| Meadow revisited |
| Written by John McCullagh | |
| Wednesday, 30 September 2009 | |
In
The Meadow of the long ago, before we had
reached our teens, we had the geography of our immediate hinterland off to a
tee. In fact we felt we had ownership...![]() ... of places
like the Pighall Loanan leading from Helen’s Terrace to The Wheel, on So we
resented – and did our best to discourage - any outside interference. At first our parochialism was even more
narrowly defined: our Slieve Gullion
Road Gang would attempt to exact some small toll – marlies, toys or any trinket
carried in pockets - from any innocent lad from some other street – or worse,
some other gang – attempting to pass through on the way to town, for
example. Gradually
our inter-street competition took a more constructive dimension, when for
example, some older men (we were ALL men, no matter how young) set up our first
soccer league. Games were played out on
the ‘big green’ in front of There was
some parting of the ways at age eleven: this was not of our own making but the result of our iniquitous
educational system that segregated the young between ‘grammar’ and ‘secondary’
schools at this stage. I passed
the 11+ and went to the Abbey Grammar and thereby incurred the wrath of many of
my friends in The Meadow, the great majority of whom never saw the inside of a
‘Grammar School’. I became somewhat of a
leper – a ‘stew’, a ‘snob’ – for having succeeded. The gap
heightened when I had ‘homework’ to do in the evenings, our time of most
intense play, and they did not. Their friendship matured within the bounds of
St Joe’s on the … more later … |