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Gort Road roundabout. File photo. Google Streetview

Off-duty garda catches two young men trying to flee from scene of serious car crash

A man is in hospital with life-threatening injuries.

AN OFF-DUTY garda followed and apprehended two young men who were trying to flee the scene of a serious car crash in Clare yesterday.

The garda was a short distance away from the Gort Road incident in Ennis when he saw the occupants of one of two cars involved leaving on foot at about 10pm.

He followed from Sheils roundabout and apprehended them a short distance away. The 19-year-old and 25-year-old were subsequently arrested. They were treated for minor injuries and are currently being held at Ennis garda station.

A pedestrian was seriously injured during the crash. A man in his 40s, he was taken by ambulance to University Hospital Limerick where his injuries are understood to be life-threatening.

The occupants of the second car – two women in their 60s – were also taken to hospital. Their injuries are not life-threatening.

The forensic team has examined the road and it has since been reopened to traffic.

An appeal for witnesses has been issued, with anyone with information asked to contact the local station on 065 684 8100 or the confidential line on 1800 666 111.

More: Tributes to PSNI officer who died after falling from horse during hunt

Read: Complaint over Paul Williams calling some Sinn Féin voters “drug dealers” and “killers” on Late Late dismissed

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55 Comments
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    Mute EK
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    Dec 10th 2016, 1:10 PM

    That’s a shame to hear. I used to love reading Montague’s poetry for the Leaving Cert and sure enough he showed when I needed him on the big day. A dolmen round my childhood. R.I.P.

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    Mute CJ Stewart
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    Dec 10th 2016, 1:15 PM

    The light, tarred skin
    of the currach rides
    and receives the current,
    rolls and responds to
    the harsh sea swell.

    Inside the wooden ribs
    a slithering frenzy; a sheen
    of black-barred silver-
    green and flailing mackerel:
    the iridescent hoop
    of a gasping sea trout.

    As a fish gleams most
    fiercely before it dies,
    so the scales of the sea-hag
    shine with a hectic
    putrescent glitter:

    luminous, bleached—
    white water—
    that light in the narrows
    before a storm breaks. ………RIP John Montague

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    Mute michael o brien
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    Dec 10th 2016, 6:25 PM

    Hey diddle diddle The cat did a piddle, All over the kitchen mat, The little dog laughed to see such fun, And piddled all over the cat.

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    Mute John O'Driscoll
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    Dec 10th 2016, 7:44 PM

    @michael o’brien
    “The disappointed cat / Reflected in the glass / Reflects on where it’s at / And that it shall not pass.” I made up that one last week when the cat was trying to get out the kitchen window and I closed it in time. Suppose Poet’s Corner’s safe from us both Michael. RIP Mr Montague filíocht mór. Ar dheish Dé go raibh a anam.

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    Mute michael o brien
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    Dec 10th 2016, 10:02 PM

    @john o Driscoll,I like your poem John,I always liked poems that rhymed.No harm havin a bit of a sense of humour.

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    Mute John O'Driscoll
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    Dec 10th 2016, 11:15 PM

    The rhymes the thing for many Michael. And a sense of humour carries us a long way past where we’d otherwise give up always. But beat and rhythm, imagery and sense don’t necessarily need to rhyme though they should always scan imo. Was thinking as I wrote that how the real cat in the kitchen appeared also to be outside on the window ledge at the same time (it being dark outside as in Country dark) as he gazed at his reflection, a photon cat observing a molecular cat or vice Versa.
    And thought of calling the insta-ditty “An answer to Schrodinger” but immediately thought it pseud and overly clever-clogs and reading this haven’t changed opinion. That’s why great poets like Montague are great; regardless of rhyme or the absence there of. Their poetry is real, not pretentious or forced. It blows the heart wide open with apols to Mr Heaney.

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    Mute Liam Geary
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    Dec 10th 2016, 9:42 PM

    I always found poetry difficult, until I discovered JOHN Montegue….you Sir, deciphered poetry for me, where others shrouded it in obscure meaning. For that, I THANK YOU. May you Rest In Peace.

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