An Béal Bocht (translated from the Irish as The Poor Mouth ) is a
satirical novel by Flann O'Brien written in Irish.
Published in 1941, it was translated into English in 1973.
The Irish expression "to put on the poor mouth," ("an béal bocht a chur ort" in Irish) is mildly pejorative and refers to the
practice, often associated with peasant farmers, of exaggerating the direness of one's situation, particularly financially, in
order to evoke sympathy, charity and perhaps the forbearance of creditors and landlords or generosity of customers. The book is a
parody of the genre of Gaeltacht autobiographies, such as Tomás Ó Criomhthain's autobiography An t-Oileánach (The
Islandman), or Peig Sayers' autobiography Peig, which recounts her life, especially
the latter half, as a series of misfortunes in which much of her family die by disease, drowning or other mishap. Books of this
genre were part of the Irish language syllabus in the Irish school system and thus mandatory reading for generations of children
from independence in 1921.
An Béal Bocht is set in Corcadoragha (Anglicè, Corkadorkey), a remote region of Ireland where it never stops raining
and everyone lives in desperate poverty (and always will) while talking in "the learned smooth Gaelic". The recurrent leitmotiv
is the sentence "I do not think that we shall see its like again". At one point the area is visited by hordes of Dublin
Gaeilgeoirí (Irish language lovers), who explain that not only should one always speak Irish, but also every sentence one
utters should be about the language question. However, they eventually abandon the area because the poverty is too poor, the
authenticity too authentic and the Gaelicism too Gaelic. The narrator, after a series of bloodcurdling adventures, is eventually
sent to prison on a false murder charge, and there has the chance to write this most affecting memoir of our times.
External links
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