Magnificent. I'm an Englishman, and we aren't supposed to have emotions. But we do, really. Especially when something old is being laid to rest, and something new begins. As equals. With our beloved Queen. Being with our beloved equals....Symbols are important. God bless our equality.
Good speech & summary of a historic visit. Nothing but respect for the Royals after this ! Laying a wreath & bowing for those who fought & died for Irish Independence & for 50k Irishmen who died in WW1, Speaking Irish & acknowledging \ regretting her countries past wrongs did it for me. Previously I was sceptical & neither liked or disliked them but they things I saw & heard this week caused a shift in my mindset . Anybody I talk to feels the same ! Northern Irishman
@fishingkayaking I'm a Canadian monarchist of Irish decent (family from northern and southern Ireland, all catholic) and I must say, this visit made myself and my grandparents (proud of their Irish heritage) so very happy! God Bless Ireland and God Save the Queen. Here is looking to the future of two close, yet distinct.
@jlangford and if all that I have ever heard or read of the Queen is correct then it appears that she does have a fine appreciation of the humour in a situation and would enjoy "our type of humour". OO'L was spot on!!!
@caneetell I really don't think that you were listening all that well ; I'm a Brit and I could see that Olivia was referring to what she felt were Irish problems in accepting the legacy of the past (as per the example of her post-box). I felt that this was a warm personal tribute, with some gentle humour not just about the Queen (ie the reference to the caution re/ the Guinness) but about the Irish in their reaction to the Queen. It was a warm but also thought-provoking essay.
@MissMaire9 what are you talking about. This was an excellent speech. She got it spot on, being able to meet as equals is something wonderful, time to move on and enjoy it.
@breedak Thanks for the reply; is it a coincidence that the major players were women? I include here both O O'L and the previous President, Mary Robinson, who started being noticed on our radar in the 90's. I remember the remarkable decision of Colin and Wendy Parry to invite MR to the funeral of their son Tim (after the Warrington bombing), in their words, "to represent the true spirit of Ireland". I think we've all seen a bit of this over the week and we're all the better for it. Slainte!
It would be interesting to have a vote in Northern Ireland now. I'm not sure the majority still support partition - the Catholic population is much larger than it was.
Let's clear up a couple of things. #1 Queen of the United Kingdom, in this respect, as England is not a sovereign nation (just like she's not Queen of Western Australia, or New Brunswick). #2 There is no "Free State of Ireland" - only the Republic of Ireland - a sovereign nation of equal footing to that of the UK. #3 The 6 Irish Counties (of Ulster, out of 9) to which you refer are not occupied, but were partitioned (not in simple terms) in 1920. Occupied territories don't have a free decision.
Your comment is harsh but maybe the Queen of England's visit to the Free State of Ireland is a step in the right direction. Hopefully there will be further steps in the right direction toward returning the Six Irish occupied Counties by the English, back to Ireland peacefully.
@caneetell You missed the point entirely. Well, too bad for you. The speech was measured, witty, and appropriate, Olivia O' Leary is great. I'd be interested to hear your counter arguments. But I doubt they exist.
@DublinVideoTube Fairly sure it's Woodbrook by Irish composer Micheal O Suilleabhain. It was featured in a memorable RTE radio documentary on the personal memoir Woodbrook, by David Thomson, which is itself a very good cameo of British /Irish, Catholic/Protestant relations in the early/mid twentieth century, and is also a nostalgic and achingly poignant read.
@NQTabroad No she didn't. The entire speech was built around the historical premise that she was the first British monarch to visit in a 100 years! Beside, the Queen is a person, not a deity in the way that the Japanese believed their emperor was divine. Are you by any chance on medication?
@RonainMacCathain What is your definition of freedom if not self government and the right of the majority of people in a particular region to determine by which government they wish to be ruled?
@Noid111 I may accept your point about Westlife, but not the Chieftains, surely?!? If the Queen did indeed (as you put it) "curtsey (sic) to Ireland", it was in the personal knowledge that there were wrongs to redress; this is generosity, not having one's nose rubbed in it. Interesting choice of words in "rebel's memorial" and surely there was more than one? The Queen btw spoke Irish, not Gaelic, unless I didn't see that she was playing football at the time :-D
@breedak Thank you for your reply, and I agree 'twas a good time to be lrish/British. Is is a coincidence that all the major players here were women (I include here Mary Robinson)? Now, about those completely wrong cricket and rugby results..... :-D
This was a low point on an otherwise fantastic visit. Got off to a bad start and didn't get better. Did not strike the right tone and the audience knew it. Almost blew the feelgood factor of revious few days.
@caneetell , agree with this, i thought it was cringeworthy, i never had any time for olivia o leary anyway, it was a bad choice to choose her, did rte have an input into choosing her, i agree with another posting it was dublin 4 in tone and not a truly irish response
ffs this woman is driving me nuts. Did she have to be so crass? Has she no generosity? It's not about equality but about rubbing The Queen's and Britain's nose in it. I can't think of one point to the trip which hasn't involved The Queen having to curtsey to Ireland. So The Queen has to bow the head to the rebel's memorial, Croke Park, speak Gaelic, listen to this and worst of all be tortured by Westlife. What has the poor woman done to deserve this?
Did not like this, was not suitable for occasion, was not entertaining, don't like Olivia speaking on my behalf, Queen did not seem to pay much attention to Olivia afterwards, whereas she had warm greeting for other participants, what do we care about Olivia's grandfather piano exploits, a bit like subjecting the bride to a critique of her dress as part of best man speech,
@deGency Thank you for your thoughtful response. This was a brave speech by Olivia; it didn't hide behind euphemism, it poked "gentle fun" as you rightly say, at each countries own proprietorial sensitivities and it also opened to the door to critical historical reflection for both nations and people. It was a great week to be Irish and to be British. Hats off to our President and your Queen for a job well done and to Olivia O'Leary for marking it humourously and intelligently.
What a brilliant speech and a warm welcome from Ireland to the Queen! Thank u Eire, hoping that Ireland and Britain will form a great partnership!
Magnificent. I'm an Englishman, and we aren't supposed to have emotions. But we do, really. Especially when something old is being laid to rest, and something new begins. As equals. With our beloved Queen. Being with our beloved equals....Symbols are important. God bless our equality.
I am an Irish American who was touched by Olivia's speech. Bravo!
A most excellent speech. Let peace and love prevail between us.
Good speech & summary of a historic visit. Nothing but respect for the Royals after this ! Laying a wreath & bowing for those who fought & died for Irish Independence & for 50k Irishmen who died in WW1, Speaking Irish & acknowledging \ regretting her countries past wrongs did it for me. Previously I was sceptical & neither liked or disliked them but they things I saw & heard this week caused a shift in my mindset . Anybody I talk to feels the same ! Northern Irishman
Brilliant speech Olivia. Thank you for expressing our thougts so elequently.
captured the mood both literally and metaphorically!!! captivating, thank you Olivia!!!
Fantastic presentation by Olivia O'Leary.
class! we loved having queen over! what happened, happened in 1916 etc. it over a long time now!
@fishingkayaking I'm a Canadian monarchist of Irish decent (family from northern and southern Ireland, all catholic) and I must say, this visit made myself and my grandparents (proud of their Irish heritage) so very happy! God Bless Ireland and God Save the Queen. Here is looking to the future of two close, yet distinct.
Great respect for your comment
Brilliant speech
@jlangford and if all that I have ever heard or read of the Queen is correct then it appears that she does have a fine appreciation of the humour in a situation and would enjoy "our type of humour".
OO'L was spot on!!!
@caneetell I really don't think that you were listening all that well ; I'm a Brit and I could see that Olivia was referring to what she felt were Irish problems in accepting the legacy of the past (as per the example of her post-box). I felt that this was a warm personal tribute, with some gentle humour not just about the Queen (ie the reference to the caution re/ the Guinness) but about the Irish in their reaction to the Queen. It was a warm but also thought-provoking essay.
@MissMaire9 what are you talking about. This was an excellent speech. She got it spot on, being able to meet as equals is something wonderful, time to move on and enjoy it.
great stuff.
@breedak Thanks for the reply; is it a coincidence that the major players were women? I include here both O O'L and the previous President, Mary Robinson, who started being noticed on our radar in the 90's. I remember the remarkable decision of Colin and Wendy Parry to invite MR to the funeral of their son Tim (after the Warrington bombing), in their words, "to represent the true spirit of Ireland". I think we've all seen a bit of this over the week and we're all the better for it. Slainte!
fantastic ! caught the mood perfectly delighted to have "her" here but never going to bow or curtesy
Classy lady!
Great video
It would be interesting to have a vote in Northern Ireland now. I'm not sure the majority still support partition - the Catholic population is much larger than it was.
I totally agree with you. The exact same situation exists with the people living in the Faulkland Islands which Argentina still covets.
Let's clear up a couple of things. #1 Queen of the United Kingdom, in this respect, as England is not a sovereign nation (just like she's not Queen of Western Australia, or New Brunswick). #2 There is no "Free State of Ireland" - only the Republic of Ireland - a sovereign nation of equal footing to that of the UK. #3 The 6 Irish Counties (of Ulster, out of 9) to which you refer are not occupied, but were partitioned (not in simple terms) in 1920. Occupied territories don't have a free decision.
Your comment is harsh but maybe the Queen of England's visit to the Free State of Ireland is a step in the right direction. Hopefully there will be further steps in the right direction toward returning the Six Irish occupied Counties by the English, back to Ireland peacefully.
Brillant.
@caneetell You missed the point entirely. Well, too bad for you. The speech was measured, witty, and appropriate, Olivia O' Leary is great. I'd be interested to hear your counter arguments. But I doubt they exist.
@DublinVideoTube Fairly sure it's Woodbrook by Irish composer Micheal O Suilleabhain. It was featured in a memorable RTE radio documentary on the personal memoir Woodbrook, by David Thomson, which is itself a very good cameo of British /Irish, Catholic/Protestant relations in the early/mid twentieth century, and is also a nostalgic and achingly poignant read.
Pity she said "Irish Republic". It's the Republic of Ireland. Good speech though.
Where does her accent come from?
@DublinVideoTube its from an album by michael o sullivan he uses his name in irish and again its titled in irish so in english the island.
@DublinVideoTube It's called Woodbrook, composed by Michael O'Suilleabhain.
@NQTabroad No she didn't. The entire speech was built around the historical premise that she was the first British monarch to visit in a 100 years! Beside, the Queen is a person, not a deity in the way that the Japanese believed their emperor was divine. Are you by any chance on medication?
she use to be in my mums class :D
@DublinVideoTube It's a piece called "Woodbrook" by Micheál Ó Súilleabháin.
Ain't that the truth
@RonainMacCathain What is your definition of freedom if not self government and the right of the majority of people in a particular region to determine by which government they wish to be ruled?
@DublinVideoTube It's called Woodbrook by Michael O Suilleabhain :)
@Noid111 I may accept your point about Westlife, but not the Chieftains, surely?!? If the Queen did indeed (as you put it) "curtsey (sic) to Ireland", it was in the personal knowledge that there were wrongs to redress; this is generosity, not having one's nose rubbed in it. Interesting choice of words in "rebel's memorial" and surely there was more than one? The Queen btw spoke Irish, not Gaelic, unless I didn't see that she was playing football at the time :-D
@breedak Thank you for your reply, and I agree 'twas a good time to be lrish/British. Is is a coincidence that all the major players here were women (I include here Mary Robinson)? Now, about those completely wrong cricket and rugby results..... :-D
@DublinVideoTube I *think* it may be a Micheal O'Suilleabhain piece...
@DublinVideoTube I think it might be : an old maid in the garret.
"Think of international rugby matches .... "
@ismaithliomchocolate It's from Dolphin's Way by Míchéal Ó Súlleabháin. Not sure of the track name.
@ismaithliomchocolate it's Mícheál Ó Súilleabháin but I don't know the name - he played it at the IFTAs this year
This was a low point on an otherwise fantastic visit. Got off to a bad start and didn't get better. Did not strike the right tone and the audience knew it. Almost blew the feelgood factor of revious few days.
@caneetell , agree with this, i thought it was cringeworthy, i never had any time for olivia o leary anyway, it was a bad choice to choose her, did rte have an input into choosing her, i agree with another posting it was dublin 4 in tone and not a truly irish response
A pretty good political speech. Total antipathy to Royals and politicians aside ofc.
@caneetell my sentiment exactly
@MissMaire9 well how about jus don't comment then, cos no-one really wants to hear your negativity at a time like this
bet there was some amount of D4 tossers at that event.
ffs this woman is driving me nuts. Did she have to be so crass? Has she no generosity? It's not about equality but about rubbing The Queen's and Britain's nose in it. I can't think of one point to the trip which hasn't involved The Queen having to curtsey to Ireland. So The Queen has to bow the head to the rebel's memorial, Croke Park, speak Gaelic, listen to this and worst of all be tortured by Westlife. What has the poor woman done to deserve this?
This was so cringeworthy. She spoke about the Queen like she wasn t even there!
A real low point on what would have been a near perfect four days.
I cringed.
The only bit I like was the last line...and she stole that.
Did not like this, was not suitable for occasion, was not entertaining, don't like Olivia speaking on my behalf, Queen did not seem to pay much attention to Olivia afterwards, whereas she had warm greeting for other participants, what do we care about Olivia's grandfather piano exploits, a bit like subjecting the bride to a critique of her dress as part of best man speech,
Patronising .....
Go hiontach ar fad. Tá Olivia ar fheabhas. :)
"Oh my god its the queen" Ireland has no soul.
@Noid111 Try imagining 800 years of oppression and you may get an inkling.
@deGency Thank you for your thoughtful response. This was a brave speech by Olivia; it didn't hide behind euphemism, it poked "gentle fun" as you rightly say, at each countries own proprietorial sensitivities and it also opened to the door to critical historical reflection for both nations and people. It was a great week to be Irish and to be British. Hats off to our President and your Queen for a job well done and to Olivia O'Leary for marking it humourously and intelligently.
BRILLIANT..................
Add me on ps3 Teriba-79