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Butcher's Dozen |
作者Author /  Thomas Kinsella 湯瑪斯 金瑟勒 |
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Butcher's Dozen
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Timeline of Bloody Sunday and "Butcher's Dozen"
Bloody Sunday and "Butcher's Dozen"
History and Geography of Derry (Londonderry) in
"Butcher's Dozen"
Beginning: Opening Stanza in "Butcher's Dozen"
Finale: Ending Stanza
Geography and History: From St Colmcille to
Derry Walls
Map and Photographs of Derry
(Londonderry)
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Timeline
of Bloody Sunday and "Butcher's Dozen" |
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Time
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1972
Jan 30 |
1972
April |
1992
Jan 30 |
1996 |
1998 |
2001 |
2002
Jan 30 |
Bloody
Sunday |
Bloody
Sunday
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The Widgery Report
published
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The 20th anniversary of
Bloody Sunday
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The Saville's Inquiry
launched
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The 30th anniversary of
Bloody Sunday
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"Butcher's
Dozen" in history |
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Peppercanister
Pamphlet
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Reissue of 1972's
Peppercanister
pamphlet
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Revision in Oxford's
Collected Poems
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Republished in
Carcanet's Collected Poems
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Politics in Northern
Ireland's
History |
1. Interment, Hunger
Strike, Civil Rights Movements.
2. Car Bombings happened in London, Dublin, and Belfast
3. 'Direct Rule' from Westminster
4. Anglo-Irish Agreement on November 15, 1985
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Anglo-Irish Talk (Brooke
/ Mayhew Talk) among Northern Ireland, Irish Republic and Britain from
April 1991 to November 1992
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1. The Irish Peace
Process launches from 1990s to the present
2. The Irish Government's assessment of Bloody Sunday and the Report of
Widgery Tribunal presented to the British Goevernment (June,1997)
3. Northern Ireland Peace Pact on April 10, 1998.
4. P.M. Tony Blair announced the re-examination of Bloody Sunday on
January 29, 1998 in the parliament. The Saville's Inquiry launched on
April 3, 1998 and is still going on now.
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Other Text
On Bloody Sunday |
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1. Brain Friel's play
The Freedom of the City published in 1973 / reissued in 1992.
2. U2's "Sunday Bloody Sunday" released in 1983's War album
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Paul Greengrass's film
Bloody Sunday--Golden Bear Award in Berlin Film Festival
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Location/
Place |
Derry (aka. Londonderry) |
London/
Dublin |
Derry (Londonderry) |
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The Saville Inquiry is
held respectively in-between Derry (Londonderry)---Londo |
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Bloody
Sunday and "Butcher's Dozen" |
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Introduction:
"Butcher's Dozen: A Lesson for the Octave of Widgery," first published
as a Peppercanister pamphlet in April 1972 after the release of the
Widgery Report, is a representation and a rewriting of the historical
event of Bloody Sunday by depicting and eliciting voices and
appearances of the thirteen demonstrators who died as a result of the
military suppression of the protest.
Bloody
Sunday happened on 30 January 1972 in Derry. Injustices
of colonial politics and jurisdiction lead to the successive human
rights marches, activities of radical violence, assassinations and car
or pub bombings intensively in the streets of Belfast and London.
Violating the six-month ban of public demonstration and protesting the
'internment without trial,' thousands of people mainly conducted by the
Northern Ireland Civil Rights Association (NICRA) departed from the
Creggan at 2:50 in the afternoon. (See the
route map) Around an hour later, the crowd moved to William
Street and then turned into Rossville Street for a meeting at the Free
Derry Corner. At the conjuncture of William Street and Rossville
Street, the clashes and confrontation between rioters and soldiers
happened at the 'barrier 14' where Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC) had
already been stationed and blocked William Street in advance. Later on,
at 3:55, soldiers proclaimed that they were under attack and started to
fire at so-called rioters or 'identified' gunman from the deserted
building and flats (Mullan 24). While the first Battalion Parachute
Regiment with armoured cars stationed in this area forcibly practiced
the arrest operation at four-ten, marchers immediately spread in
different directions and fled to Free Derry Corner, flats, lanes, and
blocks around Rossville Street. During forty-five minutes of confusion
and chaos, thirteen rioters were killed and thirteen others injured.
Consequently, on February 1 the Westminster parliament in London
established a resolution and under the Tribunal of Inquiry Act in 1921
convened the Widgery Tribunal for independent investigation and
objective inquiry into the events on that afternoon. Controversially,
the Tribunal Report was issued in April 1972.
Notes
1.
Route of NICRA's March on Bloody Sunday, Jan 30, 1972 (Guardian
Unlimited Special Report on Bloody Sunday 1972)
2. Route
of NICRA's March on Bloody Sunday, Jan 30, 1972
(BBC Bloody Sunday Inquiry Special Report)
3. On-line Photographs Exhibition: Hidden
Truths: Bloody Sunday 1972
(UCR/California Museum of Photography)
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History
and Geography of Derry (Londonderry) in "Butcher's Dozen" |
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Beginning:
Opening Stanza in "Butcher's Dozen"
The opening and the ending of "Butcher's Dozen" are a preliminary
framework that reconstruct such a historical horizon of Bloody Sunday
1972 in Derry, and further contextualize the town Derry as being
between the present and the past historically and geographically.
The poet's walk in the streets implicitly brings
out the historical horizon of "Butcher's Dozen" and the context of
Derry. This poem begins with the poet's descriptive observation of the
scene after the occasion:
I went with Anger at
my heel.
Through Bogside of the bitter zeal
-Jesus pity!-on a day
Of cold and drizzle and decay.
Three months had passed. Yet there remained
A murder smell that stung and stained.
On flats and alleys-over all-
It hung; on the battered roof and wall,
On wreck and rubbish scattered thick,
On sullen steps and pitted brick. (NLD 77)
The poet demonstrates his promenade vision of the
shooting scene around Rossville Street in Derry (so-called Bogside)
after Bloody Sunday. The poet walks through these flats and alleys and
recalls this occasion when the "murder smell" still "stung and stained"
over "flats and alleys" in the streets. This perspective of the Bloody
Sunday scene introduces the sense of "cold and drizzle and decay" and
then simultaneously reconstructs the demonstration on 30 January 1972
in the Bogside area of Derry. This introductory observation
deliberately depicts and then symbolically penetrates the problematics
of the Troubles in Northern Ireland. This aftermath-account
metaphorically delineates the poet's position among the crowds of two
thousand marchers on the scene of Bloody Sunday. Like journalists'
reports on newspapers and television, this poetic account also unfolds
the consequences of constructing historical truth in accordance with
the Widgery Report. In addition, the poet's observation unexpectedly
elicits the hidden and erased parts of Derry history, uncovering the
devious trajectory of historical discourse embedded in the streets of
Derry as well as in this poem.
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Finale:
Ending Stanza
Through the descriptive vision of ruined streets,
the ending of the poem diachronically invokes the recurring
reminiscences of Derry in the past and a historical horizon of lived
moments in Derry. The implication of the Derry Walls in the ending of
the poem further suggests this historical perspective upon the
genealogy of Derry history and represents its fictional relation with
Bloody Sunday. "Butcher's Dozen" ends with four lines of descriptive
representation of this historical town:
The gentle rainfall
drifting down
Over Colmcille's town
Could not refresh, only distil
In silent grief from hill to hill. ( NLD 83)
Bloody Sunday, for Kinsella, is the starting point
of the historical retrospect, which creates its fictional position and
symbolic representation of the history of Derry. Here "Colmcille's
town," referring to the old town of Derry, implicates the historical
development of Derry and the meaning of St. Colmcille's monastic town
in the modern area of Creggan and Bogside. Derry has experienced a
series of recurring bloody scenes and cannot easily be refreshed among
the hills. For its name, Derry, the Irish word doire with its meaning
of "oak grove," is now politically anglicized with the prefix "London"
as "Londonderry" for the official documents of both British and
Northern Ireland governments. The re-naming of Derry indicates the
struggles between colonial politics and history. The name "Colmcille"
not only revives the patron saint of Derry, but also re-justifies
Kinsella's account of Derry's history and geopolitics in the Gaelic
context.
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Geography
and History
The physical geography of Derry correlates its
historical link with words like "wall," "hill," "Colmcille's town."
Here the word "wall" implicates an important connection or a fictional
relation between this observation and the historical significance of
the Derry Walls, parts of Old City of Derry on the 120 feet-high hills
above the Lough Folye. The Derry Walls on the hill, "the heart of the
city," was established in 1610 as the new town of King James I's
plantation in between the bog and the lough. This new town Londonderry,
strategically functioned as the fortress, and it was constructed in the
original site of the monastic town of Derry Colmcille in the sixth
century (Thomas 69). Hence, the Derry Walls, part of Londonderry in the
present, are the historical remains of the colonial plantation.
According to geography and the history of Derry, the Derry Walls
represent not only the symbol of British colonization in the late 17th
century, but also later on are significant for surveillance and
domination in the event of Bloody Sunday.
Tracing back to the obliterated parts of history in
the Gaelic context, around the mid-sixth century St. Colmcille
established the monastery in Doire, which is described as the
"angel-haunted" city with St. Colmcille as the patron (Deane 13). With
two verse stanzas attributed to Colmcille and selected from Latin poems
around the 11th or 12th century, Colmcille explicitly praises the
beauty of Derry:
The reason I love
Doire:
its calmness, its purity
and the number of white angels
from one end to the other !
.……………………………..
Our Doire, with all its acorns,
Sad, spiritless, sunk in tears:
it hurts my heart to leave it
and turn toward alien people. (NOBI 67-8)
At first St. Colmcille describes Doire/Derry as
being calm, pure, and bright, which is apparently far different from
the bleak, bloody and dark scene on Bloody Sunday 1972. The monastic
town is full of blessings, hopes and angels that contrast to the
hatred, violence, and death in modern Derry. For the second part,
Colmcille not only depicts the natural scenery of Doire as "oak grove,"
but also metaphorically delineates Doire as the ruined town as
"spiritless" and "sunk in tears." Though these poems present feelings
of St Colmcille's exile to Scotland and Britain, the second part still
suggests a prophetic message of the recurring colonial experience in
the local history of Derry. These two short stanzas implicitly point
out the Viking's invasion between the 9th century and 11th century, and
the Norman's settlement around the 12th century. Furthermore, this poem
initiates a process of uncovering the history of Derry and colonial
experiences from its founding period to the moment of Bloody Sunday in
"Butcher's Dozen."
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The second part of the Widgery Report
offers the "physical background," or geographic fact as well as the
socio-political situation of Londonderry from the interment period to
the occasion of Bloody Sunday. This section of the report simply
focuses on the area along the Bogside, where the Bloody Sunday event
mainly happened, and further investigates the geopolitics and
demographics in the Catholic communities of Derry:
This area, which is
shown on the map and is in the north-east corner of the Bogside
district, is overlooked from the south-east side by the western section
of the City's ancient Walls, which encircle the old heart of the town
and which have major significance in Orange tradition because of the
successful defence of Londonderry against James II; and from the west
by the Creggan, a largely new district built on rising ground. Creggan
and the old town look at one another across the Bogside. The Bogside
and Creggan are predominantly Catholic districts, their population
amounting to about 33,000 out of a total population in the City of
Londonderry of about 55,000. The Bogside contains a number of old
terraced houses and buildings, many of them derelict or nearly so; but
also a large number of new blocks of flats and maisonettes. The small
area with which the Tribunal was concerned lies on flat ground at a
meeting point of old and new buildings. All flats so frequently
mentioned in evidence -the Rossville Flats, Glenfada Park, Kells Walks,
Columbcille Court, Abbey Park and Joseph Place-are very modern
buildings. . . . A notable feature of the area is that it contains a
number of large open spaces which have been cleared of buildings, on
both sides of William Street and of Rossville Street, as well as the
courtyards and the open spaces arising from the layout of the new
blocks of flats. (WR11-2)
This narrative of geography in Derry seems to focus
on the strategic perspective of the town for British authorities but
rather unfairly deals with the historical development and context of
the two opposing communities in Derry as well as to simplify the
conflicts between Britain and Ireland. Though this report did mention
the history of the Walls, this historical account of Derry is still
fragmented and intended to obliterate as well as to break down the
Gaelic context of Colmcille's Derry, the founding period of the
monastic town. Compared with this official investigation of the
Catholic community in Creggan and Bogside districts of Derry,
"Butcher's Dozen," akin to St Colmcille's poem, makes rather a
sympathetic response and a diachronic implication of this town, its
people, and this occasion through the events of Bloody Sunday.
Kinsella's historical discourse in "Butcher's Dozen" not only
represents a series of silent witnesses and latent historical realities
on Bloody Sunday, but also questions a recurring pattern of Irish
history-the constant invasion of foreign forces and the influential
impact of colonialism on the Irish people and culture. In other words,
this poem pinpoints the continuous hostility between Ireland and
England; the Derry Walls are a symbolic barricade between Irish
Catholics and British/Scottish Protestants in Northern Ireland.
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Map and Photographs of Derry
(Londonderry) |
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http://www.wesleyjohnston.com/users/ireland/maps/towns/derry.gif
Illustrations (Please click the number on the map and see its
photographs)
1. City Walls of Derry (Butcher's Gate) (1/5/6)
2. Bogside (40)
3. Free Derry's Corner (41)
Gate of Derry's Old
Town
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Derry's Walls
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