The house is built now that I have been dreaming about for years. Every week I drive down from Dublin, due south through County Wicklow into County Wexford. I was born and brought up near there.
This journey to the new house where I write belongs to memory. A few spots along that stretch of road have all the resonance and flavor of childhood, but most of the road has changed beyond recognition. The narrow winding road has become mostly motorway - anodyne, anonymous, flavorless. I love it.
I wish I missed the old narrow, familiar road. But I do not. I love the efficiency, the modernity, the coolness of the new road. I love getting to Dublin in an hour and a half rather than two hours. I love driving freely in the outside lane, rather than being stuck forever behind a tractor or a cattle truck.
Nonetheless, when, a number of years ago, they were widening the road that runs through a nature reserve called the Glen of the Downs, I supported the protesters, mainly young people who moved there and lived in the trees. I spoke in a television debate in their favor, pointing out that Irish governments since independence have seldom been willing to put our precious heritage before crude, quick development. They would, if the opportunity arose, run a motorway through the Hill of Tara, the most important ancient Irish site.
Until recently, this idea might be useful in a heated debate as a worst case, impossible to contemplate, on a par with selling your granny. But this now is the prospect we face in Ireland. Despite protests from many distinguished archaeologists and historians, it seems likely that in the next few weeks, the government will announce that it is going ahead with plans to build a four-lane highway and a busy interchange close to the Hill of Tara.
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For commuters who drive each day to work in Dublin from towns and villages in County Meath, where Tara lies, it might cut 20 minutes off the journey. It will make them happy as the road to Wexford makes me happy. But it seems almost beyond belief that Ireland, awash with new money and enormous economic confidence, cannot find another route for the road and leave for generations to come a heritage that has been left to us.