The Geelong Advertiser of Saturday
17th July 1948 carried the following death notice, ‘Malone on July 16th 1948 at
Mercy Hospital Melbourne, Very Rev. J.J. Malone, Parish Priest of Ashby (Geelong)
in his 83rd year and 60th year of priesthood loving
brother of Patrick (deceased), Thomas (deceased), Michael (deceased), Mary
(deceased) and John of Rockdale, Sydney.
Beloved Uncle of Sr. Gertrude (Sister of Charity Sydney) and of Mrs.
Matt Browne (Geelong). Requiescat in
Pace.’
Joseph James Malone was a native of
Dunbrin, Athy and over many years I had become familiar with his poetry which
first appeared in Irish papers and magazines of the latter part of the 19th
century including United Ireland, Shamrock and Irish Fireside. His contribution to Irish poetry was noted by
David O’Donoghue in the third part of his biographical dictionary of ‘The Poets of Ireland’ which issued in
1893. In Australia Fr. Malone was noted
for his literary interests as a poet, essay writer and journalist.
He was born in Dunbrin in 1863 and
after attending primary school at Shanganaghmore he became a pupil of the
Christian Brothers in Athy. Entering the
Catholic seminary he was ordained at Holy Cross College, Clonliffe, Dublin on
29th June 1899. He arrived in
Melbourne two days before the following Christmas and served as a curate in a
number of parishes before being appointed Parish Priest of Daylesford in
1901.
In 1906 he took a year’s sabbatical
leave and left Melbourne in February 1907 in the company of a number of priest
friends, visiting Egypt and the Holy Land on his way to Ireland and the United
States on the return journey. His
travels were recorded in an Australian Catholic magazine and proved so popular
that they were published in book form in 1910 under the title ‘The Purple East’. Fr. Malone’s arrival in Athy came soon after
the death of his brother Professor Malone who had passed away in Cork on 24th
November 1906, aged 41 years. Professor
Malone was the father of Eamon Malone, the Irish Republican who for a time was
Commander of the Carlow/Kildare I.R.A. Brigade during the War of
Independence. While he was Parish Priest
of Daylesford Fr. Malone wrote a number of Australian Catholic Truth Society
pamphlets.
In 1913 he was appointed Parish Priest
of Clifton Hall and remembering the part played by the Irish Christian Brothers
in his early education he persuaded the Christian Brothers to open a school in
his new parish. In 1914 his first book
of poetry ‘Wide Briar and Wattle Bloom’
was published, bringing together a collection of poetry which had appeared in
various magazines and publications over the previous 25 years. The book title expressed his dual devotion to
Ireland and Australia and the poetic themes included references to his native home
and the River Barrow.
The following year his book of
essays on Irish and Australian poets, ‘Talks
About Poets and Poetry’ was published.
It included a masterful assessment of the Australian poets, Adam Gordon
and Henry Kendall who Fr. Malone had heard of long before he left Ireland and
whom he described as ‘the young and
daring muses that had put spurs into Pegasus.’
In 1919 he transferred to the Parish
of Ashby where he would remain for the rest of his life. In 1927 he took another 12 months sabbatical
leave and for the last time visited places in and around Barrowhouse which had
figured prominently in his poetry.
Special celebrations were held in
1939 on the 50th anniversary of his ordination and when he died in
1948 he was the senior priest in the Irish diocese of Melbourne, with 60 year’s
service as a priest.
The Geelong Advertiser on 17th
July 1948 wrote of the Irish priest orator and poet, ‘perhaps it does not occur to many of the Geelong citizens who observed
Fr. Malone taking his daily stroll with his dogs that behind his ostentatious
but distinctly charming manner is an ever growing intellectual fire, for his
fame as an orator, poet and prose writer is not confined to Victoria or
Australia. For many years he has enjoyed
the enviable reputation of being the most eloquent Roman Catholic pulpit orator
in the State.’
At his requiem mass Archbishop
Mannix said, ‘Fr. Malone was a man of
rare gifts of deep and wide cultural great learning. A versatile writer, he gave a distinction and
charm to almost any subject he touched.
He was a poet of no mean accomplishment.
He was a preacher of rare distinction with an unlaboured flow of natural
eloquence that always filled his churches and charmed and enriched his
hearers. Yet with all his gifts he was a
simple natural, humorous, kindly, hospitable man. He was loved even for those foibles and
eccentricities which sometimes give distinction and charm to those more highly
gifted than their fellows.’
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