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This travelogue moves along by Ireland's Wild Atlantic Way, by the
Burren, a land of strange beauty that inspired Tolkien, by the
ruins of remotely-placed monastic shrines and chanting monks.
Memories of W B Yeats, G B Shaw, John Millington Synge, Raftery and
others are revived in Lady Gregory's Coole Park, the nineteenth
century literary workshop of Ireland where they planned the
founding of the Abbey theatre. A trip by the royal sites of
Ireland's Ancient East opens up a lost world where at times history
dissolves into myth - Tara of the high kings, the royal hill of
Uisneach, Rathcroghan, seat of the warrior Queen Medb, Emain Macha,
home of the kings of the Red Branch of Ulster. Viking raids occupy
these pages too and King Henry Vlll's dismantling of the
monasteries one by one. The heady days of the nineteenth century
land agitation are remembered when the forces of revolution joined
with parliamentarians - Davitt and Parnell - giving the people the
leadership they so tragically lacked during the Great Famine.
Holding these ages together is the landscape, sedate and unchanged
since it convulsed into shape when continents shifted in the great
volcanic shake-up millions of years ago. But above all, it is the
journeying companions that firmly plant this trip in the present -
poets Michael Farry, the Kennelly brothers, singer-songwriter
Christy Moore, local historian Gearoid O'Brien among other generous
people, who come along to offer a vision of their youthful world.
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