The Mudcat Café TM
Thread #45851   Message #681916
Posted By: Abby Sale
02-Apr-02 - 07:55 PM
Thread Name: William Topaz Magonagall. ljc
Subject: RE: William Topaz Magonagall. ljc
Ah. Thanks for the responses. I have a clear March 1830 for birth and, yes, born in Edinburgh but raised in Dundee. (Although sometimes it's born in Dundee and raised in E-town.) It's pretty clear he died 29 Sept 1902.

No, not a horror scopy, for the Happy! file. (See Dick Gaughan's pages.) I need an exact day to slot him in to which. If you ever come across it, please let me know.

Yes, Dec 28th would have been the last Sunday of that year. I'm glad to learn there actually was a disaster (well, not glad, but you know...) I was getting very confused.

Here's a bit of prose from "Reminiscences:"

- MY DEARLY BELOVED READERS, -- I will begin with giving an account of my experiences amongst the publicans. Well, I must say that the first man who threw peas at me was a publican, while I was giving an entertainment to a few of my admirers in a public-house in a certain little village not far from Dundee but, my dear friends, I wish it to be understood that the publican who threw the peas at me was not the landlord of the public-house, he was one of the party who came to hear me give my entertainment. Well, my dear readers, it was while I was singing my own song, "The Rattling Boy from Dublin Town", that he threw the peas at me. You must understand that the Rattling Boy was courting a lass called Biddy Brown, and the Rattling Boy chanced to meet his Biddy one night in company with another lad called Barney Magee, which, of course, he did not like to see, and he told Biddy he considered it too bad for her to be going about with another lad, and he would bid her good-bye for being untrue to him. Then Barney Magee told the Rattling Boy that Biddy Brown was his lass, and that he could easily find another--and come and have a glass, and be friends. But the Rattling Boy told Barney Magee to give his glass of strong drink to the devil! meaning, I suppose, it was only fit for devils to make use of, not for God's creatures. Because, my friends, too often has strong drink been the cause of seducing many a beautiful young woman away from her true lover, and from her parents also, by a false seducer which, no doubt, the Rattling Boy considered Barney Magee to be. 'Therefore, my dear friends, the reason, I think, for the publican throwing the peas at me is because I say, to the devil with your glass, in my song, "The Rattling Boy from Dublin," and he, no doubt, considered it had a teetotal tendency about it, and, for that reason, he had felt angry, and had thrown the peas at me.

I wonder how McGonagall would have defined "terse?"