Percy French


William Percy French became known as one of Ireland's foremost songwriters and entertainers. Thanks to the late Oliver Nulty, French has become recognised for his watercolour paintings as well. William Percy French was a gifted polymath who had a number of artistic talents at his command. He could work very quickly, and his output is prodigious across many genres.

Life

French was born at Cloonyquin House, near Tulsk, County Roscommon, the son of an Anglo-Irish landlord. He was the third child of nine. His younger sister, Emily was also a writer.
He was educated at Foyle College in County Londonderry and wrote his first successful song while studying at Trinity College Dublin in 1877 for a smoking concert. The song, "Abdul Abulbul Amir" was sold for £5 to an unscrupulous publisher. French omitted to register copyright on the song and lost all the income from the royalties until they were restored to his widow and daughters after his death. The song later became hugely popular and was falsely claimed by other authors.
He graduated from TCD as a civil engineer in 1881 and joined the Board of Works in County Cavan as an "Inspector of Drains". It is said that he wrote his best songs during this period. He also painted: French was a prolific painter of landscape watercolours, and during this period considered art to be his true vocation. In fact, when he became well-known later in his life, his paintings from his time as a civil engineer became fashionable and sought after. The volcano Krakatoa erupted in 1883 while French was in Cavan, and the particles of volcanic ash caused dramatic sunsets all over the world. French painted some of his finest landscapes in this period as he captured the spectacular skies. When Oliver Nulty established the Oriel Gallery in Clare Street, Dublin, he opened with a Percy French and George Russell exhibition. Nulty was a collector for years before opening a gallery. He had been an antiques dealer and noticed that Irish visual art was neglected. He once attended an auction and witnessed the auctioneer fail to sell a George Russell painting for 2 shillings, until a coal scuttle was added to the lot. Nulty, who was a huge French enthusiast and whose parents had met French on honeymoon in London around 1912, mounted several solo exhibitions of French's paintings and published several catalogues. One exhibition was opened by Sir Peter Ustinov. French's daughters Ettie and Joan were regular visitors to the Oriel, where for years there was a Percy French room. In his lifetime, French exhibited his pictures in the Royal Hibernian Academy and sometimes gave them short poems for titles, such as "Only the sullen seas that flow/ And ebb forever more,/ But tarry awhile kind heart and, lo!/ A light on that lonely shore."
When the Board of Works reduced its staff around 1887, French turned to journalism as the editor of The Jarvey, a weekly comic paper. When the paper failed, French's long and successful career as a songwriter and entertainer began. He had lived by the canal in Dublin at 35 Mespil Road before going to London. He famously wrote to his friends when he move there: "We have come to live by the canal, do drop in." A granite seat was erected in 1988 on the canal near his home, dedicated to French. It was sponsored by the Oriel Gallery and bears another witticisms of French's: "Remember me is all I ask,/ And if that memory proves a task, forget."
French was renowned for composing and singing comic songs and gained considerable distinction with such songs as , Slattery's Mounted Foot, and The Mountains of Mourne. French also wrote many sketches and amusing parodies, the most famous of which is The Queen's After-Dinner Speech, written on the occasion of Queen Victoria's visit to Dublin in 1900, in which French drolly suggests "There's a slate off Willie Yeats". In addition, he wrote several poems, some he called "poems of pathos". Many of his poems are on the theme of emigration. He was a regular contributor to The Irish Cyclist, a weekly comic journal.
Are Ye Right There Michael, a song ridiculing the state of the rail system in rural County Clare caused such embarrassment to the rail company that – according to a persistent local legend – it led to a libel action against French. According to the story, French arrived late at the court, and when questioned by the judge he responded "Your honour, I travelled by the West Clare Railway", resulting in the case being thrown out.
In January 1920, when he was 65 years old, French became ill while performing in Glasgow. He died from pneumonia in Formby, England at the home of his cousin, Canon Richardson of Green Lea, College Avenue, on 24 January 1920. His grave is in the churchyard of St Luke's Parish Church, Formby, Merseyside.
A statue of French sitting on a park bench in the town centre of Ballyjamesduff honours him and his song Come Back, Paddy Reilly, to Ballyjamesduff.
And in March 2020 a memorial to French was unveiled in Newcastle, Co. Down, in sight of the Mountains of Mourne, to mark the centenary of his death.

Family

He had married Ethel Kathleen Armitage-Moore while editor of The Jarvey. She was born in 1871, second daughter of William Armytage-Moore, brother of Countess of Annesley. She died in childbirth at the age of 20 and is buried in Mount Jerome cemetery, Dublin. Her sister, Priscilla Armitage-Moore, who became a famous society beauty, married her cousin and became the seventh Countess of Annesley. She lived at Castlewellan estate in County Down. Four years after Ettie's death, French married Helen Sheldon from Warwickshire, whom he met when she visited Dublin to sing in the chorus of his opera Strongbow. They had three daughters, Ettie, Mollie, and Joan. French and his family moved to London around 1900 and lived at St John's Wood.

Songs

The following songs are attributed to Percy French:
Collaborations with William Houston Collisson

Art

Artworks by French have increased in value. On 20 September 2005, the Percy French watercolour landscape Where ever I go my heart turns back to the County Mayo was sold by Dublin auctioneers Whyte's for a then record price of €44,000.
A comprehensive biography of French, focusing on his paintings, Lead Kindly Light, was produced and written by Oliver Nulty of the Oriel Gallery in 2002, the culmination of his life's work promoting Percy French at a time of official neglect. Oliver Nulty promoted French from the day he opened the Oriel Gallery in 1968, and mounted at least ten solo exhibitions of French and several group shows featuring French, one opened by Peter Ustinov. French's daughters Joan and Ettie were regular visitors to the Oriel Gallery from the early 70's. Bernadette Lowry edited and contributed to the book. The title was taken from French's favourite hymn Lead Kindly Light by Saint John Henry Newman. It was chosen as a metaphor for French's paintings as the light always leads gently into his pictures. French's landscapes are described in "The Watercolours of Ireland" by Patricia Butler as "laden with atmosphere." A runner up title which the Oriel considered was Tones That Are Tender from French's song 'Come Back Paddy Reilly' which was later used in a similar biography in 2016. French's archive currently resides in the North Down Museum, Bangor, Co. Down where researchers are welcome to view material by appointment with the museum.