Stages
Liens
Club
Tournoi
Forum
Accueil

Espace
Membres


INSCRIPTION


 Index du Forum -> Jeu du reglement -> Ireland mourns 'keeper of language' poet Seamus He


Poster un nouveau sujet   Répondre au sujet
Voir le sujet précédent :: Voir le sujet suivant  
Auteur Message
aderfp633



Inscrit le: 27 Sep 2011
Messages: 7915
Localisation: England

MessagePosté le: Dim Sep 15, 2013 2:13 am    Sujet du message: Ireland mourns 'keeper of language' poet Seamus He Répondre en citant

{Ireland mourns 'keeper of language' poet Seamus Heaney}
The Northern Ireland-born Heaney's poems evoke an Irish country childhood, with images of potato diggers and peat bog cutters, and echo the deep political splits that have divided the island.His works include the 1966 debut "Death of a Naturalist", "The Spirit Level", "District and Circle" and an acclaimed translation of the old English epic poem "Beowulf"."For us, Seamus Heaney was the keeper of language, our codes, our essence as a people,[url=http://www.longchamp-handbags-outlet.net]longchamp sale[/url]," Irish Prime #file_links[D:\keywords3.txt,1,S] Minister Enda Kenny said. "He belongs with Joyce, Yeats, Shaw and Beckett in the pantheon of our greatest literary exponents."Heaney was a rarity among poets, having won acclaim from critics while producing best-sellers. Born on a farm in Mossbawn,[url=http://www.longchamp-handbags-outlet.net]longchamp le pliage[/url], County Londonderry in Northern Ireland in 1939, his poems nos #file_links[D:\keywords2.txt,1,S] talgically recall the sights and smells of a country childhood.The weaving of rural roots and modern realism helped him to become the most acclaimed Irish poet since William B #file_links[D:\keywords4.txt,1,[url=http://www.longchamp-handbags-outlet.net]longchamp sale[/url],S] utler Yeats, who was awarded the Nobel prize in 1923. Heaney was born in the year that Yeats died, and died in Dublin near the house where Yeats was born.A tousle-haired figure with a shy and subtle manner, he hated media hype and publishers' publicity caravans even as he became one of Ireland's most famous figures. It once took him three hours to walk down Dublin's main street, pursued by autograph hunters.He found recognition in academic circles, becoming Professor of Poetry at Oxford University and lecturing at Harvard University, and won the Nobel prize for his "works of lyrical beauty and ethical depth".The news sparked immediate sorrow among poets, academics and politicians and was the main story on Irish news bulletins north and south of the border."I have described Seamus Heaney as a national treasure, but he was an international treasure, a colossus of literature," said Northern Ireland's deputy first minister, Martin McGuinness. "We're all much poorer as a result of his passing today and I feel it very deeply."A SPLIT IRELANDHeaney's life was a cultural juggling #file_links[D:\keywords1.txt,1,S] act that began with his childhood in a Northern Ireland riven by sectarian tensions between Protestants and Catholics. He left at the height of the conflict in 1972, his departure hailed by one Belfast Protestant paper which called him "the well-known Papist propagandist."Settling first in the Wicklow Mountains and then in Dublin, his move to the Irish Republic made the headlines and those experiences allowed Heaney to bring a new sense of both the pain and passion of being Irish at a time when the island was torn apart by the Northern Ireland conflict."There are tens of thousands of people today who will be feeling personally bereaved because he had great presence," said prominent Belfast poet Michael Longley. "Just as his presence filled a room his marvelous poetry has filled the heads of a generations of readers."Heaney always felt the tug of language between English and Irish and acknowledged the dichotomy in his acclaimed 1987 volume "The Haw Lantern," writing, "Two buckets were ea #file_links[D:\keywords5.txt,1,S] sier carried than one / I grew up in between."He was acutely aware of the dilemma of being a "Green" Irish nationalist in a province ruled by the red, white and blue flag of the British monarchy and was once spotted in the bar on the Dublin-Belfast railway switching diplomatically from the Powers southern Irish whiskey to the northern brand Bushmills as the train crossed the border.When a London publisher sought to put his work in an anthology of British poetry, he swiftly replied:"Don't be surprised if I demur, for, be advised / My passport's green. No glass of ours was ever raised to toast the queen."(Additional reporting by Conor Humphries in Dublin and Ian Graham in Belfast,[url=http://www.longchamp-handbags-outlet.net]longchamp le pliage[/url], editing by Paul Casciato)
_________________
People watching the forthcoming beginning of the German half of the inhabitants of Berlin are no interested in co-optation
Revenir en haut de page
Voir le profil de l'utilisateur Envoyer un message privé
Montrer les messages depuis:   
Poster un nouveau sujet   Répondre au sujet    www.badminton-web.fr Index du Forum -> Jeu du reglement
Page 1 sur 1

 
Sauter vers:  
Vous ne pouvez pas poster de nouveaux sujets dans ce forum
Vous ne pouvez pas répondre aux sujets dans ce forum
Vous ne pouvez pas éditer vos messages dans ce forum
Vous ne pouvez pas supprimer vos messages dans ce forum
Vous ne pouvez pas voter dans les sondages de ce forum





Contactez-nous !


Recopiez le mot badminton ici :

Votre nom (ou Pseudo) :
 

Votre adresse mail :
 

Votre message :
 

 



A propos de ce site...


Badminton-web est développé et maintenu par www.agence404.com, 1 rue Suffren à Nantes (RCS Nantes B 498 013 432).
Il est hébergé par Celeonet.

L'ensemble du présent site : rédactionnel, éléments graphiques, ergonomie générale et tout autre composante, est déposé et protégé par un copyright. Aucune copie n'est autorisée a priori.

Les demandes d'échanges sont toutefois bienvenues. Pour ce faire, utilisez le formulaire ci à gauche.




Qui sommes-nous ?


Khazâd, c'est mon pseudo, et je suis votre interlocuteur principal sur Badminton-web.fr. Passionné de web, je suis entouré par une fine équipe de collaborateurs tous aussi passionnés que moi.

Lydia, rédactrice on-line, transforme nos contributions "sms" en vrai bon français.
GG est le roi du forum, qu'il anime,
Fred est aux p'tits soins pour les bad-conseils,
Badidonk est notre partenaire qui alimente l'agenda du Badminton,
Patrice, Julien et l'équipe de +2bad vous proposent régulièrement leurs articles.

Et puis vous, chers lecteurs, qui contribuez chacun à votre mesure à la richesse, à la pertinence et à la convivialité qui fait l'âme de ce site qui est le vôtre !