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IE 2135 P7/2/1/9/1/4 · Item · [c. 1944-1945]
Part of The Maurice Walsh Papers

Loose pages containing handwritten fragment of draft of the novel The Man in Brown beginning ‘Chapter IV – Mr. Daniel Glover Takes a Hand’ which opens: ‘Con Madden slanted up over two grass terraces’. Alterations. Pagination.

Walsh, Maurice (1879-1964), writer
IE 2135 P3/7/6/1 · Item · [1947]
Part of The Frances Condell Papers

Handwritten extracts from the poem Midnight Lamentation by Harold Monro. Written on the reverse is a handwritten draft of a poem entitled Boundless Solitude, presumably by Condell.

Condell, Frances née Eades (1916-1986), first female Mayor of Limerick
IE 2135 P7/2/1/3/2 · Item · 12 May 1931 (finished)
Part of The Maurice Walsh Papers

Hardback notebook similar to P7/2/1/3/1. A section has been removed. Contains handwritten drafts of two parts of Blackcock's Feather as follows: at the front a fragment beginning: ‘This is the story of me, David Gordon’, pages 1-2 and in the middle, one beginning: ‘She said no other word and turned quickly to her mother’ pages 198-221 (page 214 onwards is upside down from the back of the notebook). Also contains part of draft of the novel 'The Road to Nowhere' (begun 3 March 1931), pages 1-7; part of draft of ‘Over the Border’, pages 20-40; and part of draft of the short story ‘The Prudent Man’ beginning: ‘Kemp Murray had been busy’ pages 1-3 upside down at back of notebook. Alterations. Each text is paginated separately.

Walsh, Maurice (1879-1964), writer
IE 2135 P7/2/2/2/5/2 · Item · 2-10 June 1937
Part of The Maurice Walsh Papers

Hardback notebook labelled ‘Oprobrious (sic) Name’ on the cover. Pages have been removed and others are loose. Contains handwritten draft of the short story Thomasheen James and the Opprobrious Name which begins: ‘As he himself would say, I had seen neither hair nor hide of Thomasheen James’ (pages 1-29). Also contains draft of the short story Thomasheen James and the Bird Lover (finished 20 December 1938), beginning upside down from the back and opening: ‘A recent issue of a provincial Irish paper’ (pages 1-22). Alterations. Each text paginated separately.

Walsh, Maurice (1879-1964), writer
IE 2135 P7/2/2/2/6/2 · Item · 28 October 1938-11 March 1939
Part of The Maurice Walsh Papers

Hardback notebook labelled ‘The Dangerous Age. The Blind Pension. Acid Drops’ on the front. Some pages removed and others loose. Contains handwritten draft of the short story Thomasheen James and the Blind Pension opening: ‘All that winter Thomasheen James battered on me’ (pages 1-20) and fragment entitled Thomasheen James and the Blind Pension which opens: ‘Thomasheen James, my man of no work, draped his breast with war medals’ (1 page). Also contains draft of the short story Thomasheen James and the Dangerous Age at the front which begins: ‘That year I did not take my annual holiday until September’ and continues on right-hand pages, 1-34, with pages 31-34 inserted; draft of short story Butcher to the Queen (untitled) in pencil which opens: ‘When my work as a Pension Officer took me into the Devil’s Bit territory’, beginning on the back of the first page and continuing on left-hand pages (pages 1-11); followed by draft of the short story Son of a Tinker (finished 5 November 1940) in pencil beginning: ‘Shawn Oge Callahan was his name and he was almost incredibly tough’ (pages 1-27); draft of part of the short story Thomasheen James and the Bird Lover (begun 24 November 1938), beginning upside down at the back and opening: ‘I was mighty glad to get home’ (pages 1-17). Election results at the front (1 page). Alterations. Each text is paginated separately.

Walsh, Maurice (1879-1964), writer
IE 2135 P7/2/2/2/3/1 · File · 25 February 1937 (finished)
Part of The Maurice Walsh Papers

Large sheets from an account book folded over. Contain handwritten draft of the short story Thomasheen James and the Absent-Minded Professor (untitled) beginning: ‘T. J. possessed himself of waders, creel and gaff’ (pages 1-13); part of draft of the story (untitled) at the back beginning: ‘“You are going to miss that bus”’ (page 1). Also contains a piece in pencil entitled Romance of Scotland (1937) beginning: ‘You are coming to Europe next year’, pages 1-21; three statements of royalties due to Walsh from W. and R. Chambers inserted at a page with some handwritten accounts of the same type covering the period 1 July-31 December 1936. Alterations. Each text paginated separately. Also see P7/1/3/1/1.

Walsh, Maurice (1879-1964), writer
IE 2135 P7/2/2/1/1/2 · Item · [c. 1934]
Part of The Maurice Walsh Papers

Hardback notebook ‘supplied for the public service’ with some pages removed. Contains handwritten draft of the short story Then Came the Captain’s Daughter which opens: ‘It was a fine morning that morning, and I was feeling fine too’ (60 pages – pagination 1-46). Also a piece following it, entitled Where the River Shannon Flows which opens: ‘My friend – that is if a Kerryman should use the word in referring to a male man out of Antrim or Down’ (3 pages); draft of Bad Town Dublin (29 October 1934-23 November 1936), beginning upside down from the back which opens: ‘Major Archibald MacDonald yawned lazily’ pages 1-41; followed by a piece which opens: ‘Miss Catriona MacLeod probably consulted two score authorities in writing this essay on Emmet’ (3 pages). Alterations. Some pagination.

Walsh, Maurice (1879-1964), writer
IE 2135 P7/2/2/5/1/1 · Item · 3-11 June 1963
Part of The Maurice Walsh Papers

Hardback diary – ‘Dialann 1955 – Oifig an tSoláthair, Baile Átha Cliath’ – containing handwritten draft of the short story The Smart Fellow, opening: ‘It was eleven of the clock on a May morning’ (pages 1-11). ‘Rewritten 17.6.63’ noted at the end. Also contains an untitled draft of the short story Thomasheen James Gets His Hair Cut (20-28 August 1961) which begins: ‘Lazing in a canvas chair in front of the summerhouse’ (pages 1-11); untitled draft of The Missing Meerschaum (5 April-18 May 1963) which begins: ‘There were four of us, and we were waiting for Christy Manning (pages 1-11). ‘Rewritten 27.5.63’ noted at the end; draft of the short story Teach Your Grandmother (31 October-20 November 1963) which begins: ‘I had gone to bed late, and I waked late’ (pages 1-13). ‘Rewritten 2.12.63’ noted at the end; and an untitled ‘Thomasheen James’ piece at the front which begins: ‘I was sitting in front of my summerhouse one lovely day in late summer’ (4 pages). Alterations. Each text is paginated separately. Some pages are blank.

Walsh, Maurice (1879-1964), writer
IE 2135 P7/2/2/1/3/5 · Item · 23 October 1934 (begun)
Part of The Maurice Walsh Papers

Hardback notebook with Walsh’s name and address on the front and the following inscription: ‘The Quiet Man. The Red Girl. Bad Town Dublin’, containing handwritten drafts of the stories. The Quiet Man begins at the front and opens with a verse beginning: ‘The Quiet Man he sate him down and to himself did say’ (pages 1-24); followed by The Red Girl (29 October-16 November 1934) which begins with a verse opening: ‘The Red Girl, who now sings her’ (pages 1-42); and Bad Town Dublin (26 November-5 December 1934) which begins with a verse opening: ‘Clean town Dublin; the Norseman built it’ (pages 1- 49), with an insert of two pages after page 16 and text from page 33 on pages inserted in the back of the book.

Walsh, Maurice (1879-1964), writer