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Thoughts On Connemara
By
H. V. Morton
How can it exist in the modern world! In years of travel
I have seen nothing like it. It begins suddenly as soon
as you leave Galway due west by the coast road through
Spiddal to Clifden. It is a part of the earth in which
progress - whatever we mean by it - has broken in vain
against walls; It has been arrested by high hills and
deep lakes to the east and by the sea to the west. These
people have been locked away for centuries by geography
and poverty. I have been to the tomb of Tutankhamen in
Egypt, but entering Connemara gave me a finer feeling of
discovery and a greater sense of remoteness from the
modern life.
As I went on round the eastern limit of Killary Harbour
I saw five young men pulling in a salmon net. They
formed a group that might have come from the very dawn
of the world. They wore homespun tweed. Their sleeves
were rolled above their muscular elbows. Their
necks were baked red with wind and sun. As the net was
pulled slowly towards the bank, the water, perhaps
fifteen yards out, suddenly boiled with furious life,
the sun shone on four feet of living silver as the great
fish leapt and lashed in the net. The salmon leapt up
into the sunlight. I saw the whole of him: a silver
monster, an eighteen pounder with great shoulders on him
and a tail with the kick of a mule in it.
It was a moment I shall never forget: the sun on the
opposite hills; the scent of wild thyme; the splashing
at the water's edge; the Gaelic shouts that sounded like
war-cries; the bright, leaping body in the net: over it
all the simple splendour of a lost world.
Sadly, this glorious book is now out of print.
Fortunately, the Ireland that Morton speaks about has
not passed away. The candles of the eighteenth
century are not burnt out. They still continue to shed
light on this magical place in the twenty-first centuary.
Amelia Joyce
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