Goodbye, Barney Devlin, and thank you. Hammer on!

Yvonne Watterson pays tribute to the late Barney Devlin, the blacksmith who inspired Seamus Heaney, and whom she was visiting the day her own husband died

Yvonne Watterson with Barney Devlin in his forge in Bellaghy, Co Derry: “Today, when I found out that Barney Devlin had died, I was immediately transported back to that forge, to the other side of a Door Into The Dark, to a lovely conversation with him on a rainy afternoon last June”
Yvonne Watterson with Barney Devlin in his forge in Bellaghy, Co Derry: “Today, when I found out that Barney Devlin had died, I was immediately transported back to that forge, to the other side of a Door Into The Dark, to a lovely conversation with him on a rainy afternoon last June”

The day before our 22nd wedding anniversary was the day my husband died, and I was on the other side of the world in Barney Devlin’s forge – in the heart of Seamus Heaney country. Barney’s son was there too, regaling us with all the craic behind Heaney’s The Midnight Anvil, how his da had struck it 12 times to ring in the millennium, while someone held up a phone so the sweet sound could travel all the way to a brother in Canada.

This past Father’s Day morning, I walked to the forge again in the rain and under a foreboding grey sky. I was with my oldest, dearest friend. By the time we reached Hillhead, the rain had stopped, and the sky had turned bright and blue. As if someone had ordered it, the cars stopped whizzing by, and save for the birds, all fell silent.

Inexplicably, I was compelled to reach for my phone to begin recording the silence. And too sharply, I told my friend to be quiet, not knowing why. Within seconds, it made sense, as the church bell began ringing out from the village below. Twelve times.

Barney Devlin, and his door into the dark: “Barney lived for almost a century, with heart and craft and good humour, bringing into his tiny forge thousands of visitors from all over the world. He loved the craic. He loved it when people would stop and give him the time of day. Tonight, I think only Heaney would know what to say about Barney’s passing. He would have the right words”
Barney Devlin, and his door into the dark: “Barney lived for almost a century, with heart and craft and good humour, bringing into his tiny forge thousands of visitors from all over the world. He loved the craic. He loved it when people would stop and give him the time of day. Tonight, I think only Heaney would know what to say about Barney’s passing. He would have the right words”
The note from Seamus Heaney in Barney Devlin’s visotirs’ book: a tribute that is as fitting an obituary as any. “For Barney, old friend and good example of how to do good work and stay true. ‘I’ll maybe write a poem.’”
The note from Seamus Heaney in Barney Devlin’s visotirs’ book: a tribute that is as fitting an obituary as any. “For Barney, old friend and good example of how to do good work and stay true. ‘I’ll maybe write a poem.’”

I could barely breathe, aware once again of the sharp stone of grief that I could have sworn had finally been dislodged from my chest.

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A private man, my husband had insisted that death was a private business. When the time came, he wanted to die alone, just to sleep on. There was to be no fuss, no funeral, no flurry of condolences, not even a goodbye if he could help it. And only because he expected me to accept and respect his wishes – and because I had promised – I complied. Against my will, I privatised my mourning and got lost in the distance between the desert southwest of these United States and a blacksmith's forge on the side of the road in rural South Derry.

I wanted what I couldn’t have. I wanted to visit a grave and bring flowers, perhaps freesias because he loved their scent. I wanted the bits and pieces of a public goodbye. I wanted to fill the air with his favourite music. I knew he wanted none of it. No ceremony. No punctuation mark. Just an empty space.

That morning, at Barney Devlin’s forge, I got what I wanted.

Now you may say it was just a coincidence, but I like to think the Earth paused to let Heaney’s Midnight Anvil – “the one with the sweeter sound” – ring out 12 more times for my best friend, for me, and for our dead husbands, the men who loved us so well and for so long.

So today, when I found out that Barney Devlin had died, I was immediately transported back to that forge, to the other side of a Door Into The Dark, to a lovely conversation with him on a rainy afternoon last June.

Barney lived for almost a century, with heart and craft and good humour, bringing into his tiny forge thousands of visitors from all over the world. He loved the craic. He loved it when people would stop and give him the time of day.

Tonight, I think only Heaney would know what to say about Barney’s passing. He would have the right words.

Back on that November evening, I recall before leaving the forge, I stopped to sign the visitor’s book. Leafing through it, wondering what I could write that would possibly do it justice, I spotted at the bottom of a page full of positive impressions of Barney and his forge, this note from Seamus Heaney – a tribute that is as fitting an obituary as any.

For Barney, old friend and good example of how to do good work and stay true.’I’ll maybe write a poem.’

Goodbye, Barney, and thank you. Hammer On!

This article first appeared on Yvonne Watterson’s blog, timetoconsiderthelilies.com

http://timetoconsiderthelilies.com/2016/02/18/a-moment-of-silence-for-barney-devlin/