The Book, Cat, & Cat Book Lovers Almanac

of historical trivia regarding books, cats, and other animals. Actually this blog has evolved so that it is described better as a blog about cats in history and culture. And we take as a theme the advice of Aldous Huxley: If you want to be a writer, get some cats. Don't forget to see the archived articles linked at the bottom of the page.

December 28, 2017

December 28, 1923

According to Colm Toibin, Anthony Cronin (December 28, 1923 to December 27, 2016)
 was a "Poet, critic and columnist who was Ireland’s most prominent man of letters for more than half a century." Thus the headline of his obituary, which Toibin proceeds to substantiate:

"When Charles Haughey became Taoiseach in 1979, one of his priorities was to repair the fraught relationship between the Irish state and its artists. He appointed the poet and critic Anthony Cronin... to be his artistic adviser. Cronin had, over the previous five years, written a trenchant column in the Irish Times on the theme of the relationship between the artist and the world. He also had produced a brilliant memoir, Dead as Doornails (1976), about the lives of six artists, including Patrick Kavanagh, Brendan Behan and Flann O’Brien, all of them friends of his, who had died of drink.

"Cronin was, for more than half a century, Ireland’s most prominent man of letters. Although he was called to the bar, he never practised. A true bohemian, he moved easily and effortlessly between Dublin and London and Spain. In the 1950s, he was editor of the influential journal the Bell in Dublin and was later the literary editor of Time and Tide in London. He wrote regularly for the Times Literary Supplement and was one of the first to recognise the importance of Samuel Beckett as a writer of prose.

"As an Irish poet, Cronin was unusual in not writing about landscape or childhood or large questions of Irish identity. His poems were often formal in their structure and wry in their tone. He liked clear statement and paradox. He was concerned with fragility and human frailty, but also with public events. He wrote a long poem, "RMS Titanic" (1961); his interest in modernity and history culminated in an extended sonnet sequence The End of the Modern World (1989).

"When the chance came to become involved in government, Cronin, as a socialist working for a conservative prime minister, understood the dangers, but saw that they were outshone by what could be gained. He served as cultural and artistic adviser from 1980 to 1983, and again in Haughey’s third term in office, from 1987 to 1992.

"From Government Buildings in Dublin, Cronin was responsible for setting up the Heritage Council, which supported Irish archaeology, and the Irish Museum of Modern Art at the Royal Hospital in Kilmainham, Dublin, a 17th-century military hospital that had been derelict for many years.

"He also set to work to establish Aosdána, an academy of Irish artists. Since membership included a regular stipend for the artists whose income fell below a certain level, Aosdána rescued many writers and painters and composers from living a life of penury.

"In 1954, Cronin was part of the group – including Kavanagh and O’Brien – who first recognised and celebrated Bloomsday in Dublin. Thirty years later, Cronin oversaw the marking of the Joyce centenary, with figures such as Jorge Luis Borges, Anthony Burgess, William Empson and Angela Carter invited by the Irish government to Dublin to honour the author of Ulysses.

"Cronin was born in Enniscorthy, County Wexford, the son of John, a reporter on the Enniscorthy Echo, and his wife, Hannah (nee Barron). But he became a Dubliner; he boarded at Blackrock college and went to University College Dublin, and then King’s Inns law school. His city was Joyce’s Dublin. He loved ballads and good company and laughter and city streets. Even as he walked the corridors of power and in his graceful old age, he had elements of the young Stephen Dedalus.

"He was an important mentor to many younger writers, including Paul Durcan, Dermot Bolger and myself, and also the novelist Anne Haverty, whom he married in 2003. He had previously been married to Thérèse Campbell, who died in 1998, and with whom he had two daughters...

"As well as 16 volumes of poetry, Cronin wrote two novels, including the comic masterpiece The Life of Riley (1964), a play, many collections of essays, and two biographies – No Laughing Matter: The Life and Times of Flann O’Brien (1989) and Samuel Beckett: The Last Modernist (1996)...."

Another article mentions a cat in the work of another writer. Cronin labeled Stevie Smith the author of a favorite poem of his: This is the first sentence of "Mother, Among the Dustbins."

Mother, among the dustbins and the manure
I feel the measure of my humanity, an allure
As of the presence of God. I am sure
In the dustbins, in the manure, in the cat at play,
In the presence of God, in a sure way
He moves there, Mother, what do you say?
....




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