Friday 22 April 2016

BLOGPOST SPECIAL:LAUNCH OF A GRAPHIC NOVEL ON FRANCIS LEDWIDGE

BLOGPOST SPECIAL:
TALK AT THE LAUNCH OF A GRAPHIC NOVEL ON THE LIFE OF FRANCIS LEDWIDGE; TOWER MUSEUM, 21st APRIL 2016
© Dave Duggan April 2016


The Decade of Centenaries is a box of curiosities we look into with awe, and a little nervousness. Lift the lid and see: people, events, cross-actions, armies, a new franchise for women, political promises, an arms race, extreme wealth, extreme poverty, aristocratic families across Europe, all inter-related and inter-married, falling out with each other, swathes of the south of the globe divided among countries and corporations in the north of the globe, imperialisms, repressions and rebellions. We're nervous - I suggest - both locally and globally, because the decade of centenaries is not in the past. It is now. And so we get creative, as with this new graphic novel by Marty Melarkey, Danny McLaughlin, David Campbell and Revolve Comics.
Of course, that will be challenged as an ahistorical, even an anti-historical view. And - shock horror - in a museum. Then, I work as a dramatist, not as a historian and I suggest that, while facts are to be fought over, fictions are to be enjoyed. As Alfred Hitchcock said, drama is life with the boring bits left out.
So, I go into the box, relishing the complexity of it all. Instead of one or two grand narratives, I see a mesh of multiple stories and anecdotes, half-hidden occurrences, most of them unearthed by assiduous historians, as we will hear, from Dr. Catherine Morris, in the case of Alice Milligan. And there I find, Francis Ledwidge. One hundred years ago, he was on the Eastern Front, fighting with the British Army against Turkish and Bulgarian troops, mainly young peasants like himself. Ironies of slaughter litter the box of curiosities.
It's the complexity of Ledwidge's character that leads me to write Still, The Blackbird Sings, a play on the life and times of the poet soldier in Ebrington Barracks. He returned to Ireland, to Dublin, a city devastated by the violent events of the Easter Rising. He is devastated himself by the death of his fellow poet and friend Thomas McDonagh, one of the executed signatories of the Proclamation. From this devastation he creates his best-known poem, Lament for Tomas McDonagh, featured in the graphic novel.
He shall not hear the bittern cry
In the wild sky, where he is lain,
Nor voices of the sweeter birds
Above the wailing of the rain.
Perhaps Francis Ledwidge was more lyric rhymer than soldier, more farmer/nationalist/labour activist/road mender/day-labourer than warrior, though he possibly killed people in hand-to-hand combat.
How does a person hold these two drives together?
The drive to killing, in soldiery. The drive to living, in poetry.
These are the questions that take me rummaging in the box of curiosities and find me responding artistically.
All artistic work benefits from the work of the historians. Now, one hundred years after his time in Ebrington, this graphic telling of Ledwidge's story is launched, composed and drawn by artists who are seeking to face chaos and horror with beauty and order, by forging fact and fiction, in the fires of imagining.
Imagine a young man, a poet, who has dodged death on bullet-riddled beaches in Turkey. Who has possibly killed in action. Who has been injured and recovered in a military hospital in Cairo. Who returns to Dublin to find a friend and fellow poet executed by soldiers in the same uniform as the one he wears. Who is posted to Derry in May 1916 and stripped of his rank, because of tardiness and insubordination. Who sees reflections of his beloved Boyne river in the glorious Foyle. Who learns of thousands of fellow soldiers slaughtered in battles beside the river Somme, in France in July1916.
Who lives with men petrified that they too will be sent to the human abattoirs of France, knowing that the odds on them dying are shortening.
How do you live like that?
And yet he did. Lived like that. Died like that.
His poetry remains.
And when the first surprise of flight
Sweet songs excite, from the far dawn
Shall there come blackbirds loud with love,
Sweet echoes of the singers gone.
But in the lonely hush of eve
Weeping I grieve the silent bills."
I heard the Poor Old Woman say
In Derry of the little hills.
There is a new pub, round the corner on Foyle street, called Blackbird. Francis Ledwidge would have enjoyed a pint there.
Today, historians and artists open the box of curiosities and peer inside, discovering facts and creating fictions, often forging them together. Delicate work. With this graphic novel, we have a marvellous instance of the work of artists, aiming to introduce young people to the life of the poet-soldier Francis Ledwidge. I commend it to you.
Please allow me to conclude with an extract from my play, Still, the Blackbird Sings, which I hope Creggan Enterprises may take on a tour of non-theatre venues, as a script-in-hand performance, in September.
Francis Ledwidge stands on the edge of the square in Ebrington, above the Foyle. He is with his squad. He is relishing his poetic voice and foreseeing his death in a bomb blast, as he looks over the river.


A sparkling river. And a bridge, bedecked on every side with roses. Smell them lads! Pink ones. Ruby red ones. Yellow ones, the flaxen yellow that sweeps from a girl’s hair and gladdens a man’s eye. White ones. White roses. Innocent as peace. We’re at the crossroads. The five of us. Mugs of tea in our hands. Just like now lads.
We’re laughing and telling stories and I have new poems about blackbirds and robins and the way the water runs silver in the river. Oh! The river! Oh, my darling Boyne river, by the high reed banks where we hear.....The bittern cry! Stand to lads!











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