
WHERE DID PEIG SAYERS LIVE IN DINGLE FULL
It never fails to offer a full range of weather, wind and tide to the intrepid entrants, ranging from a 32ft cruiser to a 79ft all-out racer. The race is organised by the National Yacht Club. The biennial Dun Laoghaire to Dingle race is a 320-miles race down to the east coast of Ireland, across the south coast and into Dingle harbour in County Kerry. Níl Deireadh Ráite/Not the Final Word (New Island Press) is on sale for €25ĭun Laoghaire to Dingle Yacht Race Information “There are about 5,000 pages of manuscript in the Irish Folklore Commission, so this is only touching on what is still there,” Dr Ó Healaí explains. “It never was – it was up to the individual teachers to select texts,” Ó Laoire says. Sayers’s warmth and humour and ability to be “sexy” are well reflected between its pages, he says – noting that one of the great “myths” is that her biography was compulsory for Leaving Certificate Irish. The stories are “not all entertainment” as one very touching account is of a farming couple whose three children all died young, and were helped in their grief by a story from a stranger, Ó Healái says.įour of Sayers’s surviving five children emigrated to the US, and she related her autobiography – published in Irish in 1936 - to Maidhc, the only one who stayed at home.įellow folklorist and sean nós singer Lillis Ó Laoire of NUIG’s school of Irish says the new release deserves to be a “Christmas bestseller”. The couple lost five of ten children – three in infancy, one of measles, and their teenage son Tomás died when he fell down a cliff.Īlthough she knew much poverty and hardship, she was well able to have a laugh, was “interested in lads”, had an emerging sexuality and a gift for language which included being able to utter a “good curse”, Ó Héalaí adds. Sayers, who died in 1958, was born near Dún Chaoin and married a Blasket islander Pádraig Ó Guithín.

This work referred to BBC, RTÉ and UCD archives of Sayers’s stories – now translated into many languages including Esperanto. The two men had published a previous collection, entitled Labharfad le Cách / I will Speak to you All, over a decade ago. Ó Héalaí and Almqvist drew on remastered recordings by the Irish Folklore Commission, which were taped in 1952 when Sayers was being treated for cancer in St Anne’s Hospital in Ranelagh, Dublin. “The image of her created by the text on the Leaving Certificate curriculum was unfortunate, as it didn’t give a good indication of the woman she really was, “ Dr Ó Héalaí says.Ī tale of a woman who had a child with a merman, and other stories which showed a more open, complex and often defiant character, are among the accounts gathered. It has been collated by Dr Pádraig Ó Héalaí of NUI Galway (NUIG)and the late Prof Bo Almqvist of University College Dublin (UCD) and includes recordings of Sayers on audio CDs.Ī woman who liked a sup of whiskey and was a feminist of her time, Sayers is still synonymous with nightmares among past generations of secondary school students who studied her autobiography, Peig. The new dual-language publication, entitled Níl Deireadh Ráite/Not the Final Word, is published by New Island Press.



