If you look up "George Rowley" on the net or at your friendly
reference library you will probably find that he was Vice
Chancellor of Oxford University from 1832 to 1836. He no doubt,
left his footprints on the sands of time but George Rowley, the
complex character, who has recorded his fears, ambitions,
hardships and redemption between the covers of this memoir, was
born in Dublin, to Leitrim parents, on Wednesday 22nd September
1943.
He takes the reader through Ration-books and his early
schooldays, at Stanhope Street Convent- where if a boy misbehaved
he was threatened with the mortifying punishment of sitting with
the girls. At First Communion time his mother was told that he was
too immature to comprehend the meaning of the Sacrament. His
mother negotiated and when the day came George made his First Holy
Communion, and twenty-five shillings.
As an Altar boy, in Saint Peter's Church, he used to serve
seven-o-clock Mass. He felt "proud, Saintly and at peace" and the
processions made him feel important. He was in fear of his father
but judges him justly. Even as a boy of nine, in 1952, he was
proud of his father when he paid £1,750 cash for 75, Cabra Road.
(George Snr. was not, at any stage, in the IRA but Rowley's was a
"safe house" during the forties and fifties and the names of many
subversives crop up in these pages) Young George wasn't sure if he
had a happy childhood but a Psychiatrist told him in later years
that, "it would be a mistake to believe that they were not happy".
He was once expelled (temporary) from the altar boys for smoking
and his first experience of being passed over for promotion came
when he wasn't made head Altar boy on the basis of seniority- a
more junior boy, Bernard O'Gorman, got the position.
George served Mass until he was seventeen. When I read that I
was reminded of lines from a monologue in "Around The Boree Log",
McEvoy was Altar boy
long as I remember.
He was, bedad, a crabbed lad
And sixty come December.
Faith no one dared to "interfare"
In things the which concernin'
'Twas right and just to him to trust
Who had the bit o' learnin'
To serve the priest; and here at least
He never proved defaulter:
So wet and dry you could rely
To find him on the Altar.
He entered O'Connell Schools in 1951. One of his teachers was
Micheál O'Muircheartaigh, who once caught him looking up a book on
"Mountmellick Lace" during a geography test. The Dingle man "sent
him to the sideline" but gave him 40% and didn't tell his parents.
(I wouldn't be a bit surprised to hear that incident mentioned,
during a lull in play, in an All-Ireland final commentary).
In his Inter, in 1960, he, " . . . did well beyond my own and
everybody else's expectations . . . getting 2,157 out of a
possible 2,400 marks ". He got 97% in Latin.
If you get a back-number of any daily newspaper for Friday
13th April 1962 you will find a death notice for one James J.Carey
with an address in Rathfarnham. Mr.Carey, a Latin scholar, was a
teacher in O'Connell Schools and that particular report of his
death was greatly exaggerated because of a prank in which George
played a leading role. He was expelled from O'Connell Schools and
was not allowed to sit his Leaving Cert exam there.
He studied at home and, always the negotiator, arranged with
the Department of Education to sit the exam in the O' Lehane Hall,
Parnell Square. He got five honours.
In 1963 he entered the Civil Service where he was to spend 41
years. Those four decades are presented to the reader with clarity
and precision. Be it a detailed account of a panic attack, a
flawless report on the 1973 Leitrim County final, between
Ballinamore and Allen Gaels or nights spent in Listowel or Dunquin
the reader is gripped by the atmosphere. He doesn't shy away from
describing a couple of court appearances and time spent in the
locked ward of Dublin's most Dickensean mental institution. It was
during one of his "black periods" that ". . . fear of my father
evaporated and I wanted him to be proud of me".
Out of modesty he touches only lightly on his activities in the
Union where he was a leading light.
He acquaints the reader with subjects as diverse as the
effect of such drugs as Largactyl or Melleril, his time a
Secretary (and later Chairman) of the Gaelic League and his
opinions of certain politicians. Of Enda Kenny (When Minister of
State) he says, "He never took himself seriously enough except
when it came to minding his own patch in Mayo".
He was reminded of his altar-boy days in 1979 when Pat
Connelly, who was junior to him, was promoted to Assistant
Principal Officer. George wasn't promoted to that grade for
another 10 years.
He describes his memoir as, " a testament. . . to my
upbringing, my career and my life generally".
I'd call that a very modest appraisal. I see it as instruction
for the naive, humour for those who don't take themselves too
seriously, statistics for anybody who is that way inclined, gossip
for the inquisitive and hope for the depressed.
Most people fail to realise all their ambitions and George
Rowley is no exception. He didn't fulfil his aim to wear the
Dublin jersey but wrote a ballad to commemorate a Dubs win. His
account of family matters also makes amusing and interesting
reading. The Rowley ancestral home, in Leitrim, was put on the
market, by a local auctioneer acting for the family, in 1986.
Auction day was a sit-com in itself (too complicated to go into
here. Suffice to say the Rowley homestead is still in the family).
He wrote ten short stories in a space of three months in 1992.
And his one-act play," Christmas At Home" was performed at
Listowel Writers week (the most prestigious literary event in
Europe) in 1993. It won a prize at the South Kilkenny Writer's
Festival the same year
George has been a key-figure at Writers Week for more than
twenty years. He did his own one-man show for years and, now,
"Poets Corner" where patrons recite their own work is George's
brainchild. With George as Master-of-Ceremonies it is going from
strength.
George retired, as a Principal Officer, in 2004. Among his legion
of well-wishers was Mary O 'Rourke who sent him a fax headed, "A
Tribute to George Rowley". He has left his career behind him,
long with his demons. He divides his time between Dublin, Kerry
and Dro in Italy. He has fulfilled a lifelong ambition to be a
writer. He can now say, in the words of Charles Lamb, "I have
worked task-work, and have the rest of the day to myself".
This warts and all memoir is proof that George Rowley didn't take
the advice of that senior Civil Servant, all those years ago, who
told him to, "put an escape clause in every sentence".
"A Memoir" was launched at Dishtowel Writer's Week 2007 (where
else?). It is available from all good bookshops or from
www.originalwriting.com
|