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9780198186373

Starting Lines in Scottish, Irish, and English Poetry From Burns to Heaney

by
  • ISBN13:

    9780198186373

  • ISBN10:

    0198186371

  • Format: Hardcover
  • Copyright: 2001-02-15
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press

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Summary

Why should a poem begin with a line from another poem? Is an eighteenth-century epigraph working in the same way as a post-modern quotation? And how are the dynamics of the new text and the source affected by issues of nationhood, language, history, and cultural tradition? Are literary ideasof originality and imitation, allusion and influence inherently political if the poems emerge from different sides of a border or of a colonial relationship?Taking as a framework the history of relations between Ireland, England, and Scotland since the 1707 Union, the book explores such questions through a series of close readings. Textual encounters singled out for detailed discussion include Burns's use of Shakespeare, Coleridge's reference to 'SirPatrick Spens', James Clarence Mangan's adaptation of Percy Bysshe Shelley, Ciaran Carson's quotation from John Keats, Seamus Heaney's meditation on Henry Vaughan, and the evolution of 'The Homes of England' from Felicia Hemans to Noel Coward.

Author Biography

Fiona Stafford is CUF Lecturer in English at Oxford University, and a Fellow of Somerville College.

Table of Contents

`What's Past is Prologue'
1(42)
Scottish Bards and English Epigraphs: Robert Burns' `A Winter Night'
43(48)
The Grand Old Ballad in Coleridge's `Dejection'
91(51)
James Clarence Mangan and Percy Bysshe Shelley
142(51)
The Homes of England
193(51)
`The Irish for No'
244(48)
Seamus Heaney and the Caught Line
292(36)
Epilogue. George Mackay Brown, `All Souls' 328(3)
Bibliography 331(20)
Index 351

Supplemental Materials

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