I like Ireland, and the Irish who live there. Ever since I
was briefly befriended by the then prime minister’s (Teajoc’s) brother on my
first flight to Dublin some years ago the people of the south have gained a
special place in my heart and mind. I have so many tales about experiences
there, usually based on the warmth and sense of humour of the people.
Our latest visit was occasioned by two events: our youngest
son had acquired a son and house. My wife could not wait to get her hands on
this latest grandson (I quote) and my acquired skills as a house renovator were
needed to kick the other project off. And project it was. The house is not too
far from the centre of Dublin where prices are soaring and, from first
impressions, I found it to be a basket case in a dubious area. After two weeks
hard labour where I provided a new shower and loft tank, rewired the kitchen
area and fitted up a new kitchen I changed my mind about the house and the area
– and reinforced my opinion of the Irish.
Just one example: the house is part of an old corporation
estate and bordered by a scruffy lane which serves the next door launderette,
Chinese takeaway, electrical supply shop and so on. We were living in our motor
caravan, the house unfurnished and uninhabitable. There was nowhere to park, in
fact most people parked on the pavements. So where were we to go? Luckily my
son had spotted an unusual location near to his densely populated area: a dead
end street overlooking a pleasant park and dribbling stream called the Poddle.
At the end was a large space in which cars and lorries could turn. Great – we
took up residence, nervously. Surely the permanent residents of this enviable
plot of greenery would balk at gypsies moving in?
On the first evening an old man approached with his dog,
presumably to complain. “Is it alright to park here?” I asked in an effort to
pre-empt the onslaught, adding, “it’s just temporary while we help our son do
up a house.”
“Oh, to be sure, you’ll be safe enough there. Nobody will
bother you,” he said as my jaw dropped in astonishment. He then went on to tell
us the history of the place, of his wife’s death and how his daughters
supported him and finally to introduce his new “wife”, the dog, a little scrap
of a thing whom he said, “never nags. Oh, and if you want you can park right
outside my house”.
We became regulars at the Four Roads pub where we quickly
made friends with the previous landlord and major contributor to the karaoke
session on a Monday night. It was here that we saw a spitting image of Anne
Widdicombe wiggling her bounteous hips whilst belting out Elvis’s ‘Teddy Bear’.
And it was not just the Four Roads that welcomed us - we were chatted to by
people in almost every pub that we entered.
My son allowed us just one day off work so we escaped to the
coast south of Dublin. Finding it camping car unfriendly (not surprising, there
are so many of the things nowadays and so big) we turned inland finally drawing
to a halt above Parnell Park in the village of Rathdrum. The village was small
but lively and we had a great evening of good, basic, Irish food, some
quaffable local beer and visits to two pubs with live music.
Next morning I ran
around the park, learning a little more about Parnell who was born nearby and was
a great and dogged proposer of home rule for Ireland in the 19th
century. Perhaps appropriately the park also had a plaque celebrating the
constitution of an independent Ireland which I read with great interest. Two
words leapt out at me, particularly because of the recent Brexit referendum in
the UK. The words were ‘sovereign state’ and the context , of course,
independence. My eyes widened as I read this at a time that the Irish
government had just been reprimanded from Brussels for giving favoured tax
rates to the likes of Apple and Google and ordered to accept unwelcome refunds!
And, hang on, wasn’t sovereignty the major issue in the UK referendum?
Now, I know this is a long shot, but could it be the great change
that is Brexit might be the context for a united Ireland with free trade links
with mainland Britain and who know what else – sovereignty perhaps? Yes, just
as long as they do not lose those palatial pubs of theirs where the greeting is
genuine rather than corporate policy and the drinkers are there to talk and
sing rather than adulate mobile phones.