question about A Celebration

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mebythesea

The Fly
Joined
Jan 29, 2002
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I think I get most of the lyrics to this fun single, but can anyone tell me what it means in "A Celebration" when Bono sings

I believe in the cells of Mountjoy
There's an honest man.

Mountjoy was a prison, but who is the honest man?
 
mebythesea said:
who is the honest man?

Abe%20Lincoln.jpg


:uhoh: :coocoo: :shrug:
 
ok, lol.... but....

I started thinking maybe it was sarcastic or something, but then I watched the video again and Bono puts his fist in the air in this very 1982/3 inspired-Bono way as he sings that line, so now I think again that it must be a serious reference to.....somebody.
 
hippyactress said:
Well, Mountjoy is a prison in Dublin...so those lines are probably about a prisoner who was there in the "cells of Mountjoy".
yeah. i always read the two lines as one sentence, like "i believe in the cells of mountjoy, there's an honest man." like there was someone there in jail who shouldn't have been there.
 
After a very cursory search...this is what I turned up...

It's a poem by an unknown author...

"Kevin Barry"

In Mountjoy jail one Monday morning
High upon the gallows tree,
Kevin Barry gave his young life
For the cause of liberty.
But a lad of eighteen summers,
Still there's no one can deny,
As he walked to death that morning,
He proudly held his head on high.

2. Just before he faced the hangman,
In his dreary prison cell,
The Black and Tans tortured Barry,
Just because he wouldn't tell.

The names of his brave comrades,
And other things they wished to know.
"Turn informer and we'll free you"
Kevin Barry answered, "no".

3. "Shoot me like a soldier.
Do not hang me like a dog,
For I fought to free old Ireland
On that still September morn.

"All around the little bakery
Where we fought them hand to hand,
Shoot me like a brave soldier,
For I fought for Ireland."
4. "Kevin Barry, do not leave us,
On the scaffold you must die!"
Cried his broken-hearted mother
As she bade her son good-bye.
Kevin turned to her in silence
Saying, "Mother, do not weep,
For it's all for dear old Ireland
And it's all for freedom's sake."

5. Calmly standing to attention
While he bade his last farewell
To his broken hearted mother
Whose grief no one can tell.

For the cause he proudly cherished
This sad parting had to be
Then to death walked softly smiling
That old Ireland might be free.

6. Another martyr for old Ireland;
Another murder for the crown,
Whose brutal laws to crush the Irish,
Could not keep their spirit down.

Lads like Barry are no cowards.
From the foe they will not fly.
Lads like Barry will free Ireland,
For her sake they'll live and die.
 
Wow, good work! That poem is interesting. Thanks for finding it! Maybe this guy is who the reference is to.

(On the other hand, after all, it sort of extols "the glory of dying for the revolution," which doesn't strike me as very Bono....)

I guess it's also possible, as another person suggested to me, that it refers to some news item that was well-known at the time about a Mountjoy prisoner who was, say, on a hunger strike or something, but has been long forgotten.
 
mebythesea said:
I guess it's also possible, as another person suggested to me, that it refers to some news item that was well-known at the time about a Mountjoy prisoner who was, say, on a hunger strike or something, but has been long forgotten.

:yes:

I think that's a more probable explanation...I just posted the poem cause it was interesting and seemed to be the kind of thing that Bono would write about :) I guess we'll probably never know what it's really about.
 
Bonochick said:
mebythesea~
Just wanted to say that I love your name and your avatar! :)


Thanks Bonochick! I can't remember where I found that pic of the heart suitcase projected over the crowd, but it sorta sums up the whole U2 "Thing" for me.
 
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