Popular Culture Review Vol. 15, No. 1 | Page 37

Pastoral Dreams in Innisfree, Ireland, U.S.A. 33 essentially agrarian country, has historically had just as many problems (e.g., the potato famine), if not more (inadequate health care, disease, high alcoholism, etc.), as the most industrialized of “civilized” countries. But The Quiet Man s version of Ireland is an idyllic fantasyland representative of Ford’s cinematic vision of an America that may never have existed but that Ford, and American audiences then and now, sorely desired. The California of the Joads’ dearest fantasies exists in this Ireland; it’s the land where Wyatt Earp can raise his cattle without interference from encroaching industrialism, where no cavalry is needed because there are no threats, either from Indians or urban social forces, where towns like Shinbone would never have needed the legend of the man who shot Liberty Valance because neither stereotype, Ranse “the good Easterner,” nor Liberty “the bad Westerner,” would have come to town. Here, Tom Doniphon and Hallie, “the good Westerners,” would have lived happily ever after, untouched by real world realities. Ford’s Innisfree is literally a utopian lake isle, remaining forever a pastoral fantasy land, untouched by industrialism and permanently outside the realm of American (or any country’s) history. It is entirely intentional that Sean Thornton sees his future bride for the first time while riding into town with Michaeleen. As mentioned earlier, the beauty of the landscape, which Lindsay Anderson perfectly describes as “presented with a pre-Raphaelite relish for sharp and varied colouring, as well as a kindred romanticism of view,” is unsurpassed in Ford’s cinema. And into this dreamscape comes Mary Kate Danaher (Maureen O’Hara), “a fairy-tale shepherd girl, auburn hair, scarlet skirted, dressed in two shades of blue, driving her sheep down the rocky dell, yellow gorse in the foreground, the countryside opening out greener in the distance . . . ” (25). For Sean, and ultimately for the viewer, Mary Kate is the physical manifestation of why he came to Ireland in the first place; he came for the beauty of the land and the hope of the better, simpler life it offers, and Mary Kate, shepherding the Danaher flock in the countryside, is representative of both. Before the plot gets into high gear, Ford gives us a whirlwind tour of Innisfree. From the train station, Ford moves “to countryside to town to church to pub, meeting trainmen, coachmen, priests, aristocrats, squires, the IRA, drinkers, field hands, [and] Anglican clergy” (Gallagher 279). Innisfree, with its strong community and rigid adherence to what we recognize as traditionally small-town values, contains all the best of what Ford romanticizes in his other works, and none of the bad. Although the characters are stereotypes, they are stereotypes of an acceptable kind; there is no threat from any outside sources with the exception of Sean, who will ultimately prove that he was literally bom to belong in the community. Innisfree is a town eternally untainted by the hazards of industrialization, which results in its being appealing to even jaded contemporary audiences.