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Edna O'Brien Alamy

President Michael D Higgins joins mourners at Edna O’Brien’s funeral in Clare

O’Brien died peacefully aged 93 last month after a long illness.

IRISH WRITER EDNA O’Brien’s “revolutionary intervention in Irish fiction” was remembered during her funeral mass, which was attended by Ireland’s President Michael D Higgins.

Family and friends of the late novelist gave readings and paid tribute during the service at St Joseph’s Church in her native Tuamgraney, Co Clare on Saturday.

O’Brien, a novelist, short-story writer, memoirist, poet and playwright, died aged 93 last month after a long illness.

edna-obrien-funeral The coffin of Irish writer Edna O’Brien was taken to Holy Island in Co Clare Niall Carson / PA Niall Carson / PA / PA

The funeral mass was also attended by Independent MEP Michael McNamara and Commandant Claire Mortimer, who represented Taoiseach Simon Harris and Tanaiste Micheal Martin.

Higgins was joined by his wife Sabina Coyne, who appeared emotional throughout the service.

During the procession of symbols, family members and friends laid items which held significance for O’Brien.

Her grandson Oscar presented the Irish author’s French Legion of Honour to represent a “lifetime of extraordinary achievement”, which included an honorary damehood and a Torc of the Saoi, the highest honour that can be awarded by Aosdana, an Irish association of elite artists.

Flowers from the garden of her childhood home, Drewsborough House, were also offered.

Other items included a Buddha statue offered by her niece, to symbolise that O’Brien was a “deeply spiritual woman whose curiosity and open heart led her to many faiths throughout her lifetime”, including Buddhism.

Her Irish literary inspirations were honoured by a friend who carried a copy of James Joyce’s Ulysses, while another presented a portrait of the late author Samuel Beckett, a friend of O’Brien.

Her son Marcus Gebler told mourners the purpose of his mother’s writing was to “illuminate, inspire, give courage” to those who struggled to speak out.

“In the last week I’ve been moved and overwhelmed by the tributes and affection for our mother from so many different people in so many countries,” he said.

“For many writers, it is their first book that is their best, and they never quite live up to that initial curated distillation of their own life.

“But in our mother’s case, her development as a writer was an arc continually ascending from the lives of young women in 1940s Ireland, through age, experience and suffering, to 1990s’ Bosnia or Nigeria in 2014.”

On the purpose of her writing, he added: “I believe in her case, it has been and will remain, to illuminate, inspire, give courage to and speak for those who are rendered dumb.”

Gebler also read a poem that he wrote for his mother, which received a round of applause.

He became emotional as he finished by recalling what a doctor told him after his son Oscar was born, saying: “The most important thing you can do is to give him love as much as possible and all the time, and that is what we got from her.”

O’Brien’s friend, Scottish novelist Andrew O’Hagan, paid tribute to her legacy, saying she changed the perception of Irish female writers.

“We’ve heard a lot in the last two weeks about Edna’s revolutionary intervention in Irish fiction, her opening up of the novel to the truths of desire and the complexities of interior female complexity,” he said.

“But we must remember, as we celebrate her now, the hard road she had to navigate, even amongst her heroes.

“‘Men are governed by lines of intellect’, James Joyce wrote, ‘Women by curves of emotion’.

“But Edna made it her task on an international stage both to embody and to defy that thought, marrying the intellectual to the sensual, coupling the emotional and the thoughtful, raising the bar on common experience and on inheritance, our pride of worth.”

O’Hagan spoke about “how funny” she was, saying: “Her comic engine was always turning, even, or especially, in the midst of of anxiety – the comic engine, along with those other great turbines of creativity, outrage, ambition.

“But at the centre of it all was a talent so singular that nothing could countermand it, nor age, nor illness, or lack of stamina.

“She lived inside her prose like no writer I’ve ever known. Her gifts were both solid and ethereal, like the sprites in her favourite play, A Midsummer Night’s Dream.

“Yet they were rooted in the history and the byways of Ireland, which was forever the landscape of her imagination, the seedbed of her writing and her soul.”

Among the songs performed during the service was the hymn The Lord’s my Shepherd, the traditional Irish song Danny Boy and a rendition of An Irish Blessing to close the service.

O’Brien’s remains were taken to St Joseph’s Church on Friday for the reposal and she will be buried on Holy Island after the funeral service.

The writer was best known for her portrayal of women’s lives against repressive expectations of Irish society.

Her first novel, The Country Girls, was published in 1960 and became part of a trilogy that was banned in Ireland for their references to sex and social issues.

O’Brien, who had lived in London since 1958, described an outraged response from people in Ireland in contrast to the book’s international success.

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    Mute Mary Loftus
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    Aug 10th 2024, 2:57 PM

    May she rest in eternal peace,a wonderful lady

    120
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    Mute Phillip Smyth
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    Aug 10th 2024, 3:57 PM

    Class act brilliant writer and now history maker R.I.P.

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    Mute Annette
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    Aug 10th 2024, 4:42 PM

    Wonderful woman and writer. May she Rest in Peace.

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    Mute Sean O'Dhubhghaill
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    Aug 10th 2024, 4:53 PM

    Ar dheis Dé go raibh a anam dílis

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    Mute Matt Rogers
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    Aug 10th 2024, 6:26 PM

    Like Sinéad O Connor she was an Irish woman who held up a revealing mirror to the hypocrisy of an Irish Society controlled by the Catholic Church and was punished for it.

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    Mute Ger Whelan
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    Aug 10th 2024, 7:00 PM

    @Matt Rogers: Sinead O’Connor was a massive hypo crite herself.

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    Mute Jack Hayes
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    Aug 10th 2024, 7:39 PM

    @Ger Whelan: You can’t see the good in anyone or anything though.

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    Mute Ger Whelan
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    Aug 10th 2024, 8:00 PM

    @Jack Hayes: what about what I said is I correct?

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    Mute Ger Whelan
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    Aug 10th 2024, 8:00 PM

    @Ger Whelan: ***incorrect?

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    Mute SerotoninWars
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    Aug 11th 2024, 10:57 AM

    @Ger Whelan: Aren’t we all on some level? It becomes amplified when someone is a public figure and we feel we know them. Every bit of progress, missteps or change of mind is laid out in a seemingly simple line for the rest of us. Add in mental health issues and a troubled life and it’s not exactly a surprise that her life wasn’t an exercise in perfection.

    If any of our lives were conducted in the blare of public life we’d quickly be accused of the same things no doubt. It’s impossible to be completely virtuous and avoid all of the contradictions and irrationalities that come with being human. It’s a bit of a low blow to have a pop at her now. She was a troubled soul and she should be left alone in death. She took enough of a hammering while she was alive.

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    Mute The Hard Road
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    Aug 10th 2024, 11:17 PM

    Michael D a great man for the funerals

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    Mute Colette Byrne
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    Aug 11th 2024, 8:59 AM

    Beautiful simple send-off, rip.

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    Mute donal finn
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    Aug 11th 2024, 11:44 AM

    The Church and their willing and compliant lackeys pursued and lambasted this woman for years, pontificating about their self righteousness. We now know who was morally pure. RIP Edna O’ Brien.

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    Mute Phillip Smyth
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    Aug 10th 2024, 6:32 PM

    Miraculous medal time soiling this infectious lady’s time.

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    Mute Phillip Smyth
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    Aug 10th 2024, 11:24 PM

    I guess we need to keep moving.

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