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Top ten myths about the Irish on St. Patrick's Day - PHOTOS

There are many myths told about the Irish: that they’re fighters, they’re stupid, they’re belligerent, or that they never forget. Nonsense.


Myth - All Irish have red hair and freckles - in fact more of us have dark brown hair and blue eyes
Myth - All Irish have red hair and freckles - in fact more of us have dark brown hair and blue eyes
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Take Edmund Spenser, the Elizabethan poet, for example. He tried to denigrate the Irish in his genocidal pamphlet “A View of the Present State of Ireland,” written in the early 1590’s. Spenser’s propaganda pamphlet argued that Ireland would never be totally pacified by the English until its language and customs had been completely destroyed, if necessary by violence. (Irish rebels, possibly acting on his own advice, later drove him from his County Cork home).

For many contemporary scholars Ireland’s James Joyce is the true heir to William Shakespeare simply in terms of his influence and cultural impact.

PHOTOS - Top 10 myths about the Irish

5. The Irish are charming

Anyone who has ever ordered a cheese sandwich from the joyless drudges who staff the Bus Aras canteen in County Monaghan knows this is not true. The Irish are not always charming. In fact some Irish people have perfected a stare of such hostility and perfect contempt that the memory of it will never leave you.

6. The Irish have red hair and freckles

Just as not all Irish women are tempestuous redheads crying out to be tamed by an avuncular John Wayne stand-in, not all redheaded Irish men are leading donkeys carrying turf bags to the fair.
There are quite a few blonds (bottle and natural) knocking about the old sod; black hair and brown or blue eyes are a common feature too (think of Cillian Murphy or Jonathan Rhys Meyers). Nowadays Ireland has become a much more intercultural place, so it may be time to update your image of it.

7. The Irish are happy to start a fight

Whilst it’s fair to say the Irish are a passionate lot, it’s wrong to assume they’re always spoiling for a knockdown fight. In fact when someone makes a fool of himself by acting belligerently in public most Irish people will cringe and designate him a fool – and when an Irish person comes to that conclusion about you, you’ll be considered a fool all your days.

8. The Irish are drunks

The Irish don’t drink more alcohol than any other western nation; they just have more conspicuous fun in the process.

9. The Irish are great storytellers

Well yes, and no. Whilst it’s true there are Irish people who can tell tales to delight or terrify you, they’re not all born with the gift. In fact the Irish have produced the woman that literary experts agree is the worst novelist who ever lived. Amanda McKittrick Ros was born in Ballynahinch, County Down in 1860 and according to The Oxford Companion to English Literature is “the greatest bad writer who ever lived.”

Amanda self-published her own series of novels in the late 1890’s and instantly won a devoted following, but the critics savaged her. McKittrick Ros faith in her own talent was undiminished however, and she replied by calling them variously: “bastard donkey-headed mites, clay-crabs of corruption, denunciating Arabs, evil-minded snapshots of spleen, talent-wipers of a wormy order.” Her revenge is that today we quote her, and not her detractors.

10. The Irish never forget


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Im 1/4 Irish 1/4 Italian 1/4 German 1/4 Polish & 5 Generation American. Call me a Mutt and I'll kick your Butt ! I'm a Retired Vet a US. Marine. a Gunny Sgt. OH yeah my Irish & German temper starts to shows when I'm under pressure. But after that my Italian /Polish Soft loving side will take over lol But Im Proud to Be an American & a Marine !
I can agree with you on that Murph46!
Irish on both sides - I am an atheist, but I do not drink to excess any more, I can sing, I am always friendly, I will fight at the drop of a hat, I am told I am charming, and I am renowned as a storyteller. Considering my mother's Irish ancestor (Teague MacQuillen) came to America in 1632 and my father's Irish ancestors just after the 1690 Battle of the Boyne our Irishness has endured quite well, thank you.
If your lucky enough to BE IRISH ,your lucky enough.Irish by God,American by birth. Now someone dare tell me I'm not Irish!
 




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