Fidgeting among the audience in Meeting House Square on
Culture Night (19th September 2014), from where the RTE Radio arts
show Arena was broadcasting live - I was suddenly halted, arrested and rooted to
the spot by the voice of Barry McGovern reading from Finnegans Wake by James
Joyce.
I don’t remember which part he read. Finnegans Wake is as baffling and
incomprehensible to me as Ulysses. I
just remember the hair standing on the back of my neck, my heart opening, my
pulse quickening, I was transfixed.
Finnegans
Wake, Séan Rocks told us, was seventeen years in composition before it
was published in book form on 4 May 1939 – 75 years ago.
I wondered if that were Joyce himself up there reading -
would he be a blogger? Would he be on
facebook? Would he tweet? I decided he
would. Would his worries be like my
worries – about his writing not being linear enough, having too many
flashbacks, having too much backstory?
What advice would he give to me? I
decided he would say something like this.
"bababadalgharaghtakamminarronnkonnbronntonnerronntuonnthunntrovarrhounawnskawntoohoohoordenenthur-nuk!
My musings were taking place during a pleasant musical
interlude – with Jack L - backed by the RTE Concert Orchestra. And then suddenly - it happened again. I was halted, arrested and rooted to the spot
- this time by the voice of Ciarán Hinds performing Prospero from Shakespeare’s
Tempest.
"we are such stuff
as dreams are made on;
and our
little life
is rounded with a sleep."
The music resumed. My musings now kept pace with the
Contempo String Quartet.
Would the Bard tweet?
Would he blog? Very probably.
What would his advice be – what would he say?
As the quartet built towards its
finale, I imagined I heard the Bard again.
“Our doubts are traitors,
and make us lose the good we
oft might win,
by fearing to attempt.”