| The mystical imagination of Patrick Kavanagh |
|
Una Agnew SSL looks at how Kavanagh, one of Ireland’s greatest 20th century poets, was able to uncover “the radiances of life”, though many of those who knew him as gruff and uncouth would have found that hard to believe.
Patrick Kavanagh was once invited to attend the launch of a cosmetic product in a top class Dublin hotel. The official representatives of the organisation addressed the assembled VIPs. They promoted their product eloquently, each competing with the next in ascending superlatives. A banquet had been prepared, the product displayed and a gala evening was in progress. Wine flowed in abundance. But Patrick Kavanagh's poetic soul was by now outraged. He jumped up, awkwardly knocking over a glass of red wine and, to the embarrassment of all, shouted in a loud voice: 'This is a load of ballyhoo,' adding, 'and there are honest men at this moment, footing turf up the bogs of Monaghan. You can keep your banquet; and as for your product, I know what you can do with it...' He stalked out of the hotel to the acute embarrassment of the organisers and the VIPs.
Bad behaviour The reason why the poet Patrick Kavanagh has been underestimated by the literary critics may lie in the fact that people were distracted by his external behaviour and then failed to confront the mystical dimension of his literary contribution. Nothing in Kavanagh's person would reassure one of his mystical propensities. He cursed, used bad language, talked to himself, spat, drank too much, and, especially ifhe had an audience, offended the accepted laws of gentility. But Patrick Kavanagh was making a statement in his public persona for those who over-value acceptable norms of civility. He had little regard for 'high moral ground,' suave talk or polished social behaviour. There was nothing polished about Kavanagh: his shoes were tied with binder twine and his toes were visible through the soles of his shoes, his coat was dirty and his hat, characteristically worn 'on the Kildare side' was battered and shapeless, a sodden, greasy reminder of too many winters and too many downpours. Celebrating nature’s mysteries The poet's spiritual awakening occurs among the drumlin hills of Inniskeen and within sight of his mystical mountain, Slieve Gullion in south Armagh. Following in the footsteps of William Carleton, the Clogher writer, he observed closely the life of small-time farmers in south Monaghan. He is absorbed by local characters and the whole business of farming and related domestic chores. He critically assesses the influence of the local church of his time and observes in detail the roles played by the parish priest and curates and their influence on the lives of the people around him. He is otten humorously aware of the unchristian nature oflives ostensibly given over to meticulous religious observance. He has a keen sense for what is true and what is phoney and delights in exposing the latter. Struggling to escape from the fog of ignorance and mass-mindedness derived from unreflected religion, he seeks to distil an essence of faith and use it as a yardstick for his life. He succeeded in fashioning his own theology and in living it. Territory of human spirit Purified again and again by poverty, by his struggle for self-education, by the gigantic task of learning the trade of poetry in an environment which was frankly unsympathetic to the requirements of Parnassus, he embarked on a lonely poetic journey. He was intent on achieving his goal, without jeopardising the unyielding and sometimes awkward integrity of his immortal soul. Kavanagh sought to carve an identity for himself as a rural poet: the genuine article! He had no models. In the early tWentieth century, the Irish language was fast disappearing in this poetic territory of east Ulster. The era of Art McCooey and Peadar Ó Doirnin and Seamus Dall MacCuarta, his poetic predecessors, was over. Kavanagh, born of the soil with a love of words and a poetic turn of phrase, had to carve his own poetic diction, a diction suited to the subjects he chose. He did this in a manner aptly described by Seamus Heaney as 'single-handed' and 'out of a literary nowhere.' Worse still and relatively unappreciated till now, was the fact that he had to grow up with an impaired genealogy. His grandfather was absent since the birth of his son, James Kavanagh, who though given an approximation of his father's name was deprived of his real identity. Patrick did not therefore know fully who he was. For the first time the lost facts about his paternal lineage have been made available. Instead of being a Kavanagh, he was descended from the historic Hymany tribe - the MacGeibheannaighs or Kevanys of Easkey, Co. Sligo. Because of the circumstances of his father's birth, Patrick Kevany had been summarily banished from the Inniskeen area. He never returned. The school was closed as a result of the 'scandal' and the story told only in whispers and out of earshot of the Kavanagh family. Shadows and light Despite all this Kavanagh was mystically illumined and frequently gives voice to moments of pure epiphany. Such instances occur 'when the new moon hung by its little finger' from the telegraph wires.' In such a kairos moment, he 'knew how God had happened.' Kavanagh found in the doctrine of the Holy Ghost, a powerful metaphor for the poetic fire that sustained him. The Holy Ghost could take 'the bedlam of the little hills' and weave them into a song, a simple song.. .and he saw the Holy Spirit on the hills.' Kavanagh had begun early in life by learning to trust the dance of the Holy Spirit in April, on the hills, fields and in the hedgerows of south Monaghan. Later he knew he had met his God there: 'This was my God who made the stones and streams in April'. Salvation was present wherever he was present: 'Something will be mine wherever I am' was his mature conviction. He became capable of finding his God in unlikely places: 'This was my God who wandered the unconscious streets of Dublin.' Struggling against the oppressive religious mores of his times he found that, claustrophobic though his environment might be, the 'little window' of his cramped life 'let in the stars.' Kavanagh's skill at uncovering the radiances of life is one of his greatest strengths. He finds the first ray of the Incarnate God 'when Christ comes with a January flower' and senses the completion of his life in 'October' when, sensing his harvest of poems near completion, he no longer needs 'to puzzle out Eternity.' The whole earth is his prayer now and all of it bathed in autumnal light and splendour. Latterly, he is at peace with his life and feels called to 'praise, praise, praise / The way it happened and the way it was.' There must be something of a saint in a man who was dealt a raw deal in life and yet can thank God for it all. Beauty and messiness of life This article first appeared in Spirituality (March-April, 1999), a publication of the Irish Dominicans. |







