Setting afloat the Celtic
He
crossed the empty hall with deliberate purpose, each measured footfall striking
the boards and returning to him in a hollow echo. For now, it was a cavern of
stillness, a place suspended between intent and uproar; but he knew well that
within the hour it would swell with bodies and cigarette smoke, with persuasion
sharpened into argument, with the restless friction of men convinced they were
right. Hibernian and Dundee Harp had demonstrated that they could attract a
good crowd to watch their charity games. The Sacred Heart School had already served
over 50,000 meals to children and in doing so had boosted attendance
considerably. He knew if his people were to climb out of poverty then education
had a vital role to play. The time had come for the Irish of Glasgow to have
their own football club.
The
name was chosen. The course laid. Yet certainty, he knew, was a private luxury.
Tonight it would be tested against the will of others—against those who would
come pressing for a Glasgow Hibernians, a shadow cast in imitation of
Edinburgh’s pride. They would speak of loyalty, of tradition, of the comfort of
a borrowed identity. But he wanted none of it. If a club were to be born here,
it would stand on its own feet, answer to its own name, and grow from the soil
beneath it rather than cling to another city’s roots. At the back of the hall,
along East Rose Street, he reached the small room set aside for him. He stepped
inside and closed the door behind him, shutting out the echo of the passage. Here,
at least, there would be order.
He
drew up a chair and set pen to paper, the scratch of the nib breaking the
silence. Line by line, he began to shape the club’s purpose—not merely a name,
but a declaration, something that could be spoken aloud and carry weight enough
to steady a room divided. When he read it that night, he would not be arguing;
he would be offering something whole, something certain. Outside, the hall
waited. Soon it would be filled with voices. But for now, there was only ink,
and intention, and the quiet conviction of a man determined to begin something
that belonged, unmistakably, to itself.
As
he moved towards his desk, he caught a glimpse of himself in the dusty,
wooden-framed mirror by the window. He looked old and tired. The years of toil
in Glasgow’s east end had taken their toll. He allowed himself a small smile
and sat at his desk. He picked up his pen and continued to write the circular
he had started earlier that day…
‘The
above club was formed in November 1887 by a number of the Catholics of the East
End of the City. The main objective of the club is to supply the East End
conferences of the St. Vincent De Paul Society with funds for the maintenance
of the Dinner Tables of our needy children in the Missions of St Mary’s, Sacred
Heart, and St. Michael’s. Many cases of sheer poverty are left unaided through
lack of means. It is therefore with this principle object that we have set
afloat the Celtic, and we invite you as one of our ever-ready friends to assist
in putting our new Park in proper working order for the coming football season.’
As
he sat at his desk and thought of the words he would write, a spider caught his
eye as it scurried for cover behind some books. Something about it stirred a
memory from long ago and his childhood in County Sligo, he stared into space,
his mind lost somewhere in a past long gone…
The
glistening web of a wolf spider, heavy with dew clung to the reeds. The light
of a new dawn shone through the strands of the web casting a shimmering
kaleidoscope of colours. It was as if the spider had set out to snare a
rainbow. The child, barely 7 years old lay on the damp grass watching it
intently, mesmerised by its beauty. A gentle breeze caused the web to sway
gently before his young eyes. He felt as much a part of this land as the spider
or the birds greeting the new day with their chorus. All of his short life his
grandmother had whispered or sung to him in the old tongue, the folk tales of
their ancient land. She has passed them onto him as they sat by the turf fire
on wild winter’s days when the trees bent in the westerly wind. She had poured
them into his drowsy head as she rocked him to sleep at night. She had sung to
him the ancient tale of the Children of Lir who had been changed into swans by
their father’s jealous second wife and destined to remain that way until the
sound of a Christian bell was heard in the land. She had told him of Dagda’s
Harp which had the power to make men weep, laugh or even sleep at its sound.
She had also taught him respect for the land and all the creatures which drew
life from it. ‘Listen to me sweet child,’ she’d say, ‘everything has
a spirit. The rocks, the pools, the hills and trees, all are woven into the
very pattern of life. When men forget this truth disaster usually
follows.’
Even
as a small child he understood something of her wisdom. A slight movement of
the web made the child tilt his head slightly, a smile of anticipation crossing
his lips as he saw the spider emerge from its hiding place. A small fly was
struggling on the lower part of the web and in its vain attempts to free itself
had merely hastened its demise. A voice broke into his silent world, ‘Andrew,
where are you?’ He raised himself onto his knees and glanced back towards
his family’s small cottage. He could see his mother’s familiar form glancing to
her left and right looking for him with a worried look on her face. ‘Andrew!’
she called again, this time louder. He stood and faced her, seeing her relief
as she realised he was safe. She strode towards him and knelt by him pulling
him close, ‘You need to stop leaving the cottage before we’re awake. The
bog can be a dangerous place for a child. Whatever are you thinking?’ She swept
him up in her arms and headed back towards the house, ‘Come now, you’re father
and brother are preparing breakfast.’ Andrew glanced over her shoulder and
smiled at the spider’s web. He’d return to look at it again one day soon.
The
following day, young Andrew had joined his father and brother Bernard on a
journey to the small market in Ballymote. His mother waved them off before
turning to the many chores a country woman had to attend to. Not least of which
was caring for her old and increasingly frail mother who had lived with then in
their cramped little cottage for the past year. Their small cart was loaded
with the meagre produce his father had grown with much effort and they needed
to sell it at the market so that the landlord could have his rent. So many had
been turned out onto the road in recent times and some had even been forced to
watch as their humble homes were destroyed by the landlord’s agents. Young
Andrew sat in the back of the cart among the cabbages and carrots as it lurched
along the rutted roads and tracks to the town. They had barely gone a mile when
his father stopped the cart and stared in silence at a field to his left.
Andrew followed his father’s gaze and saw a group of perhaps eight or nine
haggard figures, dressed in rags scavenging like crows in the rutted field. At
least four of the wraith-like figures were children but they were so painfully
thin and their long, unkempt hair covered much of their faces as they dug in
the muddy turnip field with their bare hands. One of the skeletal adults let
out a guttural cry as he had managed to drag a turnip from the unforgiving
ground. The others flocked to him as he beat the turnip on a rock and attempted
to bite into the hard, raw surface. Andrew looked at his father and saw that he
was greatly troubled by what he was witnessing.
At
the edge of the field, barely 10 yards from their cart, something drew Andrew’s
attention. He was surprised to see the emaciated figure of a small girl. She
was a similar age to him, but painfully thin and pale. Her eyes, dark,
emotionless pools regarded him. He clothing was little more than a piece of
rough sackcloth wrapped around her and tied with a thin piece of rope. Her
feet, bare and thick with dirt, stood in a gathering puddle as she continued to
watch Andrew with dark, hungry eyes. Instinctively he reached in to one of
sacks of carrots his father had loaded onto the cart and took out a bright
orange carrot. He threw it towards the child and it landed in the mud at her
feet but she didn’t move, she just continued to watch him. Andrew’s father
turned to him and gently rebuked him… ‘Andrew, I know you mean well but no
more. If we give all our food away, we will be joining those poor wretches. We
need to sell the food to pay the rent. It breaks my heart son but these are
dark times. They are in God’s hands now. For as sure as the sun rises those
with means have abandoned them.’ He sat down again in the cart and with a
flick of the reins set the donkey pulling it again along the road. ‘But
Father, they’re hungry?’ he had intoned. His father stared grimly ahead,
perhaps determined that his little family wouldn’t be joining the increasingly
desperate groups of starving and dispossessed people who haunted the
countryside in these cruel times. Andrew turned and watched the girl as she
receded into the distance behind the cart. She had still not moved and stood like
a barely living statue by the roadside. He knew that his conscience would
imprint this sight onto his mind forever and was in his own childlike way as
troubled as his father by what they had witnessed. He mumbled a soft ‘sorry,’
which she would never, could never hear.
Andrew
Kerins exhaled and dragged his mind back from 1840s Sligo to the pressing
business at hand. As he began to write he forced his mind to blank out for a
few moments, other desperate images of the black years of the great hunger
which crowded his consciousness. What he had witnessed on that day long ago on
the road to Ballymote was just a foretaste of the horrors to come. Sometimes
thoughts of those times could overwhelm him and he would weep in the darkness
of the night as he thought of the emaciated children tumbled into mass graves
with neither coffin nor shroud. Sometimes it was the wailing of mothers with
nothing to feed their crying offspring with. God how that cry haunted him
still… For now, though, he must put such thoughts out of his mind. Tonight’s
meeting was of vital importance and he needed to find the right words for his
audience. He had grasped quickly the potential for the new sport to raise much
needed money to help the poor around him in Glasgow. Never again did he want to
see children go hungry and he and the men he had gathered around him would do
something about it. People were willing to pay to watch a good football side
play and there was no denying that his flock needed a symbol, a source of
identity and pride. Most of his close associates felt as he did that their new
club shouldn’t go down the temperance or strictly Catholic route. In the longer
term this was wise as was his choice of name.
‘Yes,
that name had a ring to it,’ he thought to himself; ‘Celtic.’
Remembering
Brother Walfrid who died on this day in 1915.
On
the day of his passing, his beloved Celtic defeated Third Lanark 4-0 at Cathkin
Park to win the league. They would go on to many more honours.


Excellent as always LL. God bless brother Walfrid.
ReplyDelete“WALFRID’S BOON”
ReplyDeleteON the 111th Anniversary of the passing of our legendary founder, we are proud to present our verse tribute to the club that was founded to relieve the social deprivation then rife in the East End of Glasgow.
To quote a line from Bothiebhoys’ tribute song, “A Calton Bhoy” (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NmpBLpernOw ):
“Down in Walfrid’s back yard, hard men were hard” … and so were times for our forefathers, the earliest Celtic supporters, in those distant days.
Thank God for ‘The Celtic … then and now.
“WALFRID’S BOON”
Born of squalor – mouths to feed,
born to meet a mighty need.
Sligo scholar sowed the seed
– reaped a harvest,
launched a creed.
Symbol of Hibernia’s cause,
migrant generation lost.
Alba’s bounty, Erin’s cost
– Harp and Thistle,
karmas crossed.
Ravaged by An Gorta Mór,
blighted still on Scotia’s shore,
abject underclass deplored
– godforsaken
enclave horde.
Branded, ridiculed and scorned,
shorn of dignity – forlorn,
bigotry their crown of thorns
– race discrimination
borne.
Brute affliction spawned a club,
fulcrum of their life – its hub,
of their soul the very nub
– roused their spirit,
raised them up.
Rich in fable, steeped in lore,
all-inclusive open door,
oozing craic from every pore
– Charity
the very core.
Quinn, McGrory, Larsson, Stein –
towering legends wove the dream,
icons of our ‘Grand Old Team’
– few of many,
ever green.
Haunting litany sublime,
echoes in the mists of time,
minstrelsy in ev’ry line
– bliss and heartbreak
intertwined.
Sprawling saga, epic-strewn,
heart from generations hewn,
eulogised in verse and tune
– Hail ‘The Celtic’ …
Walfrid’s Boon!
Copyright © 25thMay1967