"Take it Down from the Mast" is the common name of an Irish republican song written in 1923 by James Ryan. Entitled "Lines Written by a Republican Soldier in 1923", it was first published in 1936 in Good-Bye Twilight: Songs of Struggle in Ireland, a collection of songs by Leslie Daiken.[1]
Its lyrics refer to the Irish Civil War (1922–23), while the flag in question is the Irish tricolour. The song tells supporters of the Anglo-Irish Treaty and the Irish Free State to take down and cease using it, as it is also the flag of the Irish Republic, which the "Free Staters" betrayed. At the time, the Anti-Treaty IRA regarded their Civil War opponents as traitors and therefore unworthy to use the Irish tricolour.
In 1959, a version written by Dominic Behan[2] was published. It told of the execution of four members of the IRA Executive on 8 December 1922: Dubliner Rory O'Connor, who was spokesman for the Four Courts garrison at the outbreak of the Civil War; Galway man Liam Mellows; Cork volunteer Dick Barrett; and IRA chief-of-staff Joe McKelvey from Tyrone. Their shooting in captivity was a reprisal for the IRA's assassination, the previous day, of TD Seán Hales.
Behan's also accused the Free State of abandoning the province of Ulster, much of which became the state of Northern Ireland after partition in 1921.
^Leslie H. Daiken, Good-bye Twilight: Songs of the Struggle in Ireland (Lawrence & Wishart, London, 1936), pp. 90–91
^Nick Guida. "the Dominic Behan discography (1957-1961) at theBalladeers". Theballadeers.com. Archived from the original on 6 December 2013. Retrieved 27 March 2014.
and 22 Related for: Take It Down from the Mast information
"TakeitDownfromtheMast" is the common name of an Irish republican song written in 1923 by James Ryan. Entitled "Lines Written by a Republican Soldier...
of '22 TakeItDownfromtheMast Sean South The Patriot Game Alternative Ulster, 1978 Belfast Brigade Back Home in Derry, by Bobby Sands; to the tune of...
Republic, and condemned its appropriation by the new state, as expressed in the song "TakeItDownFromTheMast". The Executive Council's decision was a provisional...
Fusiliers" "The Merry Ploughboy" "Our Last Hope" "Paddy on the Road" "The Patriot Game" "The Sea Around Us" "TakeItDownfromtheMast" "Bás, Fás, Blás"...
to be eliminated from the group as they were down by four goals and had failed to accrue the points necessary to remain in the tournament. Some commentators...
strove the two between, The old love and the new love, - The old for her, the new that made Me think of Ireland dearly, While soft the wind blew downthe glade...
places it in his pocket or in his hand. The apprentice does not try to stop this from happening, which is speculated to be out of his love for the girl...
lines from this song. This included the lyrics "Armoured cars and tanks and guns, came to take away our sons. But every man must stand behind, the men behind...
FF take two seats each on Cultural panel". The Irish Times. 25 April 2016. "The Wolfe Tones: official story". The Wolfe Tones. Archived fromthe original...
The air of hope and optimism associated with the ultimately doomed rebellion was intended to provide inspiration for rebels preparing to take to the field...
released in 1958. The song concerns an incident during the Border Campaign launched by the Irish Republican Army during the 1950s. It was written by Dominic...
songs by Kearney include "Down by the Glenside", "The Tri-coloured Ribbon", "Down by the Liffey Side", "Knockcroghery" (about the village of Knockcroghery)...
"The Wearing of the Green" is an Irish street ballad lamenting the repression of supporters of the Irish Rebellion of 1798. It is to an old Irish air...
described the song as embodying "sentiments of revenge [which] loomed large in the motivations of IRA volunteers". And it's down Along the Falls Road...
And from that time, through wildest woe, That hope has shone a far light, Nor could love's brightest summer glow Outshine that solemn starlight; It seemed...
Piers) Fitzgerald, High Sheriff of Kildare (as "Lord Kildare") Rory Óg O'More It has been performed by numerous Irish folk bands, including Planxty and Wolfe...
returning to Ireland in the 1970s. He wrote "The Fields of Athenry" in 1979, and it has been recorded by several artists, charting in the Irish Singles Chart...
celebrating the Manchester Martyrs, three Fenians executed in 1867. It served as an unofficial anthem for Irish nationalists fromthe 1870s to the 1910s. On...
it specifically takesthe Republican view of the Civil War and looks forward to a resumption of armed actions and to an Ireland led by the IRA, the song...
circumvented by the Volunteers and decided to try to take control of the new movement. Despite opposition fromthe Irish Republican Brotherhood, the Volunteer...