It's 3.30am but I couldn't tear myself away from this documentary. 😢 I had tears in my eyes seeing the young Patrick Kavanagh on the First Bloomsday video. I'm so glad to know he was a gentle, warm-hearted man. I love the man for the poetry he brought to a young Monaghan girl, 50 years ago when I first learned his poems foe Inter and Leaving. They stayed with me and bring me much pleasure and joy still.
I am actually reading Pat Kavanagh, this documentary gave me a better understanding of the time he was living at his time, thanks for share. As Brazilian living in Dublin it helps me to construct a better comprehension of the Dub culture. Thanks Ben.
This documentary is an artefact of Irish literary history. Patrick Kavanagh singing a verse of "On Raglan Road", Brian O'Nolan's only interview, Anthony Cronin in the Catacombs, Brendan Behan standing outside McDaid's! Thank you for posting this!
Brian O'Nolan's only interview and where he had drank a bottle of sherry and had been drinking vodka the rest of the day. Amazing he could speak at all.
7:18 Patrick Kavanagh I'd be interested if there is more of him singing somewhere on CZcams ?? He sings the first verse a little different from Luke Kelly On the Raglan Road on an autumn day I met her first and knew_ That her dark hair could weave a snare_ that I might one day rue; I saw the danger, yet I walked_ upon the enchanted way, And I said, let grief be a fallen leaf_ at the dawning of the day. -
Lol can't make this shit up. This encapsulates why I love the Irish. The *real* Irish - those that feel shame and regret - only later. I don't know - I just love 'em...
It's 3.30am but I couldn't tear myself away from this documentary. 😢 I had tears in my eyes seeing the young Patrick Kavanagh on the First Bloomsday video. I'm so glad to know he was a gentle, warm-hearted man. I love the man for the poetry he brought to a young Monaghan girl, 50 years ago when I first learned his poems foe Inter and Leaving. They stayed with me and bring me much pleasure and joy still.
Absolutely glorious . Thank you .
Thank you for posting, even though I've missed much needed beauty sleep 💗
I am actually reading Pat Kavanagh, this documentary gave me a better understanding of the time he was living at his time, thanks for share. As Brazilian living in Dublin it helps me to construct a better comprehension of the Dub culture. Thanks Ben.
Ah, that's great to hear, Isac, thanks for leaving the comment
Absolutely wonderful !
Glorious. Thank u. ❤
wonderful documentary, thank you so much for posting.
amazing pc. so GLAD YOU POST THIS;;
"..he saw the evening star over Jenny O'Tooles and he knew - this worry would pass" - Tarry Flynn
Excellent. Thank you very much for sharing this rare documentary, Ben.
You're more than welcome!
Again, many thanks.
This documentary is an artefact of Irish literary history. Patrick Kavanagh singing a verse of "On Raglan Road", Brian O'Nolan's only interview, Anthony Cronin in the Catacombs, Brendan Behan standing outside McDaid's! Thank you for posting this!
Brian O'Nolan's only interview and where he had drank a bottle of sherry and had been drinking vodka the rest of the day. Amazing he could speak at all.
Anthony cronin was my grandad
@@grapefruit531 Very nice! I own a copy of his first poetry collection and his memoir Dead as Doornails
Fantastic,Thanks for posting
Behan exemplified the great Dublin wit for which dubliners are known for
Only documentary on literary Dublin that's worth something.
How alcohol stunted the growth and longevity of these incredible men..
7:18 Patrick Kavanagh
I'd be interested if there is more of him singing somewhere on CZcams ??
He sings the first verse a little different from Luke Kelly
On the Raglan Road on an autumn day
I met her first and knew_
That her dark hair could weave a snare_
that I might one day rue;
I saw the danger, yet I walked_
upon the enchanted way,
And I said, let grief be a fallen leaf_
at the dawning of the day.
-
And I think, as always about these three: what a waste. What a bloody waste.
a Kitson was involved.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frank_Kitson
Lol can't make this shit up. This encapsulates why I love the Irish. The *real* Irish - those that feel shame and regret - only later. I don't know - I just love 'em...