The launch will take place in Newry Arts Centre on
Wednesday 26th October at 8.00pm. Included
below is a press release for the event which focuses on the famous story known
locally as 'Mabel's Folly'.
‘Mabel’s Folly’
Historian Dr John McCavitt will reveal a new insight
into the background causes of the Flight of the Earls at the local launch of an
innovative/educational CD that combines story-telling with original music and
song. Pat McGinn, Mayor of Newry and
Mourne Council, will host the event at Newry Arts Centre on Wednesday 26th
October at 8.00pm. The Newry connection
to the Flight of the Earls is linked to the fact that two of the Earl of
Tyrone’s four wives were Newry women, Mabel Bagenal and Catherine Magennis. It was Catherine Magennis as Countess of
Tyrone who famously accompanied her husband to the continent in 1607. When the fugitive party arrived in Rome the following year they were to be the guests of
honour at a canonisation, the Pope’s niece accompanying the countess (who was
‘much admired for her beauty’) to the ceremony where she had pride of place
among the ladies present, that included the ‘Pope’s sisters….the duchesses and
other nobility of Rome’.
It was the
earl of Tyrone’s marital difficulties with his third wife, Mabel Bagenal that
contributed to the turbulent background to the Flight of the Earls. ‘Mabel’s Folly’, as it is known in local lore,
was the famous incident when Hugh O’Neill, earl of Tyrone, eloped with the
sister of Nicholas Bagenal, the Queen’s Marshal, based in Newry. A Protestant, and barely half his age,
O’Neill’s marriage to Lady Mabel was fraught with difficulty. Tradition has it that Mabel finally tired of
O’Neill’s womanising and left him, though he was to be shocked by Mabel’s
intolerance of his admission that ‘I did affect two other gentlewomen’. Tradition has it that Lady Mabel retired to
her Tower (which still exists in the grounds of the Abbey Grammar School)
where she died of a broken heart, barely in her mid-twenties. Dr McCavitt’s new research has unearthed
evidence that the ‘scorned’ countess did not go quietly, but played a key role
in having her errant husband proclaimed a traitor, thereby providing powerful
evidence to reinforce the suggestion by some historians that Mabel was the
Helen of Troy of the Elizabethan wars in Ireland.
Inspired
by the local dimension to the story of the Flight of the Earls Newry teacher Dr
John McCavitt and local composer, Maura Erskine, have pooled their talents to
produce a CD entitled ‘The Flight of the Earls in Story and Song’. It begins with a narrative piece called ‘The
wooing of Mabel’. The accompanying song
entitled ‘Mo Stóirín’ (My Darling) encapsulates the tensions involved in the
liaison between Catholic champion and the Elizabethan Protestant lady. Further
narrative chapters include the evocatively entitled ‘Death and vendetta’ and
‘Destruction by Peace’, bearing testimony to this turbulent and poignant phase
in Irish history. That Ireland was
suddenly and shockingly denuded of its native aristocracy at a stroke is brought
home by the doleful song entitled ‘Lost chieftains of Tyrconnell’, while the
pain of exile, such a feature of many generations of Irishmen, is epitomized in
the ballad, ‘My Distant Homeland’, which articulates the sentiments of the earl
of Tyrone on his deathbed in Rome.
For those who prefer the story in ‘music and song’
only, a second CD entitled ‘The Flight of the Earls in music and song’ has been
cut which offers two attractive additional tracks. Based on the sentiments of bardic poetry of
the period ‘The Gaelic Twilight Years’ is a ballad offering a romanticized view
of Ireland
in the era before the Flight of the Earls. Drawing on contemporary verse too, ‘Daughters
of Erin’ commemorates the women of the Flight of the Earls.
The talented array
of singers include Billy Finnegan, Cecille La Rochelle, Sarah Mills as well as
Rós Uí Dubhain, a winner of the ‘Young voice of Ireland’. The CDs were produced by Miles Jones and are
available from John McCavitt who can be contacted via the Abbey Grammar School
Newry (30263142) or via his website: (http://www.theflightoftheearls.net).
The same site includes two excellent reviews of
McCavitt’s latest book, Flight of the Earls, which book (or the above lauded
CDs!) would make an excellent ‘stocking filler’ for that person who’s SOO hard
to buy for!