Oliver St. John Gogarty
- Died:
- September 22, 1957, Manhattan, New York, U.S. (aged 79)
- Movement / Style:
- Irish literary renaissance
Oliver St. John Gogarty (born August 17, 1878, Dublin, Ireland—died September 22, 1957, Manhattan, New York, U.S.) was a writer, wit, and raconteur associated with the Irish literary renaissance whose memoirs vividly recreate the Dublin of his youth. Gogarty worked as a surgeon and was also a senator in the government of the Irish Free State.
Gogarty grew up in a middle-class family and attended Royal University (now University College Dublin), where he was a fellow student of James Joyce. For a short time, they were roommates in a demilitarized Martello tower near Dublin that was leased by Gogarty. However, the friendship ended after an incident in which Gogarty and Samuel Chenevix Trench, another roommate, terrified Joyce by shooting a gun inside the tower. Gogarty later appeared in Joyce’s novel Ulysses (1922) as the character “stately, plump Buck Mulligan,” an identification that he heartily disliked and that proved to be a lifelong irritant to him. (He did not take Joyce seriously as an artist.) A slightly adapted version of a bawdy, profanity-laced poem of Gogarty’s, nicknamed “The ballad of joking Jesus,” also appears in Ulysses.
Bloomsday map of Dublin featuring sites from James Joyce’s novel UlyssesGogarty practiced as a surgeon and throat specialist in Dublin, where he became acquainted with William Butler Yeats, George Moore, George William Russell (AE), and other leaders of the renaissance. He was a vigorous amateur athlete, particularly accomplished in cycling and swimming, and led a notoriously colorful life. Gogarty was closely involved with the Irish republican political party Sinn Féin, speaking at the party’s founding meeting in 1905 and writing plays that baldly expressed Sinn Féin sympathies. Between 1922 and 1936 Gogarty served as a senator for the Irish Free State. During the Irish Civil War, he was kidnapped by a faction of the Irish Republican Army (IRA) that had begun a campaign of targeting Free State senators. (The IRA had splintered after the Anglo-Irish Treaty of 1921 resulted in six counties remaining part of the United Kingdom.) Gogarty escaped his kidnappers in part by jumping into Dublin’s River Liffey and swimming to safety.
Gogarty wrote the entertaining memoirs As I Was Going Down Sackville Street (1937), Tumbling in the Hay (1939), and It Isn’t This Time of Year at All (1954). In 1939 he traveled to the United States to begin a lecture tour and settled in the country permanently, having become disillusioned with political developments in Ireland. He died of a heart attack while living in New York City.