5 6 September 2016
G
eneral disparagement that anyone con-
cerned with their own patch must be a
small-minded xenophobe fuelled the Brexit
debate. Such lazy stereotyping of Leave
voters by the liberal collective undermines
its own self-perception as open-minded.
In the midst of this continuing existential maelstrom,
my metaphysical GPS has been happily trekking a ter-
rain of books based on the idea of place and our
connection to it. The volumes are very different in style,
sensibility, and age. But each one possesses a common
thread: a love of the local, be it knowledge; the land; or
the language we attach to it.
This convergence of homegrown thought enveloped
a strong environmental message too. The books are a
perfect rebuke to anyone who vaingloriously carries a
lumpen backpack around the globe (with the associ-
ated grotesque carbon footprint) in an effort to
accumulate knowledge about the world. The writings
prompt questions: why do we disdain knowledge of the
wild flowers that grow in our own fields, for example;
why do we think learning is only
impressive when the flowers
grow 6000 miles away?
One of the books is by Hubert
Butler, who died 25 years ago
this year. His relatively little-
known voice is fortunately
abloom again in a collection of
essays published by Notting Hill
Editions called 'The Eggman and the Fairies'. I am grate-
ful, otherwise I might not have found this tactful and
enlightening writer. Butler's unfussy talent might have
been tucked away quietly in his home county of Kilk-
enny, travelling no further than the libraries of the
literati.
The central philosophy of Butler's connection with
civic consciousness literally jumps off the page - the
engraved quote on the cover reads: “I have always
believed that local history is more important than
national history. Where life is fully and consciously
lived in our own neighbourhood, we are cushioned a
little from the impact of great far-off events which
should be of only marginal concern to us”. His inherent
sense of locus is a refutation to the hate-lacquered
acronym NIMBYISM and its implied curtain-twitching
malevolence. Instead, Butler's cipher could read: KYO-
BISM, Know Your Own Backyard: for there you will find
a world of wonder to be getting on with.
In his introduction to the book John Banville places
Butler alongside Hazlitt, Orwell, and Robert Louis Ste-
venson in the canon of great essayists. Banville
describes him as “the least noisy of writers”, which is
delineating as one moves through the pages with
Butler, for he seemingly shuffles through places such
as the River Nore or Fethard-on-Sea.
His markings are usually near to hand, but his mind
is always large, pan-European, in spirit.
The sensibility can remain broad, even if the eyes are
restricted. “These essays appear to be about Russia or
Greece or Spain or Yugoslavia, (but) they are really
about Ireland, he writes in the preface, before
expounding on subjects as diverse as Wolfe Tone or
plans to build 'a new Geneva' on the River Suir in Water-
ford. “I go on believing that the strength to live comes
from an understanding of ourselves and our neighbours
or the diaspora that has replaced them”.
Butler was born in 1900. After an education at Char-
terhouse in England and St John's College, Oxford,
followed by some travel through Europe, he returned to
his birthplace Maidenhall in Kilkenny for the rest of his
days. His family was part of the landed gentry, yet he
was staunchly Irish, describing himself as part of Ire-
land's rich strain of Protestant Republicanism. The
essays were written over a period of sixty years for vari-
ous newspapers and magazines, as he cleaved – to use
Banville's word – steadfastly to the home place. The
book is a treasure trove of knowledge, shared with dig-
nity and a deliberate style. The topics are
unapologetically indigenous, yet the themes resound
universally, in an artful synthesis akin to Orwell's
musing on that quintessential English subject: the per-
The local
Three books explore fresh
antidotes to the global
by NJMcGarrigle
CULTURE
Each book manifests
a love of the local,
be it knowledge; the
land; the language we
attach to it
September 2016 5 7
fect cup of tea.
Michael Harkin contrasts markedly to Hubert
Butler in background, but when it comes to wit
they could have been brothers. Born in Carn-
donagh, Donegal in 1830, he penned a precious
jewel of local history while working as a post
office master, 'Inishowen – its History, Tradi-
tions, and Antiquities' under the nom de plume
Maghtochair. “Our legends
and traditions are dying, the
customs and habits of the
olden time are nearly extinct,
but in order to preserve some
of them from total oblivion I
thought it well to gather this
collection”, he declares. The
book is a tidy volume of rural
life and community in micro-
cosm: mixing topography,
history, songs, anecdotes,
and verse. Just like Butler,
Harkin drew beauty and depth
and anchored a deep-seated
affection, in the local. Pre-
sented in gazette format, these segments also
appeared initially in a newspaper, The Derry
Journal (how many local or regional papers
carry such columns today?). The stories were
inspired by Harkin's travels around the Donegal
peninsula in a rattling little car, stuffed with
books of poetry and prose, collating informa-
tion from the local seanachies all the while. In
Maghtochair, the people in the Big Houses are
sidelined. Instead we find monks or clergy, and
issues such as the fight for better rights for
farmers in rural Ireland: “Was it the landlords
who made our valleys smile with plenty and
teem with fertility?”, Maghtochair asks point-
edly. “Certainly not; it was the peasantry.
A chapter on 'Illicit Distillation' is a joy to
drink in, combining fact with plenty of fiction in
all likelihood. It humorously sends up official-
dom's presumptive interference and folly in
trying to reform human nature. He seems to say,
"we like things that are bad for us: if you commit
to the futility of preventing us from enjoying
them, we will only enjoy them even more".
Maghtochair describes “the lynx-eyed consta-
bles of the Revenue Board” tilting at windmills
with their still-hunting and concludes, not with-
out reason, that the production of contraband
Inishowen whiskey “probably will be carried on
while light and dark succeed each other. The
imagination flickers at the
thought of the Donegal night
sky being lit up with torches
firing across the landscape as
a warning of custom men on
the prowl.
Scraping and shaping of lan-
guage is local too and can be
carved in the land, as John R
Stilgoe argues in 'What is Land-
scape?'. Landscape is a noun,
he tells us, stripped of orna
-
ment and necessity. Stilgoe is Orchard Professor
in the History of Landscape at Harvard University
and his love of language and the land sees him
ploughing through outdated and specialist dic-
tionaries for our benefit, in this illuminating and
entertaining book (apparently Chambers Diction-
ary still champions Scottish perspectives unlike
the Anglocentric Oxford English Dictionary
(OED), he tells us). Reading this will have you
thinking anew about words, as it breaks down
both the language and the land that it may origi-
nate from or be attached to. Some words have
been simply lost through time, fallen through
sinkholes in our syntax. “Swashbuckler, for
example. Does it have any relevance in modern
terms? Swash as a verb or noun can relate to
water; but usually we take it to mean
flamboyantly to swagger about, or to wield a
sword (the word's origin is to “make a noise like
swords clashing or beating on shields” accord-
ing to the OED; combined then with “buckler, a
small round shield worn on the forearm). We use
the word rarely now, describing a film or a sport-
sperson's style say, but swash still has everyday
usage for local fisherman: to them it usually
means a stretch of low-tide water snaking
through sandbars.
Stilgoe's book flows with sparkling streams
of enlightenment; how language with the land
can give it different meaning, and he unearths
such diamond words as ensamhet, unique to
Sweden, meaning “the restorative, relaxing
effect of being solitary and thoughtful, but not
lonely. Along the way he notes plenty of quirks
too: how experienced beach-goers know how
to sit on sand; the idea of classrooms in the sky
momentarily posed by the advent of aviation;
how the mariner measures land with his fist. All
robust and succulent.
What is Landscape?’ is a great read to dip
into (another phrase I'm sure Stilgoe could give
many new shades). Reading part of its preface
again, it could apply to any of the three books
mentioned: “neither dictionary nor field guide,
it is only an invitation to walk, to notice, to ask,
sometimes to look up and around, sometimes
to look up in a dictionary...”. A nudge, to look
around.
The Eggman and the Fairies - Irish Essays By
Hubert Butler (Notting Hill Editions)
What is Landscape? By John R Stilgoe
(The MIT Press)
Inishowen - its History, Traditions, and Antiq-
uities by Maghtochair (Three Candles Printers,
Dublin)
'Ensamhet':
the restorative,
relaxing effect of
being solitary and
thoughtful, but
not lonely
Deep, rich and homegrown

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