"Seamus Heaney" Essays and Research Papers

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    Beowulf's Heroic Traits

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    People know what to look for in a hero. Whether it be pride‚ happiness‚ strength‚ or integrity‚ people generally have at least somewhat of an inkling on what makes a hero. In this poem‚ “Beowulf‚” translated from Old English by Seamus Heaney‚ Beowulf is a typical hero. The son of Ecgtheow‚ Beowulf is a famous Geat warrior who valiantly fights off the horrid monsters Grendel and Grendel’s mother. He gains attention and fame for his courageous actions‚ and he does not get too overly confident about

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    Four Poems by Derek Mahon

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    Four Poems by Derek Mahon INTRODUCTION Derek Mahon belongs to the same generation of Northern Ireland poets as Seamus Heaney. But‚ whereas many of Heaney’s poems are rooted firmly in the rural landscape of Ulster where he grew up‚ Mahon’s poems reflect his childhood spent in Belfast. His familiar places were the streets of the city‚ the Harland and Wolff shipyard where his g-andfather and father worked‚ and the flax-spinning factory where his mother worked. Later on‚ Mahon would come to study

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    Heaney is a poet who’s work focus’ on nature quite a lot. This is influenced by his heritage and nationality. Heaney was born in 1939 in County Derry‚ Northern Ireland. His first collection of poetry‚ Death Of A Naturalist‚ was published in 1966. He has since won numerous awards‚ including The Whitbread Prize for The Haw Lantern‚ and in 1995 he won the Nobel Prize for Literature. He has worked as a lecturer at many universities including Harvard and Oxford. (Heaney‚ S. New Selected Poems 1966 – 1987

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    Beowulf

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    begun with limited knowledge‚ and through personal experiences‚ that knowledge may grow to a profound understanding of one’s true nature. This understanding is wisdom. All people inherently lack wisdom and only age is capable of elucidating it. In Seamus Heaney’s narration of Beowulf‚ Beowulf commences his heroic journey as a young‚ ignorant warrior‚ and as he grows in both age and experience‚ he gains wisdom and realizes that he is not the immortal warrior he once believed he was. Beowulf’s journey

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    SEAMUS HEANEY AS A IRISH NATIONALIST Heaney is widely considered Ireland’s most accomplished contemporary poet and has often been called the greatest Irish poet since William Butler Yeats. In his works‚ Heaney often focuses on the proper roles and responsibilities of a poet in society‚ exploring themes of self-discovery and spiritual growth as well as addressing political and cultural issues related to Irish history. His poetry is characterized by sensuous language‚ sexual metaphors‚ and nature

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    “Punishment” “Punishment‚” a poem written by Irish author Seamus Heaney‚ speaks of the discovery of the body of a young bog girl‚ who as realized later in the poem‚ was punished for being an “adulteress.” (23) On closer inspection and as the poem shifts from past to present the faith of the bog girl is compared with the faith of another woman in more recent violent times‚ namely The Troubles in Northern Ireland. In this poem Heaney thus comments‚ through the use of literary devices such as enjambment

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    The Constable Calls By Seamus Heaney A Constable Calls is the second in a sequence of six poems entitled ’Singing School’ which concludes Heaney’s fourth collection ’North’ (1975). The poem is a vivid description of an incident from the poet’s childhood - a policeman making an official visit to his father’s farm at Mossbawn to record tillage returns. There is something grotesquely bizarre about an armed representative of the law travelling by bicycle around the Ulster countryside to record agricultural

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    Leaving Cert Comparitive study : Translations by Brian Friel Translations is a three-act play set in the tumultuous nineteenth century country of Ireland. The action takes place in a hedge-school where students are faced with the invasion of English speaking soldiers. One of these soldiers falls in love with an Irish girl and then mysteriously goes missing. The son of the master of the hedge-school is forced to go into hiding to keep from being condemned for the crime‚ although he is not responsible

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    Margaret Atwood Poems

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    Margaret Atwood’s collection of poems‚ Morning in the Burned House‚ could just as easily have employed morning’s homonym—mourning—in the title. The overriding theme of loss and some of its sources and consequences—aging‚ grief‚ death‚ depression‚ and anger—permeate this collection and‚ in particular‚ Section IV which is a series of elegiac poems about Atwood’s father. The collection is divided into five sections. Section I opens with the poem “You Come Back.” This poem seems to look back on a life

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    The Turnip-snedder The poem “The Turnip-Snedder” by Seamus Heaney is about an archaic machine that was used in traditional farming‚ to cut the heads off turnips. The turnip-snedder is personified and portrayed in multiple ways. It is personified in a monstrous way but also in a very god like and powerful manner. The turnip snedder is also used to reflect the idea how some people refuse change even though it is inevitable. The poet’s attitude is nostalgic with a sinister undertone of violence and

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