Book description
This is the remarkable journal of an Enlishwoman in her early
thirties abroad in Ireland, recently widowed and sole mistress of the
vast neo-medieval Castle Freke overlooking a remote headland in west
Cork, where she raised her young family in the company of servants,
dependants and occasional visitors. Reflective and sensitive, Mary
Carbery was deeply atuned to the spirit of place and to the people she
lived amongst in Ross Carbery, studying Irish and taking note of local
speech, folklife and customs. This journal of 1898 to 1901, previously
unpublished, is an intimate record of one woman's growing attachment
to an alian contryside and its inhabitants, bringing them vividly to
life with the eye of a naturalist and the ear of a writer. The editor,
Jeremy Sandford, describes his grandmother's life before and after the
period of journal, and the fate of the Carbery family at a time of
seismic political and social change. His commentary encompasses the
terrible fire of 1910, and the rebuilding of the castle; the
disaffection of her eldest son John, and 10th Lord Carbery - a
daredevil aeronaut who sold Castle Freke in 1919 and joined the 'Happy
Valley' set in Kenya; and Mary's own wanderings, writings and gentle
decline at Eye Manor in the Welsh border country. A singular work,
appearing in the centenary year of its inception, Mary Carbery's West
Cork Journal will take its place among the minor classics of Ireland's
Literary Revival.
Mary Carbery (1867-1949) edited Mrs Elizabeth Freke, Her Diary 1671
to 1714, and was author of several books, including The Farm by Lough
Gur (1937), a celebrated account of farm life in Ireland during the
nineteenth century, and Happy World (1941), a memoir.