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One of France's most important modern poets, Eugene Guillevic
(1907-97) was born in Carnac in Brittany, and although he never
learned the Breton language, his personality is deeply marked by
his feeling of oneness with his homeland. His poetry has a
remarkable unity, driven by his desire to use words to bridge a
tragic gulf between man and a harsh and often apparently hostile
natural environment. For Guillevic, the purpose of poetry is to
arouse the sense of Being. In this poetry of description - where
entire landscapes are built up from short, intense texts - language
is reduced to its essentials, as words are placed on the page 'like
a dam against time'. When reading these poems, it is as if time is
being stopped for man to find himself again. Carnac (1961) marks
the beginning of Guillevic's mature life as a poet. A single poem
in several parts, it evokes the rocky, sea-bound, unfinished
landscape of Brittany with its sacred objects and its great silent
sense of waiting. The texts are brief but have a grave, meditative
serenity, as the poet seeks to effect balance and to help us 'to
make friends with nature' and to live in a universe which is
chaotic and often frightening. Introduction by Stephen Romer.
French-English bilingual edition. Bloodaxe Contemporary French
Poets: 9
With its pale pink sandstone, picturesque domes and dramatic
setting, Drumlanrig is one of Scotland's most romantic castles, its
history entwined with that of the country itself. The twists and
turns of its story are here captured atmospherically in words and
pictures. It took a decade for a medieval stronghold to emerge in
1689 as the palace that greets visitors today. The legacies of
three ducal families have combined to create a collection of
imposing portraits and rare French furniture. Stately interiors
lead to delightful, intimate spaces and an unforgettable Rembrandt.
Still home to the heirs of William, 1st Duke of Queensbury, the
castle continues to evolve and impress to this day.
Honouring the Word is a tribute book compiled to mark the 80th
birthday of poet Maurice Harmon. In addition to being a poet,
Maurice Harmon is the leading scholar-critic of his generation in
the field of Anglo-Irish Literature. He pioneered its development
as an academic discipline and is the author of a number of
significant works, from bibliographical guides to headline studies
of Sean O Faolain, Austin Clarke, Thomas Kinsella, and others.
The Figure in the Cave selects the prose of one of Ireland's
foremost contemporary poets - part autobiography, part criticism,
part self-commentary - a gathering, from the mid-century to the
present day, that marks a lifetime's critical engagement with
literature in both Europe and America. In the title essay Montague
looks over his career as a writer; in others he describes a
coming-of-age in Ulster, explores his own poetics, and appraises
Goldsmith, Carleton, George Moore, Joyce and Beckett, MacNeice,
Clarke, Kavanagh, Hewitt and MacDiarmid. Pieces on American
literature include a vignette of Saul Bellow, a review of Lowell
and an intimate sketch of Berryman. To conclude, the author
examines the impact of international modern poetry on Irish
writing. Humorous, forceful, impressionistic, enriched with
personal and political observation, this dialogue between early and
later selves traces the development of the boy from Garvaghey to
the figure in the cave, and reveals the workings of a fine poet's
mind.
The Bag Apron: The Poet and His Community is part of UCD Press's
The Poet's Chair series, publishing the public lectures of the
Ireland Professors of Poetry. The Ireland Chair of Poetry was
established in 1998 following the award of the Nobel Prize of
Literature to Seamus Heaney and is supported by Queen's University
Belfast, Trinity College Dublin, University College Dublin, the
Arts Council of Northern Ireland and the Arts Counci 1/An
Chomhairle Ealafon. Other poets in the series include Nuala N1
Dhomhnaill, Paul Durcan, Michael Longley, Harry Clifton and Paula
Meehan. In his volume of The Poet's Chair, John Montague speaks of
finding his own voice and of 'wandering around the world to
discover the self you were born with'. He also shares his thoughts
on the long poem format and the relationship between words and
music, investigates the challenges of translation in poetry, and
speaks about his relationship with Samuel Beckett, whom he knew in
Paris.
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