Sunday, October 25, 2015

Happy Halloween, Bram Stoker, & Dracula

Thanks again to Mr. Mike Collins, author of A Letter from Ireland Vol. 1 & 2 available here http://www.amazon.com/Letter-Ireland-Surnames-Counties-Culture/dp/1499534310/ref=as_li_ss_tl?ie=UTF8&qid=1434275944&sr=8-1&keywords=letter+from+ireland&linkCode=sl1&tag=thetrainingpr-20&linkId=KNTF5LSSI6OMMUXT

Next week sees the Celtic festival of Samhain (pronounced Sow-en - Sow as in pig) - more commonly called Halloween these days. Where's the year going? Let's now look at a Samhain/Halloween-related story instead - a time of the year when the dead and the living traditionally come closer to one another.


Now to catch up with Charlotte ...

A FIRST HAND VIEW OF FAMINE AND EPIDEMIC.

Charlotte Blake Thornley was born in Sligo town in 1818. While she was still a young girl, a cholera epidemic hit Sligo with a huge force in 1832. And this followed on from two successive years of a failure in the potato crop. The bodies mounted up all around her - and local carpenters could not source enough wood to keep up with the required coffins for burials. It must have been a horrific place to live each, to see those corpses line the streets of your home town - and wondering which of your families and friends might be next. Also, some of these supposed "corpses" were still living, too weak to pull themselves back to the living - a horrific thought for a a young girl to endure.

Charlotte came from two of the most illustrious families of Ireland - the Blakes of Galway (one of the Tribes of Galway), and the O'Donnells of Tirconnell. She later married and left Sligo for Dublin, and it is said that she was always a prodigious story-teller - remembering many of the folk tales that had been passed down through her Irish families.

Her third child remained sick for an extended period of time, and he later recalled how she would pass on many of these stories to keep them entertained on the long days spent together. This son went on to write one of the most widely-read books in the world. His name was Abraham - "Bram" - Stoker, and he was the writer who provided us with Dracula. Have you ever read the original book? I do remember staying up late to watch an old Dracula movie as a youngster - eventually ending up watching from behind the sofa, one hand over my eyes. It took less to scare us back in those days!

It's thought that Charlotte filled Bram's head with old Irish stories, and her first-hand accounts of the horrors she witnessed during the Sligo cholera epidemic. She also told him of myths such as the blood-drinking dwarf of Ulster called the "Leacht Abhartach (evil dwarf), whom was killed and buried, but kept on coming back to life. In the end, it was only a sword made of Yew wood that killed him for good.

Or maybe she told young Bram of the "fear an drach fhola", meaning "man of bad blood". Interesting that the last two words "drach fhola" are pronounced "Drawk-ola".

So, although Bram Stoker may have left Ireland for London in 1878, it seems that he brought a large part of his mother's stories and imagination with him. He published his novel, Dracula, in 1897 - and the nightmarish characters and adventures he detailed took up residence in the imagination of millions of people across the world.

It was a gothic horror novel informed by the stories and first hand accounts of famine and epidemic by his west of Ireland mother, Charlotte Blake Thornley.

So, how do you celebrate Samhain/Halloween in your part of the world? Will any of your children, or grandchildren, go trick-or-treating dressed up as Dracula?

Wishing you and all you family a very happy Samhain/Halloween - and may you feel a little closer to your ancestors over the time!

Slán for this week,
Mike and Carina : )


Halloween Apples?!
Cheers,
Pat

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