Book description
Between clubs, dining halls, libraries, institutions and good
addresses in the country, R. B. McDowell, born in September 1913, had
led the charmed and energized existence of a distinguished bachelor
don, embellishing the lives of generations of students - chiefly
Trinity College undergraduates - fellow historians, academic
colleagues and friends. In McDowell on McDowell, A Memoir, he
describes this life, almost entirely shaped by a seventy-five year
association with Trinity College, Dublin, with interludes at Radley,
Oxfordshire during the second world war, in London after official
retirement in 1981 and on the Continent for vacations. With spare,
poised prose, which reveals as it conceals, he tells of origins in
Edwardian Belfast and evokes memories of secondary education at 'Inst'
and Elmwood Sunday School, annual visits to London, and summers at
Fahan and Portadown. He survives the Spanish flu epidemic of 1918, and
experiences widening social and intellectual contours informed by avid
reading in military history, eighteenth-century British politics,
nineteenth-century fiction, Adam Smith, Marx and Spengler. In 1932 he
progresses to TCD as lecturer, historian and writer, coming to
identify with eighteenth-century Ireland - its buildings, politics and
people - as the primary focus of his interest and work in a moving
expression of its ethos and his own. He also provides fascinating,
vivid cameos of Europe in crisis: visiting Cologne in January 1939,
and in May 1968 joining student radicals on the Boulevard St Germain
in Paris, an experience turned to account as he dealt with home-grown
Internationalists in his capacity as Junior Dean (1956-69). This
entertaining essay is self-portraiture, conveyed with the perception
and ease of an after-dinner speaker and raconteur, alive to the
idiosyncrasies and vagaries of his profession, is a valuable record of
a unique Irishman and citizen of the world at the close of his days.
The Lilliput Press has published four of R. B. McDowell's previous
works: Land and Learning: Two Irish Clubs (1993), Crisis and Decline:
The Fate of Southern Unionists (1997), Grattan: A Life (2001) and
Historical Essays, 1838-2001 (2003).
R. B. McDowell, who has been the subject of two volumes of tributes
and reminiscences edited by Anne Leonard (The Junior Dean: Encounters
with a Legend, 2003, and The Magnificent McDowell: Trinity in the Golden
Era, 2006), is Emeritus Fellow and former Professor of History at
Trinity College, Dublin.