This essay was originally sent out two years ago today. Since June 4th is my late father’s birthday, and most of my subscribers weren’t here two years ago, I thought it post it a second time. When you read it, you’ll understand why I want to share it again.
Seventy-four years ago today, my father was born — arse-first and very large — on the Crumlin Road in Belfast, in a hospital next door to a prison. Perhaps his difficult entry into the world infused in him a poet’s poignant outlook. Or maybe his poetic soul was formed in utero, where he had overstayed his welcome by close to a month; and that wayward spirit was the cause, not the result, of his traumatising trip down the birth canal the wrong way. Poets do not want to make life easy on themselves. Poetry is the salt mine of intellectual labour. I wouldn’t wish being a poet on my worst enemy.
Thankfully, my father did not devote his life to being a poet — earning a crust as a novelist and freelance journalist is tricky enough. But throughout his life he wrote a large number of poems, and all the ones I have read have been wonderful. (Personal fondness aside.) I’m sure his writing skill was enhanced by the fact that he was well taught by a teacher who went on to become a world-famous poet: Seamus Heaney (more on that below.)
In honour of his 74th birthday, I would like to share a few of my father’s poems with you. Starting with one of the last things he ever wrote, four months before he died: a Valentine’s Day love poem for my mother, Mary.
On St Valentine's Day 13/2/04
Misogynists get into line --
I wrote this for my Valentine,
A woman who your sort defame
And dare to pass along the blame
For all your ills and stunted lives:
Misogyny on misery thrives.
Misogynists get into line,
Hesiod, Cato, Augustine --
And the author of the Bible --
It's time that he was sued for liable --
All who thought it was their duty
To slander women and their beauty --
Misogynists get into line --
I celebrate my Valentine --
The gods of love attend our bed
And on my arm she rests her head --
A woman who in every part
Captivates both mind and heart.
Misogynists get into line --
For Mary is my Valentine!
Much of my parents’ social circle was made up of left-wing intellectual types, but my father was deeply skeptical of ideologues. So to be his friend, you had to be able to take a joke. Call it his working class common sense, but he thought most hard-line lefties were humourless, university-educated softies with zero understanding of working class culture. I came across this poem, written in 1982 to a close friend who was a Marxist-Leninist professor. It is a gentle and deftly written takedown. (I aspire to such subtlety, but I suspect I’m more of a fire-breathing polemicist. It’s my fierce feminine nature.)
And finally, a very short poem he wrote the day after I was born. It’s really quite a grim piece of writing, uncharacteristically pessimistic, indicating perhaps he had a momentary existential crisis after becoming a father to a daughter. He was always very jolly around me when I was growing up, but that clearly is not how he felt when he wrote this. Nonetheless, it is an incredibly taut, deep piece of writing.
As I mentioned above, my father was taught as a young teen by Seamus Heaney, who was himself just a young man starting out in life. Five years after my father died, a friend sent me an email to tell me that in the book Stepping Stones: Interviews with Seamus Heaney, by Dennis O'Driscoll, Heaney was asked about his time at my father’s school, St Thomas’s (1962-63) in Ballymurphy, an infamously poor area of West Belfast.
Heaney said:
“Put it this way: forty years on, I still remember five or six names and faces out of that fourth-year class – the more intelligent ones, admittedly, the ones with sensibility and personality… You’re right to see disadvantaged homes and impoverished conditions generally as a barrier to growth and self-realization. The sectarian realities, the unemployment, the eventual presence of the British army, the IRA recruiting machine, the peer pressure – hard to see teenagers who were simply returned from the school to the street corner being able to transcend all that…
One pupil, by the way, did triumph – the late Jack Holland, the novelist and writer on Northern Irish affairs, who eventually ended up in New York. Jack was in class 4B and his essays suggested he would make a path for himself. He had an appetite for language – and a sardonic sense of humor. If you have the words, there’s always a chance that you’ll find the way.”
Happy birthday, Dad. Thanks for giving me the words.
I usually categorize myself as one who has little patience for poetry . . . up until I read a good one, and then I squirm with pleasure while marveling at the skill and insight of its creator. Your Dad was a great poet who reminds me this morning that I DO love a good poem.
That was beautiful and it's good to see your father passed on his talent and love of words. I've never seen such a defense of the humanity of women as his Valentine poem to your mother, and Dear Gary could be "Dear Progressives" these days. Please publish more of his poetry!
The poem to the Marxist professor certainly could have been written to the cancel culture enforcers of today (and they doubtless would have been furious that he dared to question them). I would be interested in reading more of your father's poetry. And yes, you are an excellent fire-breathing polemicist of subtle thought.
O wow. I was thinking that this was a project for the future. I wasn't familiar with WhatsApp, so I tried to download it, but you have to download it through a phone, and I don't have a phone and I'm not very good at technology.
When people born without a limb, wondering what the pitying thoughts from others are about, by necessity and acceptance, make their way in the world. Having been raised by a mother with an occasional visit from my father, a welder following the trade down the East Coast of the USA during construction of paper mills, it is difficult to relate to others who had a resident and good father. I have taken the liberty of copying the image of the two of you reading. It tells me with a picture what I missed. Thanks for sharing.
It's later in the morning, but my wife, and Seamus, our beagle, are still sleeping. Your father's words, and your words are new gifts for me. And I felt the thrill of realizing your father's closeness to the poet after whom I named our dog--but, I think I like your words here even better.
These poems were a joy to read. Thank you so much for sharing them!
Your father's A Brief History of Misogyny stands apart from most works on this usually ill-defined subject thanks to the depth of research and the thoughtful presentation of his extensive reading and conclusions. Few books these days -- and that assessment includes academic books -- are grounded in such a solid foundation of reading and desire for knowledge. The book doesn't fake-psychologize or craft a grand theory based on preferred assumptions but considers verifiable words and known actions. The argument derives from considering them carefully and the conclusions don't run ahead of the evidence. It's the kind of book that makes you want to be a lifelong learner. Thank you both for getting this work into readers' hands and for bringing this kind of unfake-able thoightfulness into your other endeavors. It means a lot.
Thank you for sharing this, Jenny. Your dad sounded like an amazing man with a real gift for words and thinking, which you have obviously inherited. I bet he'd be really proud of you. I found this piece very touching and thought-provoking, too. I had a bit of a complicated relationship with my own dad, who passed away 2 years ago. I miss him terribly, even now. Your piece reminded me of the importance of a good solid relationship with one's parents, despite any conflict, and the values and knowledge we learn from them. Love is a lasting legacy.
Your father's poem upon your birth is startling, almost as though your birth moved him to contemplate the Heideggerian Geworfenheit of it all. Were you his first child?
I remember reading this two years ago, and it made me feel the same way again today--thankful for the good fathers, yours, mine, and all the rest, some gone but never forgotten.
I am a publisher(Marco Polo Press) in Korea. My name is Hyojin Kim. If this book(Misogyny: The World's Oldest Prejudice) has not been contracted for publication in Korea, I would like to publish it. Who should I consult with to ask about the license?
What a beautiful man. Thank you, Jenny, for sharing your father with us. Even in the picture of your parents and also the picture of your father with you, he radiates the Energy of Love. Of all the poems you included, the one he wrote in honor of your birth is my favorite (I'll also mention that the picture of you and your dad brought tears to my eyes). Again, thank you!
I need to get my day started but, truth is, since discovering your Substack this morning most of the tears that have welled up in my eyes unexpectedly are the happy kind. I can see your substack is going to be a time-management challenge for me but being here feels like home and that’s a nice problem to have on a busy morning☀️
I don't find it that pessimistic, my love. Nestled comfortably in their mother's womb, each newborn becomes sentient enough to notice the loss of security the womb enveloped them in. But the terror passes, and soon enough they are smiling and laughing. That being said, your tribute to your father is wonderful. 76 years ago today he was born. Of happy memory.
Good day first cousin Mary and dear hostess from 2019 in the North, Jenny! To you, Jenny, the (adored) apple did not fall far from the (your Dad's and Mom's) tree! Love,
Hi, Tommy, how are you? Good to see you here. I came across your comment and thought it must be you, so I subscribed. If you have an email or WhatsApp address I'll catch you up on our news. A kiss to you all from Italy.
I'm a first-time Grandfather to little miss fetching, Merrin Elizabeth Greaney, born to my son Matt and daughter-in-law Holly Dec. 22, 2022. I've been enjoying retirement for the past 3.5 years, and have spent considerable time in CO renting rooms near my Laura and her partner Charlie and up in Maine near Matt and Holly. I still own my condo in Westerly, RI.
Jenny, I hope that you will consider publicizing your father's poems. I think that, in particular, those about his Catholic upbringing back in the day would be of interest to many.
What a heartfelt tribute. That photo of you and your Dad wrapped it all up beautifully. I’m so glad your Mom or whoever the photographer was seems to have chosen the perfect moment to capture, for the future, the essence of what you have written here. Thanks for sharing your Dad’s legacy of words. Your writing seems to always reflect love. Now I know why.
I usually categorize myself as one who has little patience for poetry . . . up until I read a good one, and then I squirm with pleasure while marveling at the skill and insight of its creator. Your Dad was a great poet who reminds me this morning that I DO love a good poem.
That was beautiful and it's good to see your father passed on his talent and love of words. I've never seen such a defense of the humanity of women as his Valentine poem to your mother, and Dear Gary could be "Dear Progressives" these days. Please publish more of his poetry!
The poem to the Marxist professor certainly could have been written to the cancel culture enforcers of today (and they doubtless would have been furious that he dared to question them). I would be interested in reading more of your father's poetry. And yes, you are an excellent fire-breathing polemicist of subtle thought.
Thanks as always Susan -- I really love that poem and will try to remember posting it regularly. So many things, so little time.
With Jenny I want to put together a selection of his poems for publication — self-publication of course via Amazon or something. He was a fine poet.
Set it up and publish it on Kindle. It's simple (except for getting the damn gutters right.)
Thank you. We'll work it out.
I'd love to read it.
I don't think you'd be disappointed. Perhaps tomorrow — it's late here where I live — I can WhatsApp you a few copies tomorrow.
O wow. I was thinking that this was a project for the future. I wasn't familiar with WhatsApp, so I tried to download it, but you have to download it through a phone, and I don't have a phone and I'm not very good at technology.
When people born without a limb, wondering what the pitying thoughts from others are about, by necessity and acceptance, make their way in the world. Having been raised by a mother with an occasional visit from my father, a welder following the trade down the East Coast of the USA during construction of paper mills, it is difficult to relate to others who had a resident and good father. I have taken the liberty of copying the image of the two of you reading. It tells me with a picture what I missed. Thanks for sharing.
He would be very proud of you.
Thank you Jeff. That means a lot.
It's later in the morning, but my wife, and Seamus, our beagle, are still sleeping. Your father's words, and your words are new gifts for me. And I felt the thrill of realizing your father's closeness to the poet after whom I named our dog--but, I think I like your words here even better.
This is a truly beautiful comment -- a little snippet of a golden moment.
These poems were a joy to read. Thank you so much for sharing them!
Your father's A Brief History of Misogyny stands apart from most works on this usually ill-defined subject thanks to the depth of research and the thoughtful presentation of his extensive reading and conclusions. Few books these days -- and that assessment includes academic books -- are grounded in such a solid foundation of reading and desire for knowledge. The book doesn't fake-psychologize or craft a grand theory based on preferred assumptions but considers verifiable words and known actions. The argument derives from considering them carefully and the conclusions don't run ahead of the evidence. It's the kind of book that makes you want to be a lifelong learner. Thank you both for getting this work into readers' hands and for bringing this kind of unfake-able thoightfulness into your other endeavors. It means a lot.
Thank you! It means a lot to me to hear such lovely thoughts about his writing and mine -- it is very heartening.
Thank you for sharing this, Jenny. Your dad sounded like an amazing man with a real gift for words and thinking, which you have obviously inherited. I bet he'd be really proud of you. I found this piece very touching and thought-provoking, too. I had a bit of a complicated relationship with my own dad, who passed away 2 years ago. I miss him terribly, even now. Your piece reminded me of the importance of a good solid relationship with one's parents, despite any conflict, and the values and knowledge we learn from them. Love is a lasting legacy.
Your father's poem upon your birth is startling, almost as though your birth moved him to contemplate the Heideggerian Geworfenheit of it all. Were you his first child?
Erm, no, not technically. I was the only child he raised tho! 😬
I remember reading this two years ago, and it made me feel the same way again today--thankful for the good fathers, yours, mine, and all the rest, some gone but never forgotten.
Yes, I remember your comment about your dad from then too!
Thank you. How very beautiful.
What a lovely, sharp and open-eyed elegy. Am upgrading my subscription.
Thank you so much!!
Here's another poem to celebrate his birthday, this one written about Jenny's American grandmother:
A Bronx philosopher
by Jack Holland
A Bronx philosopher expressed it best:
"If God exists, he sure ain't mindin' the store."
If Hubble ever peers that far, it will find
An "out to lunch" sign hanging on Heaven's Door —
A long Martini lunch — fifteen billion years at least
Since the Lord declared "Let there be lunch!"
And traipsed off to enjoy the feast.
Dear Jenny Holland
I am a publisher(Marco Polo Press) in Korea. My name is Hyojin Kim. If this book(Misogyny: The World's Oldest Prejudice) has not been contracted for publication in Korea, I would like to publish it. Who should I consult with to ask about the license?
laissez@gmail.com
Bien cordialement,
Hyojin Kim
Marco Polo Press
Dasom1ro9. Sejong City, S. Korea
https://www.facebook.com/marco.polo.livre/
Hello Hyojin!
Thanks so much for your interest.
I have written to the publisher to ask -- I will let you know what they say!
There's an immense kindness in his words, even the one about the baby.
Yes, there is! I'm glad you can see it too!
Beautiful.
What a beautiful man. Thank you, Jenny, for sharing your father with us. Even in the picture of your parents and also the picture of your father with you, he radiates the Energy of Love. Of all the poems you included, the one he wrote in honor of your birth is my favorite (I'll also mention that the picture of you and your dad brought tears to my eyes). Again, thank you!
Thank you Shelley! How lovely.
I need to get my day started but, truth is, since discovering your Substack this morning most of the tears that have welled up in my eyes unexpectedly are the happy kind. I can see your substack is going to be a time-management challenge for me but being here feels like home and that’s a nice problem to have on a busy morning☀️
This is extremely high praise -- thank you very much for your time!!
I don't find it that pessimistic, my love. Nestled comfortably in their mother's womb, each newborn becomes sentient enough to notice the loss of security the womb enveloped them in. But the terror passes, and soon enough they are smiling and laughing. That being said, your tribute to your father is wonderful. 76 years ago today he was born. Of happy memory.
Good day first cousin Mary and dear hostess from 2019 in the North, Jenny! To you, Jenny, the (adored) apple did not fall far from the (your Dad's and Mom's) tree! Love,
Tom Greaney
Hi, Tommy, how are you? Good to see you here. I came across your comment and thought it must be you, so I subscribed. If you have an email or WhatsApp address I'll catch you up on our news. A kiss to you all from Italy.
Great to receive your response, Mary. My email is savvycomm18@gmail.com
I'm a first-time Grandfather to little miss fetching, Merrin Elizabeth Greaney, born to my son Matt and daughter-in-law Holly Dec. 22, 2022. I've been enjoying retirement for the past 3.5 years, and have spent considerable time in CO renting rooms near my Laura and her partner Charlie and up in Maine near Matt and Holly. I still own my condo in Westerly, RI.
Hi, Tommy, I'll get back to you tomorrow. Nice to get an update.
Jenny, I think you would like this writer: https://www.ukcolumn.org/blogs/the-paradigm-wars-part-3-a-wrench-in-the-fabric-of-reality-a-new-paradigm
Jenny, I hope that you will consider publicizing your father's poems. I think that, in particular, those about his Catholic upbringing back in the day would be of interest to many.
Thank you so much Keryn!
Those days feel very over don’t they? 🥺
One of Jack's longer poems was a parody of TS Eliot's Love Song of J Alfred Prufrock called The Dole Song of J. Alfred Pinecoffin.
I'll have to look that up. I know of a wicked parody of Four Quartets by Henry Reed --
http://www.solearabiantree.net/namingofparts/chardwhitlow.php
What a heartfelt tribute. That photo of you and your Dad wrapped it all up beautifully. I’m so glad your Mom or whoever the photographer was seems to have chosen the perfect moment to capture, for the future, the essence of what you have written here. Thanks for sharing your Dad’s legacy of words. Your writing seems to always reflect love. Now I know why.