As I Was Going Down Sackville Street is told in the
first person from the perspective of Gogarty. Unlike a conventional
memoir, however, the book deals little with events in Gogarty's personal or professional life, instead using his
persona as a vehicle for encountering and describing the geography and chief inhabitants of 20th-century Dublin. In writing
Sackville Street, Gogarty sought to give "past and present the same value in time"; thus, while the first-person narrative is continuous and appears to occupy a compact chronological space, the events detailed span the years 1904–1932. Gogarty also rearranged events into (approximately) reverse chronological order, beginning with life in the
Irish Free State and moving backwards through the
Irish Civil War, the
Irish War of Independence, and, finally, colonial Ireland. This structure was intended to loosely recall that of
Dante's
Divine Comedy, with the Dublin of the mid-1920s–1930s standing for
Inferno, the Dublin of the 1910s–1920s for
Purgatorio, and turn-of-the-century Dublin for
Paradiso. The tone of the book is predominately anecdotal and conversational; much of its action consists of lively accounts of dinner parties, luncheons, "at-homes", pub conversations, and chance meetings, allowing Gogarty to draw vivid portraits of his contemporaries by reproducing their speech patterns and characteristic social interactions. Gogarty also frequently embarks on humorous, rambling narrative monologues, pertaining to other characters, to the landscape, and to various salient issues of the time. While not strictly polemical,
As I Was Going Down Sackville Street is notable for its political overtones, expressed in both Gogarty's monologues and in the speeches he places in the mouths of other characters. As a
Catholic with strong intellectual and personal ties to the
Anglo-Irish Ascendancy, a founding member of
Sinn Féin with a deep devotion to
Arthur Griffith, and a
Free State Senator who had suffered kidnapping and arson at the hands of
IRA gunmen, Gogarty's political identity was complex and idiosyncratic, and in his book he gave frequent vent to his animosity towards
Éamon de Valera and his disillusionment with Irish politics. ==Characters==