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The Land Of The Gael - sung by John Horgan
12016-03-14T13:03:10-07:00Emily Bengtson492ae61bd2e39593725a3c9c3faa12fc78cda4ec82201Written by Garry McMahon about an exile from the Gaeltacht in the beautifull Dingle Peninsula.plain2016-03-14T13:03:10-07:00YouTube2011-10-21T19:53:38.000ZNUWAtY-jhlsJohnHorganFolkEmily Bengtson492ae61bd2e39593725a3c9c3faa12fc78cda4ec
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1media/4640518267_8e9997a873_b.jpgmedia/4640518267_8e9997a873_b.jpg2016-03-07T13:35:35-08:00The Land of the Gael59plain2016-04-06T13:59:32-07:00This is one of the many Irish folk songs about the sorrow of leaving Ireland, with the narrator promising to never forget his native land. The narrator fondly remembers his hometown and all the specific beautiful places around it. The Dingle Peninsula, mentioned here, remains one of the Gaeltacht areas of Ireland to this day, so the penultimate line of the song,"Then I'll hear my own tongue" becomes even more important, and this song becomes not only about losing Dingle and the natural beauty of the area, but also about the loss of language.
I wish I was westward of Dingle On the golden sands of Beál Bán Where I’d wait for the mountain of Brandon To appear in the red light of dawn I’d gaze over Smerwick Harbour See the yacht with its billowing sail My body is here in the Bowery But my heart’s in the Land of the Gael
For it's fifty long years since I left it, a young fellow still in my teens, Did I ever return now you ask me - I go back every night in my dreams, Yes the call of my homeland's all powerful, and I'm certain this time I'll not fail, Then I'll hear my own tongue and again I'll be young when I'm home in the Land of the Gael.
This song is describing a very specific area of Ireland - the beautiful Dingle Peninsula.
Each of the specific places mentioned - from Beál Bán, Smerwick Harbour, and Mount Brandon in the first stanza to the second stanza referencing County Kerry, the Blasket Islands, and Ceann Sibéal - can be found and pinpointed on a map.
Researcher/Writer: Michaila Gerlach Technical Designers: Emily Bengtson and Maren Connell