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GRAVE OF GERALD GRIFFIN,Cork County,Views of Ireland,1884 Antique Wood Engraving
GRAVE OF GERALD GRIFFIN,Cork County,Views of Ireland,1884 Antique Wood Engraving Historical Collectible Art Print

Gerald Griffin - A novelist, dramatist, lyricist; b. 12 December,
1803, at Limerick, Ireland; d. at Cork, 12 June, 1840. His parents
came from good families in the south of Ireland. Thirteen children
were born to them, nine boys (of whom Gerald was the youngest) and
four girls. When Gerald was seven years old his parents moved to Fairy
Lawn by the river Shannon about twenty-seven miles from Limerick.
Gerald received a good education; he had many teachers, but he owed
most to his mother, a woman of deep religious feeling and great talent.
"She was", as Dr. Griffin Gerald's brother and biographer,
remarks "of exceedingly fine tastes on most subjects, intimately
acquainted with the best models of English classical literature, and
always endeavoured to cultivate a taste for them in her children".
Gerald's early life was happy and profitable. When free from his books
he was wont to roam through the neighbouring countries, so rich in
ruins, which told him of the past glories of his native land. At that
time, too he got an insight into the customs of the people and became
familiar with the popular legends and folk-tales which he later worked
into his stories. In 1820 the family at Fairy Lawn was broken up.
The parents with several of the children emigrated to America and
settled in the State of Pennsylvania. Gerald, with one brother and
two sisters, was left behind under the care of an elder brother, a
practising physician in Adare, County Limerick. Gerald had thought
of following the professlon of his brother, but love of literature
had too strong a hold on him. His chief interest was in the drama.
The modern stage he considered in a decadent condition. Boy though
he was, he conceived the bold project "of revolutionizing the
dramatic tastes of the time by writing for the stage". With this
idea in view he wrote several plays, expecting to have them staged
in London. When only nineteen years old he started on his quixotic
journey--"a laughable delusion", he called it some years
later, "a young gentleman totally unknown coming into town with
a few pounds in one pocket and a brace of tragedies in the other".
His life during the first two years was life in a city wilderness;
it is sad reading. He could not get an opening for his dramas, he
did not live to see his "Gisippus" acted at Drury Lane in
1842, when Macready presented it in his effort to restore the classical
drama to the stage. Disappointed in his dramatic aspirations he tried
his hand at all sorts of literary drudgery; he translated works from
the French and the Spanish; he wrote for some of the great magazines
and weekly publications, most of which, he says, cheated him abominably.
And yet he kept on writing, ever hopeful of success, though he was
often in straitened circumstances, going for days without food. His
resolve to rely on his own efforts for success, and his abhorrence
of anything that savoured of patronage, kept him from making known
his needs. To disappointment was added ill-health, an affection of
the lungs and palpitation of the heart. At the end of two years he
obtained steady employment in the publishing house as reader and reviser
of manuscripts, and in a short time became frequent contributor to
some of the leading periodicals and magazines. He wrote on a great
variety of topics and displayed such talent that his services were
well rewarded. What spare time he had he devoted to the writing of
novels wishing by this means to make known the people and places with
which he was most familiar--those of the south of Ireland. And so
he started a series of short stories, "Anecdotes of Munster",
which he later called "Holland-Tide". This series established
his reputation and enabled him to give up his literary drudgery. No
longer haunted by the failure he returned to Ireland. Though broke
down by poor health, he kept on working and produced his "Tales
of the Munster Festivals". His next work "The Collegians",
published in his twenty-fifth year, assured him of fame and fortune.
It is perhaps the best of his novels. It gives a comprehensive picture
of every phase and gradation of Irish life. The story is well worked
out, giving the strongest proof of the dramatic talent of the author.
It was dramatized in the popular play, "The Colleen Bawn",
but, unfortunately not by Griffin. He took up the study of law at
the London University, but in a short time removed to Dublin for the
study of ancient Irish history, preparatory to his work "The
Invasion", which was published in 1832. This work had a good
sale and was highly praised by scholars, but never became popular.
For several years more he kept at his literary work. It became evident,
however, that a great change had come over him in his views of fame
and fortune. In a letter to his father in 1833 he told of the desire
he had "for a long time entertained of taking orders in the Church",
and adds, "I do not know any station in life in which a man can
do so much good, both to others and to himself, as in that of a Catholic
priest." This idea of doing good had been the motive power at
work with him; but soon the conviction had forced itself upon him
that he had overrated the value of fiction, and he was afraid that
"he was wasting his time". The rest of his life may be briefly
told. With the exception of a tour through Scotland and a short trip
on the Continent, he lived with his brother, keeping up to some extent
his literary labours, but devoting more and more time to prayer and
to teaching the poor children of the neighbourhood. This last occupation
was so congenial that he resolved to enter the Institute of the Christian
Brothers, a society which has as its special aim the education of
children of the poor. It was apparently a sense of the deep responsibility
of the duties attached to the priesthood that caused him to turn to
the humbler position of Christian Brother. But before entering upon
his religious life he gathered together and burned almost all his
unpublished manuscripts. On 8 Sept. 1838, he entered the Institute
and there as Brother Joseph spent the rest of his life content and
happy. Writing to an old friend he said "he felt a great deal
happier in the practice of this daily routine than he ever did while
roving about the great city, absorbed in the modest project of rivalling
Shakespeare and throwing Scott in the shade". In June, 1839,
he was transferred from Dublin to the south monastery of Cork, where
he died of typhus fever at the early age of thirty-six.
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| PUBLISHED DATE |
c1884 NEW YORK |
| PUBLISHER |
THOMAS KELLY |
| PAGE SIZE: approx |
10 1/2 INCHES x 8 1/2 INCHES |
| IMAGE SIZE: approx |
5 1/2 X 5 3/4 INCHES |
| CONDITION |
INTEXT ENGRAVING, with TEXT on the back . Excellent condition. Heavier
paper.Suitable ageing. The image is clean, clear and sharp with beautiful
depth and detail.This beautiful rare item would look great matted and
framed. An art supply store can provide you with a selection of frames
for old art treasures. |
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