under her red drug store umbrella. Standing at the farm gate, I picture
William Senior setting off from here with his young family, bound for timber
reaches in far-off Upper Canada in 1835, ten years before the start of the potato
famine. I knew coming here would feel this way, as if we are their emissaries,
making the return Journey that they knew they never would. If there’s such a
thing as shared genetic memory, the idea of three generations summoning it
together just seemed important. From
At Dunfanaghy, a rising tide fills the wide shallow harbor
just outside Arnold’s Hotel. Inside, Mack presses for another family story
before bed. He’s our lore guy, for years collecting tads of our history the way
a robin gathers bits of twigs. Tonight it’s great-grandfather’s cousin Sir
Edward, the grandson of a Cootehill farm boy who became head of a global
transportation empire, the Canadian Pacific Railway. Mack recalls the picture
of him in our living room. He is standing beside the Prince of Wales in 1930 on
the maiden voyage of the Empress of
Britain-an ocean liner sunk by a German U-boat in 1940, just miles off
Dunfanaghy’s shores. We vow to find a good lookout tomorrow to see what we can
see.
By morning, everything has changed. The sun shines. The
breeze is warm and gentle. We hike to
Tramore Beach’s vast empty expanse; the boys race down its massive dunes,
formed in the great storm of 1839; we ride big-boned Irish ponies across the
Dunfanaghy tidal flats. And in one brilliant, no-granny-left-behind mission,
James insists that he and his dad half-carry my mom up a steep, craggy path to
the highest, most westerly lookout of Horn Head peninsula. As they reach the
summit, I see in Jame’s eyes a satisfaction born out of wisdom far beyond his
18 years. His granmother’s joy is palpable, infectious, as together they survey
what feels like the northwest corner of the universe-the Atlantic and bloomin’heather
as far as the eye can see.
Three hundred miles later-including one golf game with two
slices into the North Atlantic-we ponder how best to kill seven hours before
flying home. Sleep? Pshaw. Like any self-respecting Irish progeny, we go to the
pub.
Mack tosses five euros in an open guitar case to seal the
deal. The bandleader introduces. Mom. She’s surprised but doesn’t hesitate,
squeezing up to the mic through a cheek-by-jowl throng of Gaelic football fans
at Dublin’s Oliver St.John Gogarthy pub.
This Temple Bar hub pulsates with revelers, their beloved “Dubs” having just
recaptured the championship after a-16 year drought.
“Just say the words here,” she instructs as she points to
her right hearing aid. Eyes roll as the band proffers a few bars of a familiar
lead-in. the song: “Danny Boy.”
What follows is transcendent. As she leans into her
audience, lyrics flowing seamlessly in one ear and out her mouth, her
classically trained, freakishly youthful voice sends this Celtic gem soaring.
At the end, band members hug her and locals line up to shake her hand. “Imagine
what she could do if she knew the feckin words!” shouts the banjo guy over
deafening applause.
Later, in that quiet descent to slumber, I reply this
moment. Yes, her voice, but more her pluck, her fearless embrace of the moment.
It’s a delightful end to a journey that has revealed so
much-for sure, illuminating bonds with those long gone, but mostly,
reconnecting us to the very best in us here and now.
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