The redress of poetry /

Seamus Heaney.
Bibliographic Details
Main Creator: Heaney, Seamus, 1939-2013, author, speaker.
Contributors: Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, publisher.
Summary:These lectures were delivered by Seamus Heaney while he was Professor of Poetry at Oxford University. In the first of them, Heaney discusses and celebrates poetry's special ability to redress spiritual balance and to function as a counterweight to hostile and oppressive forces in the world. He proceeds to explore how this 'redress' manifests itself in a diverse range of poems and poets, including Christopher Marlowe's 'Hero and Leander', 'The Midnight Court' by the eighteenth-century Irish poet Brian Merriman, John Clare's vernacular writing and Oscar Wilde's 'The Ballad of Reading Gaol'. Several twentieth-century poets are also discussed - W.B. Yeats, Dylan Thomas, Elizabeth Bishop and others - and the whole book constitutes a vivid proof of the claim that 'poetry is strong enough to help'.


Seamus Heaney defines the title of this work of criticism as follows: "To redress poetry is to know and celebrate it for its forcibleness as itself ... not only as a matter of profferd argument and edifying content but as a matter of angelic potential, a motion of the soul." Throughout this collection, Heaney's insight and eloquence are themselves of a poetic order.
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Format: Book
Language:English
Text in English.
Published / Created: New York, New York : Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1995.
Subjects:
Notes:Title vignette; copyright and edition statements from title verso.

LO 15067 is signed by the author on the title page.

Includes bibliographical references (pages 204-212).

Physical description: 211 pages ; 21 cm

"First published in 1995 by Faber and Faber Ltd."--Title verso.

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ISBN:0374248532
9780374248536
Call Number View In Collection
LO 15067
Manuscripts Reading Room
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