and sometimes crafty and mischievous – ‘Nothing escapes him’ – he presents the rest of the family with something of a mystery. His whereabouts are often unknown; he does not respond when he is called: he ‘escapes us all’. A second reading of this line, however, might imply his impending end – is that possibly the grandfather’s escape?
This poem, like many other Mahon poems on your course, explores the theme of isolation. The grandfather becomes increasingly, and poignantly, isolated from his family. If Mahon’s grandfather ‘escapes’ his family, then there is the sense that there is a widening gulf between him and them. He is aware of their comings and goings, but he is becoming increasingly lost to his family. As he retreats into his own private world, he becomes more and more of a mystery to the people who are closest to him. This is a sad reality that many of us have to confront during our lifetime, and that is what makes the poet’s treatment of the theme of old age in this poem so universal.
A ship being built at the Harland and Wolff shipyard in the 1950s