Matt Talbot – the workers’ saint
Matt Talbot was one of 12 children - eight sons and four daughters - of Charles and Elizabeth Talbot.
He was born at 13 Aldboro Court on May
2, 1856, and was baptised in the Pro-Cathedral three days later.
He attended St. Lawrence O'Toole's Christian Brothers School for brief
periods and later O'Connell Schools at North Richmond Street, which he
left at the age of 12.
Road to drunkenness
Matt then went to work as a
messenger boy with the firm of Messrs Edward and John Burke, wine
merchants, North Lotts, Dublin, which did an extensive bottling business
for Guinness and Youngers.
Before he was a year in the store, he
returned home drunk one evening. His father gave him a beating, removed
him from Burke’s, and got him a job as a messenger boy in the Port and
Docks Board, where he was in charge of the bonded stores. Sadly, it was a
case of ‘out of the frying pan, into the fire’.
In Burke’s the drink
was stout; in the stores of the Port and Docks, it was whiskey. The men
in the bonded stores gave young Matt whiskey to drink, and thus began
his road to drunkenness.
At 17 he became a bricklayer's labourer with Pembertons, the building
contractors. He was an excellent workman and a great timekeeper but
after work he would go with companions to neighbouring public houses and
shebeens to drink until closing time or until the money was spent.
Pawning and stealing
Sometimes on Saturdays, pay
day, he would give his 18 shillings wages to the owner of a public
house. It would be drunk by Tuesday, and when the money was gone, he
would pawn his boots to buy drink, and walk home in his stockinged feet.
On one occasion, when drinking with friends, a fiddler joined them.
When the money was running short, Matt took the fiddle and pawned it. He
then returned with the money and bought more drink. It wasn't until the
party broke up that the fiddler realised that his means of livelihood
was gone. Years later Matt searched the city for the fiddler and, not
finding him, had Masses offered as restitution.
But, no matter how much drink he had the night before, he was always in time for work at 6 a.m.
Changed his life
When Matt was 28 years old, an
incident occurred that changed his entire life. For a week he had stayed
away from work, drinking heavily. Saturday found him sober, thirsty and
penniless.
But confident that his workmates, for whom he had often
bought drink, would come to his assistance, he stood with his brother
near O'Meara's pub on the North Strand to meet his colleagues coming
from Pembertons.
The men passed in twos and threes but none stopped to
ask the brothers to have a drink. Matt said later that he was "cut to
the heart" by this treatment and went home.
His mother, preparing the midday meal, looked up with surprise, and
exclaimed, "Matt, you're home early and you're sober." After the meal,
he turned to his mother and said, "I'm going to take the pledge."
As he
left the house she said, gently, "God give you strength to keep it."
Matt went to Holy Cross Church and, according to his own account, went
to confession and took the pledge from Rev. Dr. Keane. He kept that
pledge until his death 41 years later.
From that time on he attended Mass daily at 5 a.m. in St Francis
Xavier's church, Upper Gardiner Street, before going to work at 6a.m..
After his evening meal at home he walked to a church on the north side
of the city, either St. Peter's, Phibsboro, or Berkeley Road, where he
prayed until it was time to go to bed. This was to avoid the temptation
of meeting his former drinking companions as the effort to quell the
craving for drink was causing him immense suffering.
Every week evening, every Saturday afternoon, and every Sunday
morning was spent in church. He gave up all company and confided only in
his mother. When Fr. John Cullen, a Jesuit priest attached to Gardiner
Street Church, founded the Pioneer Total Abstinence Association in 1898
Matt became one of its first members.
Prayer and mortification
Matt Talbot mortified
himself rigorously. He slept on a plank bed with a piece of timber for a
pillow. This left his face numb in later years. He slept in chains
which he wore for 14 years before his death, round his leg and on his
body.
He prayed each night from 2 to 4 a.m., then dressed and prayed again
until it was time to leave for Mass in St. Francis Xavier's church. He
would arrive at 5am, if not earlier, and would kneel in prayer at the
church's iron railings, waiting for it to open. On entering he would
kneel and kiss the ground, then make the Stations of the Cross.
In 1892 Matt took up employment as a bricklayer's labourer with the
firm of T & C Martin, on the North Wall, where he remained until his
death. He fasted constantly. His breakfast consisted of cocoa prepared
the previous evening by his sister, which he often drank cold. With this
he ate some dry bread. For his midday meal he had cocoa to which he
would add a pinch of tea, and again drank cold. With this he took a
slice of bread. His sister would bring him a small evening meal. If she
brought fish he would insist that she take it home with her and would
make do with bread soaked in the fish juice.
On Sundays he remained in the church for every Mass. Only on
returning to his room at about 2 p.m. would he break his fast for the
first time since 6.30 p.m. the previous day. The remainder of the day
was spent in prayer, reading the Scriptures and the lives of the saints.
He gave all his money to neighbours in need and to the missions.
Collapsed and died
Matt was on his way to Mass in
St. Saviour's on Trinity Sunday, June 7, 1925, when he collapsed and
died on Granby Lane. A paragraph in The Irish Independent of
the following day stated, "An elderly man collapsed in Granby Lane
yesterday and, on being taken to Jervis Street Hospital, was found to be
dead. He was wearing a tweed suit, but there was nothing to indicate
who he was."
He was buried the following Thursday, the feast of Corpus Christi, in Glasnevin Cemetery.
In 1952 Matt Talbot's remains were exhumed and transferred to a
double coffin bearing the inscription, 'The Servant of God, Matthew
Talbot.'
The coffin was placed in a vault in the central circle of the
cemetery to which pilgrims began to flock from all over the world.
In 1972 Matt Talbot's remains were removed to the Church of Our Lady
of Lourdes in Sean McDermott Street. The tomb has a glass panel through
which the coffin may be seen.
Anyone who receives a favour through the intercession of Matt Talbot
is requested to write to the current (2011) Vice-Postulator:
Very Reverend Brian Lawless, Adm
Parish of St. Agatha
North William Street
Dublin 1.
His email address is frbrian@stagathasparish.ie
Parish of St. Agatha
North William Street
Dublin 1.
His email address is frbrian@stagathasparish.ie