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In Search of Dublin's Literary Greats

Orla Rapple goes on a Dublin literary pub crawl — combining history, literature and alcohol.

Dublin City is renowned for its literary geniuses, great buildings and even greater pubs. So what better way to take in these three tourist attractions than on the Dublin Literary Pub Crawl?

The literary pub crawl starts off upstairs in the Duke, just off Grafton Street, at 7.30pm, on Thursdays to Sundays during the winter season (November to March 31) and every night from April to October. While partaking in the first of many drinks of the evening the audience are introduced to Eithne and Donnagh, two actors who are our hosts for the night. Eithne and Donnagh have a wealth of Irish literary information and pass it onto their audience through well-acted excerpts from plays and letters written by Dublin’s best-known writers. Eithne gets the audience in the mood with a rendition of the old Dublin song, Waxie Dargle, a term that would not be familiar to most tourists but soon they are all singing along to the chorus. Then comes an excerpt from Samuel Beckett’s masterpiece Waiting for Godot followed by interpretations of the play and information on the life and times of Beckett. This may all just sound like a better-situated English lesson but through Eithne and Donnagh’s wit Beckett’s biography takes on a life of its own. Added to this are details of the history of The Duke and the first couple of questions for the literary quiz, a competition with some great souvenirs of the pub crawl as prizes and with questions that keep the audience on their toes throughout the tour.

The Dublin Literary Pub Crawl is not just based around pubs and alcohol. After The Duke the next stop is Trinity College, where Eithne and Donnagh delve into the lives of Jonathan Swift, Bram Stoker, Oscar Wilde and Oliver Goldsmith, who were all students of the college at one time. It is mainly the life of Oscar Wilde that is dealt with during this stop as Eithne describes his life at Trinity College and his subsequent literary tour of America. Eithne relives many of Wilde’s letters to family and friends during his tour with hilarious results. Some pretty interesting details are divulged about Wilde and the other writers as well. For example, did you know that Oliver Goldsmith wrote the children’s nursery rhymes Jack and Jill and Hickory Dickory Dock? Or that Oscar Wilde once boxed for Trinity College?

After all that information it is time for another pint and the tour moves to O’Neill’s on Suffolk Street, a watering hole for many present day Irish writers, including Brian Keenan, the Beirut hostage and author of An Evil Cradling and Brendan Kennelly, the poet and critic and Professor of Modern Literature at Trinity College. Unfortunately we are given just a 20 minute break at O’Neill’s before Eithne and Donnagh introduce us to Saint Andrew’s Church across the road from the pub. Here there are details on the history of the church as well as an excerpt from a short story by Anne Devlin, the only female writer dealt with on the pub crawl. Then it’s on to The Old Stand on Saint Andrews Street for another liquid break.

Before every pub stop either Donnagh or Eithne give a short history of the establishment we are about to visit with some interesting snippets from its past. On the way to The Old Stand the audience are advised to look out for a black and white photographic print from the late 1920s in one corner of the pub as it captures the funeral cortege of Kevin O’Higgins, the assassinated Minister for Justice and regular customer of the pub, passing the doors of The Old Stand on its way to Glasnevin Cemetery.

After our stop at The Old Stand it is back to Duke Street where Eithne and Donnagh lead their audience down a side street for the literary pub quiz and prize-giving ceremony. Then we are entertained with a surprising excerpt from one of Samuel Beckett’s plays before we head into Davy Byrnes- another pub full of literary history. It got a mention in two of Joyce’s masterpieces, Dubliners and Ulysses.

The Dublin Literary Pub Crawl is not just for tourists. The tour, which takes just over two hours, gives so many interesting details about Dublin’s past that even the most cynical city-dweller could not fail to be impressed with Dublin’s literary background. For those who would rather take in the literary and liquid sights of Dublin during the day there is a pub crawl every Sunday at noon.

There is never a dull moment on this tour, however if you are expecting to spend a long time languishing in various pubs you may be disillusioned. There is only time for one drink in each establishment and the tour bases itself around just four pubs that are all in the general vicinity of Grafton Street. However the Dublin Literary Pub Crawl cannot fail to entertain you, as it is the perfect combination of history, literature and alcohol.

Tickets for the Dublin Literary Pub Crawl are priced at 8.89 Euro for adults and 7.62 Euro for students. Tickets can be booked upstairs at The Duke before the tour (it is advisable to arrive at The Duke at least half an hour in advance of the tour) or at Dublin’s Tourism Centre on Suffolk Street.

More details on the Dublin Literary Pub Crawl can be found by calling 00 353 1 6705620 or by emailing info@dublinpubcrawl.com

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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