Gaelic Gloom

Colm Tóibín

  • Brian Moore: The Chameleon Novelist by Denis Sampson
    Marino, 344 pp, IR£20.00, October 1998, ISBN 1 86023 078 4

In the second chapter of Brian Moore’s first novel The Lonely Passion of Judith Hearne, Miss Hearne gets to know her fellow boarders, especially the landlady’s brother, the returned Yank, Mr Madden. They discuss the difference between men and women in Ireland and America. ‘Guys beating their brains out to keep their wives in mink,’ Mr Madden complains. ‘It’s the women’s fault. No good ... Me, I wouldn’t have nothing to do with them.’ Miss Hearne, deeply alert to nuances of education and class, thinks to herself that he can’t be very well educated if he can speak like that. And then she replies: ‘O, that’s not like Ireland, Mr Madden. Why, the men are gods here, I honestly do believe.’ As Mr Madden continues, Miss Hearne becomes aware of his maleness: ‘He was so big, so male as he said it that she felt the blushes start up again. His big hand thumped the table.’

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Vol. 22 No. 15 · 10 August 2000 » Colm Tóibín » Gaelic Gloom (print version)
Pages 3-8 | 7596 words