Easter Rising Quotes
Easter Rising: An Irish American Coming Up from Under
by
Michael Patrick MacDonald955 ratings, 3.78 average rating, 107 reviews
Easter Rising Quotes
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“Look, he's just in another form! Do you understand?" Ma explained. I didn't know where she was going with it. The old man Wren looked down and gripped her hand, unable to say anything. Ma said, "Look! You know how you've taken many forms in this life?"
He looked up again.
"First you were a baby. Then you were a little kid running around these glens. Then you were a young man getting married."
Mr. Wren exclaimed, "Yes!" repeatedly, getting louder with every form he'd ever taken in this world. By the excited look on him, I thought Ma was going to do him in with memories. His trembling was getting worse and he cried, but not like a child, because he was crying and smiling at the same time. "You're not the same form you were even ten years ago! It's like evolution. Throughout this life you just go from form to form! Well, it's the same when you die. Your son is just in another form! Do you hear me?”
― Easter Rising: An Irish American Coming Up from Under
He looked up again.
"First you were a baby. Then you were a little kid running around these glens. Then you were a young man getting married."
Mr. Wren exclaimed, "Yes!" repeatedly, getting louder with every form he'd ever taken in this world. By the excited look on him, I thought Ma was going to do him in with memories. His trembling was getting worse and he cried, but not like a child, because he was crying and smiling at the same time. "You're not the same form you were even ten years ago! It's like evolution. Throughout this life you just go from form to form! Well, it's the same when you die. Your son is just in another form! Do you hear me?”
― Easter Rising: An Irish American Coming Up from Under
“When I started doing community organizing in Boston's neighborhoods, working on all the issues that had affected my family - violence, poverty, guns - I realized that the sooner the Irish of Southie came to better understand their history as an "inferior race" by English standards and learned what it meant to be Irish beyond the happy-go-lucky tunes and bloody fistfights of Saint Patrick's Day, the sooner they would acknowledge Southie's poverty and its manipulation by gangsters and politicians. And maybe even work with black people in neighboring Roxbury on common issues, like the fact that both neighborhoods had been declared "death zones" by sociologists. I also became obsessed with the connection between the work I was doing and personal recovery from trauma, as I got close to a number of mothers whose kids had been murdered in the city.”
― Easter Rising: An Irish American Coming Up from Under
― Easter Rising: An Irish American Coming Up from Under
“Someone told me you were worshipping the devil with the punk rocks!" he said, opening the jug.
Ma walked into the apartment, and Grandpa repeated that I'd joined the devil-worshippers. "With the punk rocks," he added proudly, liked he'd copped on to a new phenomenon.”
― Easter Rising: An Irish American Coming Up from Under
Ma walked into the apartment, and Grandpa repeated that I'd joined the devil-worshippers. "With the punk rocks," he added proudly, liked he'd copped on to a new phenomenon.”
― Easter Rising: An Irish American Coming Up from Under
