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The most famous graveyard in all our area is doubtless
that of Creggan, just outside of Crossmaglen, not least because it is the last
resting place of the celebrated Bards, Padraig Mac a Liondain (1685-1733),
Seamus Mor MacMurchadha (1720-1750) and Art MacCumhaigh (1738-1773).
The grave of Mac a Liondain is marked by a plaque
erected by Eigse Oirialla, an organisation harking back to an even earlier
period when the clans of Armagh, Monaghan, East Fermanagh, South Tyrone and North Louth were united under the great House of
Oriel. (The name too is commemorated in
the beautiful Oriel Trail, a glorious walk well-signposted through the
magnificent Cooley
Peninsula!).

McMurphy has been already lauded on Journal. This present article is about MacCooey. Local tradition has it that MacCooey penned
his greatest work, ‘Urchill an Chreagain’ after spending a night in the
underground vault at Creggan that houses the bones of his former clan
chieftains, the O’Neills of the Fews.
The O’Neill clan vault (marked now by a simple granite stone bearing the
inscription ‘1480 O’Neill 1820’ – the dates representing their span of
dominance – a time of culture and native powers when the said poets were the
pride of the entire province of Ulster) was rediscovered only in 1971 by my
aunt’s brother Owen Keenan when his tractor wheel sank mysteriously into the
earth! Anyway MacCooey lapsed into
despair for his conquered people in the vault: a fair maid appeared and invited him to accompany her to a land where
the English did not rule. Convinced of
his people’s defeat he agreed to go. He
insisted however that wherever he might die his body would be laid to rest in
Creggan.
MacCooey’s life was short and stormy. He was excommunicated by the local priest Fr
Terry Quinn for having run off with his second cousin Mary Lamb whom he
eventually married in a Protestant wedding ceremony at Creggan Church
(which, apparently to some people’s surprise is still a Protestant
church). MacCooey was ostracised by his
neighbours and had to leave. He went to
Howth where he composed ‘Aisling Airt Mhic Cumhaigh’ (which in English became
entitled ‘By Howth’s Fair Haven’. In
this poem he dreams of the memory of Creggan churchyard and the O’Neills which
he imagines have been restored to The Fews. Of course, in his dreams Fr Quinn, his nemesis has been ousted.
As it happened the latter came to pass and the
excommunication was lifted. Fr Quinn’s
grievance with the poet was, it was believed, on account of a vicious poem that
Art had written about his sister, the priest’s housekeeper. Apparently MacCooey had one time sought
succour in the priest’s home but Mary Quinn had offered him only buttermilk and
confined him to the kitchen, well away from some gentry then being regaled in
the house. MacCooey in his verse brought
her eyesight defect to attention and entitled the poem Maire Chaoch or Blind
Mary. Fr Tom Fee’s translation includes
the stanzas..
MacCooey
the poet she reckoned unable
To drink
with the gentry or sit at the table
But in
some nook or cranny, left perched on his legs
He drained
all his buttermilk down to the dregs.
If the
heroes of Oriel were still in the land
They
wouldn’t allow his verse to be banned
Nor suffer
the hucksters to kick up a din
Entertained
in the priest’s house by Blind Mary Quinn.’
MacCooey has compelled to make amends to the lady and
composed ‘Cuilfhionn Ni Choinne’ – The Fair-haired lass of the Quinns’. As O
Fiaich said it is ‘a fulsome praise, metrically perfect and patently
insincere!’.
It was enough to allow his return from Howth! He got a job as a cattleherd on a farm in
Tullyard. A few years later he died and
was buried as requested in creggan beside his sister. Remarkably her grave is marked while his is
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