Round Ireland in Low Gear. Eric Newby

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      ERIC NEWBY

       Round Ireland in Low Gear

       DEDICATION

      For the Irish,

      the Eighth Walking (and Talking)

      Wonders of the World

      CONTENTS

       Cover

       Title Page

       6 In the Steps of St Brigid

       PART TWO January

       7 Through Waterford to Cork

       8 Through the Realms of Moving Statues

       9 A Night in Ballinspittle

       10 On the Road to Skibbereen

       11 Return to Kilmakilloge

       PART THREE June

       12 Dublin Unrevisited

       13 Main Line to Shannon Harbour

       14 To the Fair at Spancil Hill

       15 To the Aran Islands

       16 Stormy Weather

       17 An Ascent of Croagh Patrick

       PART FOUR October

       18 Last Days in Ireland

       Epilogue

       Bibliography

       Index

       Acknowledgements

       About the Author

       Praise

       Also by the Author

       Copyright

       About the Publisher

       Footnotes

       INTRODUCTION

      The roads are very variable, some being grand, others very bad. Intercourse with the peasantry will be found interesting and amusing. Nothing can exceed their civility and courtesy; and for those who are not too particular it will be found an excellent plan to lunch in their cottages, excellent tea, home-made bread, butter and eggs being procurable for 1s. [5p] a head.

      The Cyclists’ Touring Club Irish Road Book, c. 1899

      In the autumn of 1985, more or less on the spur of the moment, we decided to go back to Ireland and travel through as much of it as we could in the space of three months or so, starting in the South. The North could wait. If things improved there, so much the better. If they got worse we would simply not go there. We were not going to travel in the guise of sociologists, journalists or contemporary historians. I was unlikely to write a book called Whither Ireland? or Ireland Now. We were not going there, we hoped, to be shot at. We remembered it as it had been some twenty years previously, when it had been idiosyncratic and fun. (Romantic Ireland was long since dead and gone, as Yeats wrote, ‘with O’Leary in the grave’ – that is, if it had ever existed.) We were going there, in short, to enjoy ourselves, an unfashionable aspiration in the 1980s.

      It was now mid-November. All Souls’ Day was already past. The dead season, as far as weather went, was in full sway all over the northern hemisphere and would last until Easter, and probably longer. We had no illusions about the dead season. Anywhere in the British Isles and in most parts of the Mediterranean it conjured up vistas of matchstick figures bent double

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