Seamus Heaney by Michael Allen
Seamus Heaney by Michael Allen
Seamus Heaney by Michael Allen
SEAMUS HEANEY
New Casebooks
PUBLISHED FORTHCOMING
Antony and Cleopatra Coriolanus
Hamlet Feminism and Shakespeare
King Lear Julius Caesar
Macbeth The Merchant of Venice
A Midsummer Night's Dream Much Ado About Nothing and
Shakespeare's History Plays: The Taming of the Shrew
Richard II to Henry V Othello
Twelfth Night Shakespeare's Problem Plays
Shakespeare's Tragedies
Feminist Theatre and Theory
Waiting for Godot and The Duchess of Malfi and
Endgame The White Devil
Christopher Marlowe
Joseph Conrad
David Copperfield and Hard Bleak House
Times Wilkie Collins
Emma Jane Eyre
E. M. Forster Jude the Obscure
Frankenstein Mansfield Park and Persuasion
Great Expectations Toni Morrison
Middlemarch Ulysses
Mrs Dalloway and
To the Lighthouse John Donne
Sense and Sensibility and Philip Larkin
Pride and Prejudice Paradise Lost
Sons and Lovers Metaphysical Poetry
Tess of the d'Urbervilles
Tristram Shandy
Villette
Wuthering Heights
William Blake
Chaucer
Coleridge, Keats and Shelley
Seamus Heaney
Victorian Women Poets
Wordsworth
Postcolonial Literatures
New Casebooks
SEAMUS HEANEY
Acknowledgments Vll
v
VI CONTENTS
The editors and publishers wish to thank the following for permis-
sion to use copyright material:
Neil Corcoran for material from Seamus Heaney (1986), by per-
mission of Faber and Faber Ltd; Patricia Coughlan for material
from "'Bog Queens": The Representation of Women in the Poetry
of John Montague and Seamus Heaney' in Gender in Irish Writing,
ed. T. O'Brien Johnson and D. Cairns (1991), by permission of
Open University Press; Seamus Deane for 'Seamus Heaney: The
Timorous and the Bold' in Celtic Revivals (1985), by permission of
Faber and Faber Ltd; Thomas Docherty for 'The Sign of the Cross:
Review of The Government of the Tongue', Irish Review, 5,
Autumn (1988), 112-16, by permission of the author; and 'Ana-; or
Postmodernism, Landscape, Seamus Heaney' in Postmodernism: A
Reader, ed. T. Docherty (1992), by permission of Harvester
Wheatsheaf and Columbia University Press; Terry Eagleton forma-
terial from 'Recent Poetry: Review of Field Work', Stand Magazine,
vii
viii ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
1
2 INTRODUCTION
revenge' ('Punishment', II. 43-4) and his own hopes (as a cos-
mopolitan and liberal Irishman) for a satisfactory resolution of the
Northern situation? In taking the poems of North as a vindication
of his own pessimistic view of historical events with little attention
to their formal qualities or canonical worth, O'Brien's stance is ac-
tually quite similar (because of its Continental antecedents) to one
which was by the 1970s significantly influencing English and
American academic literary thinking:
North as 'parole', the personal voice of the poet, selecting and con-
stituting itself out of the immense possibility of articulation pre-
sented by 'langue', the social order of language.
A logical consequence of the strict belief that each parole is a
working part of an impersonal system, langue, is the refusal to
accept that 'a free subject' (the author) can 'penetrate the substance
of things and give it meaning', can 'activate the rules of a language
from within and thus give rise to the designs which are properly its
own' (Foucault). 21 This is a model derived from Saussure's view (as
a linguist) of the way signifiers function in a linguistic community. 22
Hughes is no purist in the way he appropriates it, but he finds its
metaphorical transfer of agency from the poet on the one hand or
'society' on the other to literary language itself very useful. What is
more, Kristeva's version of Bakhtin can be seen as poised 'between
traditional "high" structuralism with its yearning for "scientific"
objectivity' and 'a remarkable early form of "poststructuralism" or
the desire to show how the pristine structuralist categories always
break down under the pressure of the other side of language'. 23
Hence Hughes suggests that the linguistic procedures of North open
up a 'carnivalesque' or 'dialogic' space where texts meet, contradict
and relativise each other. Heaney is to be seen in North as im-
mersed in the intertextual 'babble' of various idioms: of his own lo-
cality; of Wordsworth, or Yeats, or his own student contemporary
and friend, Seamus Deane; of Irish voices, English voices, even the
translated Spanish voice of Lorca. Within this 'dialogic' arena the
possibility of rejecting English voices (what Deane calls 'politicisa-
tion') is tested experimentally to the point of desolation represented
by the book's final poem, 'Exposure'. How is this desolation to be
interpreted? According to Hughes it demonstrably results from the
failure to comprehend and activate the variety of possible selves
available in earlier poems. Volosinov's thinking suggests that lan-
guage (including Heaney's poetic language) is a site of social strug-
gle and will opt to be as active as possible. So we can see rehearsed
in the later pages of North, says Hughes, the discovery that to
accept English language and culture 'may be to lose a measure of
independence'; but it provides opportunities to be active and to be a
representative voice. Hence, according to Hughes, Heaney's reas-
severation of English voices in his next book, Field Work.
Hughes, of course, had the advantage of retrospection in seeing
Heaney's developing 'parole' as almost involuntarily moving into
the space within the literary 'langue' which was waiting for it. His
INTRODUCTION 7
the text itself plays (like a door, like a machine with 'play') and the
reader plays twice over, playing the Text as one plays a game,
looking for a practice which re-produces it. 25
NOTES
1. See 'Further Reading', p. 268 below (Contexts: List A).
2. Other ways of labelling this approach would be: 'Practical Criticism'
which is what Heaney himself calls it (Preoccupations: Selected Prose
1968-1978 [London, 1980], pp. 13-14); 'Anglo-American Formalism'
(which then has to be distinguished from Russian Formalism: I have
simply called the latter Formalism); 'the Modernist Reading' (adopted
by Richard Kirkland, p. 261 below from Anthony Easthope and Jane
Tomkins). All such labels have their problems, including my own,
which parrots the title of a book by John Crowe Ransom (Norfolk,
CT, 1941) and is often used of a coherent group of American critics
including Ransom, Allen Tate, Cleanth Brooks and W.K. Wimsatt.
3. '"This- doesn't it?- bears such a relation to that; this kind of thing-
don't you find it so? - wears better than that", etc.' F.R. Lea vis,
'Criticism and Philosophy', The Common Pursuit (London, 1965),
p. 215.
4. Whose fourth book, The Force (London, 1966), appeared in the same
year as Heaney's first.
5. T.S. Eliot, 'The Function of Criticism', Selected Essays (London,
1958), pp. 32-3.
6. Seep. 22 below.
7. See p. 26 below. ('Punishment' is a locus classicus of Heaney criticism.
[See below, pp. 25-6, 44-6, 70, 174-6, 195].)
8. Roland Barthes, 'What is Criticism?' Critical Essays (1964, English
trans. Richard Howard, Evanston, IL, 1972), p. 257.
9. P. 35 below. Compare 'Imagery and Movement', A Selection from
Scrutiny (Cambridge, 1968), vol. 1, pp. 231-47.
10. See p. 35 below.
11. For the origins of the first, see Cultural Traditions in Northern Ireland
(ed. Maurna Crozier; Belfast, 1989); for those of the second, see
Ireland's Field Day (afterword by Denis Donoghue; London, 1985).
12. See p. 59 below.
13. See p. 69 below.
14. See Seamus Deane, Celtic Revivals (London, 1985), pp. 18-27 and
Raymond Williams, Keywords (London, 1976), pp. 268-9.
18 INTRODUCTION
35. John Lucas, whose prefatory note to volumes in the series begins: 'In
an age when critical theory promises or threatens to cross over into lit-
erature and become its own object of study, there is a powerful case
for re-asserting the primacy of the literary text.'
36. See the quotation on p. 112 below from 'Envies and Identifications:
Dante and the Modern Poet' (Irish University Review, 15: 1 [Spring
1985], 5-19), and the thanks expressed to Heaney in Corcoran's
'Preface' (Seamus Heaney [London, 1986], p. 9).
37. P. 107 below.
38. Seep. 124 below.
39. Corcoran, Seamus Heaney, p. 9.
40. Seep. 127 below.
41. Seep. 119 below.
42. Seep. 127 below.
43. Pp. 223-4 below.
44. P. 144 below. See Longley's words on p. 32 below: 'his poetry suffers
when he forsakes the hovering suggestiveness of thresholds'. Longley,
however, does seem to imply that some poetry (Yeats?) goes beyond
thresholds.
45. Seep. 144 below.
46. 'to deconstruct a text is to show how it undermines the philosophy it
asserts or the hierarchical oppositions on which it relies, by identifying
in the text the rhetorical operations that produce the supposed ground
of argument, the key concept or premise.' Jonathan Culler, On
Deconstruction (London, 1983), p. 86.
47. (London, 1988). Docherty gives references to this edition throughout.
48. It is in the nature of Docherty's strategy that I can only approximate to
his meaning in this account of pp. 14 7-9 below. For the full statement
of Frost's view, see 'The Figure a Poem Makes', Complete Poems of
Robert Frost (New York, 1967), p. vi.
49. Seep. 153 below.
50. See pp. 149-51 below.
51. Seep. 152 below.
52. Seep. 156 below.
53. Seep. 148 below.
54. The Government of the Tongue (London, 1988), p. 137.
20 INTRODUCTION
And 'their cool hardness in our hands' is just what we love in the
words themselves- an unsentimental clarity which impinges with a
sense of the physical and yet never becomes obsessed (in Peter
Redgrove's way) with physical impingement. 'Digging' is even able
to risk mentioning rhythm ('Stooping in rhythm through potato
drills'), and then to manifest the very firmness of rhythm which it
speaks of:
The extra syllable in 'firmly' braces itself - it sees the line through
by skill and will. And the way that the skill of digging combines
21
22 CHRISTOPHER RICKS
Too clever, too outre? No, because 'stations' has a simple and hon-
ourable place in traditional praises of nature (the stars in their sta-
tions), and because 'broadcasting' did originally mean scattering
seed: the modern sense is the metaphorical one, borrowed from
country life, and so when Mr Heaney rotates the metaphor, he
repays the debt or the compliment to country life. The wheel again
comes full circle.
'Churning Day' is not only a finely evocative and unaffected de-
scription of how butter is churned from milk, but the poem itself
follows the arc of those processes. It gradually becomes 'heavy and
rich, coagulated sunlight', and then finally, itself a memory, remem-
bers how the household remembered the recent churning:
'It wasn't fair' calls across the years in the accents of childhood -
only to be answered by the concluding and conclusive rhyme of
'rot' and 'not', so uncompromising after the half-rhymes of the pre-
vious lines.
The deploying of rhymes and half-rhymes, the subtle taking up of
hints, the sardonic pitying puns - there can be no doubt about Mr
Heaney's technical fertility, and it gains its reward in a directness, a
freedom from all obscurity, which is yet resonant and uncon-
descending. The two poems on Ireland's great hunger are masterly.
Only in some of the love-poems is there a note of mimicry (Robert
Graves?).
NOTES
[This is the first of two essays in this collection by Christopher Ricks. It is
included because it offers a characteristic analysis in the style of English
New Criticism, albeit in the shape of a review, emphasising the form of the
poetry and its relationship to other canonical poems. The reader is ex-
pected to be sufficiently familiar with the work of two English poets, Peter
Redgrove (b. 1932) and Robert Graves (b. 1895), to be able to compare
Heaney with the first and see the second as a possible influence on his love
poetry. Ed.]
2
My poor scapegoat,
I almost love you
but would have cast, I know,
the stones of silence ...
I who have stood dumb
when your betraying sisters,
cauled in tar,
wept by the railings,
25
26 CONOR CRUISE O'BRIEN
'Betraying' ... 'exact' ... 'revenge'. The poet here appears as part of
his people's assumption that, since the girl has been punished by
the IRA, she must indeed be guilty: a double assumption -that she
did, in fact, inform on the IRA and that informing on the IRA is a
crime. The IRA - nowhere directly referred to - are Furies with an
'understood' role and place in the tribe. It is the word 'exact' that
hurts most: Seamus Heaney has so greatly earned the right to use
this word that to see him use it as he does here opens up a sort of
chasm. But then, of course, that is what he is about. The word
'exact' fits the situation as it is felt to be: and it is because it fits and
because other situations, among the rival population, turn on simi-
larly oiled pivots, that hope succumbs. I have read many pessimistic
analyses of 'Northern Ireland', but none that has the bleak conclu-
siveness of these poems.
In a poem with the finely ironic title, 'Act of Union', Heaney has
'the man' addressing a woman pregnant by him, with the metaphor
of England addressing Ireland:
The terms of the metaphor are surprising. After all, it is not just the
'obstinate fifth column' engendered by England - the Ulster
Protestants - who wield parasitical and ignorant little fists; and
most Ulster Protestants would be genuinely bewildered at the
thought that it was they, rather than their enemies, who were
beating at borders, or threatening England.
It is true that the act of impregnation can be thought of as pro-
ducing the total situation in Northern Ireland, a fifth column rela-
tive to both England and Ireland: the poem is rich enough.
(Elsewhere, Seamus Heaney writes of the Catholics as 'in a wooden
horse', 'besieged within the siege'.) In a sense, the poet here is delib-
erately envisaging the matter mainly as 'the man' feels the woman
(Ireland, the Catholics of Ireland, within the metaphor) feels it to
be; and in relation to these feelings he is never likely to be wrong. In
any case, there is a kind of balance at which Seamus Heaney is not
aiming. He mocks at one of the protective Ulster cliches in
'Whatever You Say Say Nothing': "'One side's as bad as the other"
never worse'. His upbringing and experience have given him some
cogent reasons to feel that one side is worse than the other, and his
poems have to reflect this.
Many people in Northern Ireland are in the habit of arguing that
they 'have nothing against Catholics as such' (or 'Protestants as
such', as the case may be). The trouble is that neither lot, in prac-
tice, can remain just 'such', they have to be the much more and
much less that it means to be Irish Catholics and Ulster Protestants:
such-plus and seen as such-plus, inherently hostile and frightening.
In these poems of Seamus Heaney's, Protestants are seen as such-
plus: a matter of muzzles, masks and eyes. About his own such-
pluses he is neither sentimental nor apologetic. This, on their mood
in (I think) the winter of 1971-2:
way in which Thor makes his presence felt is always 'a slow north-
east wind'.
NOTES
[Conor Cruise O'Brien, a prolific writer on political topics, suggests in
another essay that what he has to say about contemporary Ireland should
be 'considered less as a theoretical analysis than as a report from ... an in-
formant: a person otherwise ignorant, but familiar with a particular local
situation' ('An Unhealthy Intersection', The Irish Times, 22 August 1975,
p. 10). Interestingly, Heaney in his view is this and more: poetry, he says
elsewhere, may 'attempt to reveal, through metaphorical insight, what is
actually happening and even, in a broad sense, what is about to happen'
('Passion and Cunning', In Excited Reverie [ed. A. Norman Jeffares and
K.G.W. Cross, London, 1965], p. 278). In this sense, he reads Heaney's
poetry directly into the troubles of Ireland. Quotations not identified by
O'Brien in this review are from 'Grauballe Man' ('bruised like a forceps
baby'), 'Whatever You Say Say Nothing' ('in a wooden horse', 'besieged
within the siege') and 'Exposure' ('I am neither internee nor informer .. .').
Ed.]
3
But he does not probe the content more particularly or more politi-
cally, falling back on the blurb ('Seamus Heaney has found a myth
which allows him to articulate a vision of Ireland' etc.). Five years
later Blake Morrison was to note: 'with the exception of Conor
Cruise O'Brien in the Listener, hardly anyone seemed interested in
what it was that Heaney had to "say" about Northern Ireland'. 3
There is nothing new in divergent perceptions on either side of the
Irish Sea. (Or, conversely, in Irish writers simultaneously trans-
mitting different messages to different audiences.) Still, O'Brien's
30
'INNER EMIGRE' OR 'ARTFUL VOYEUR'? NORTH 31
when I wrote that poem I had a sense of crossing a line really, that
my whole being was involved in the sense of - the root sense - of re-
ligion, being bonded to something, being bound to do something. I
felt it a vow. 7
the very first poems I wrote, 'Docker' and one about Carrickfergus
Castle for instance, reveal this common root. The latter had William
'INNER EMIGRE' OR 'ARTFUL VOYEUR'? NORTH 33
This transition is the hinge on which the poem turns from present
to past (a better-oiled process in North). 'At a Potato Digging'
starts out like an echo of Patrick Kavanagh's The Great Hunger:
'Clay is the word and clay is the flesh/ Where the potato-gatherers
like mechanised scarecrows move/ Along the side-fall of the hill'
(Kavanagh); 'A mechanical digger wrecks the drill,/ Spins up a dark
shower of roots and mould./ Labourers swarm in behind ... '
(Heaney). But Kavanagh's title symbolises the starvation of the
spirit in twentieth-century rural Ireland; his perspective on servi-
tude to the land is local in place and time, whatever historic depri-
vations lurk in the background. As Heaney says, 'The "matter of
Ireland", mythic, historical or literary forms no significant part of
[Kavanagh's] material.' 11 And again, 'At the bottom of Kavanagh's
imagination there is no pagan queen, no mystique of the national,
the mythic or the tribal.' 12 (Does this make Kavanagh paradoxically
34 EDNA LONGLEY
[It] was written in 1966 when most poets in Ireland were straining to
celebrate the anniversary of the 1916 Rising. That rising was the
harvest of seeds sown in 1798, when revolutionary republican ideals
and national feeling coalesced in the doctrines of Irish republicanism
and in the rebellion of 1798 - itself unsuccessful and savagely put
down. The poem was born of and ended with an image of resurrec-
tion based on the fact that some time after the rebels were buried in
common graves, these graves began to sprout with young barley,
growing up with barley corn which the 'croppies' had carried in their
pockets to eat while on the march. The oblique implication was that
the seeds of violent resistance sowed in the Year of Liberty had
flowered in what Yeats called 'the right rose tree' of 1916. I did not
realise at the time that the original heraldic murderous encounter
between Protestant yeoman and Catholic rebel was to be initiated
again in the summer of 1969, in Belfast, two months after the book
was published. 13
Heaney speaks in the poem as one of the 'fatal conclave', a more ef-
fective tactic than his use of the Commander's voice as a semi-ironic
filter. However, in 'Bogland', a threshold-poem like 'The Tollund
Man' ('I wrote it quickly ... revised it on the hoof' 14 ), he abandons
both straight history and the dramatic monologue. He opens his
proper door into 'the matter of Ireland', by imagining history as an
experience rather than a chain of events, by dramatising his own
imaginative experience of history, by discovering within his home-
ground a myth that fits the inconclusiveness both of memory and of
Irish history, and by fusing the psychic self-searching of poet and
nation:
'INNER EMIGRE' OR 'ARTFUL VOYEUR'? NORTH 35
Both the rhetorical questions of 'A Northern Hoard', and the an-
swering probes into rural local history, develop the prospecting of
'Bogland'. Heaney's 'Inwards and downwards' strike also turns up
anonymous ancestors, deprived even of 'scraggy acres': servant boy
('Old work-whore, slave-/ blood'), mummer (though this model of
the vanishing tribal artist has English origins), 'mound-dwellers',
Spenser's 'geniuses who creep/ "out of every corner/ of the woodes
and glennes'". Occasionally such figures convey a thinner, more ro-
mantic, more literal version of history: not so much active prospect-
ing as nostalgic retrieval: 'how/ you draw me into/ your trail'. 'The
Tollund Man' himself and two poems with no explicit historical
ties, 'Limbo' and 'Bye-Child', embody more powerfully the same
structure of feeling. 'Bye-Child', which might symbolise 'A people
hungering from birth', expresses Heaney's most intense empathy
with deprivation:
As a group the poems insinuate that the ghost of Gaelic, local idiom,
the sound of the land itself, all united in Heaney's own utterance, are
compelling the tradition of Shakespeare and Spenser to go native.
He puts this, and other things, more bluntly in Part II of North:
'A Constable Calls' (the second poem) lacks the same ultimate
impact, the caller's bike becoming, even from the child's eye view,
an implausibly melodramatic time-bomb: 'His boot pushed off/ And
the bicycle ticked, ticked, ticked.' However, both poems explore
their own subjects; we infer the effect on Heaney's developing sensi-
bility. 'The Ministry of Fear' and 'Summer 1969' (4) seem written
largely for the sake of the sequence, and to fill in a poetic curricu-
lum vitae (down to the provision of dates). Again, the nods to Yeats
and Wordsworth in Heaney's titles and epigraphs (one of which is
'Fair seedtime had my soul') look self-conscious as well as satirical.
'The Ministry of Fear' veers from the sharply specific:
[does] not mean liberal lamentation that citizens should feel com-
pelled to murder one another or deploy their different military arms
over the matter of nomenclatures such as British or Irish. I do not
mean public celebrations or execrations of resistance or atrocity -
although there is nothing necessarily unpoetic about such celebra-
tion, if one thinks of Yeats's 'Easter, 1916'. I mean that I felt it
imperative to discover a field of force in which, without abandoning
fidelity to the processes and experience of poetry ... it would be pos-
sible to encompass the perspectives of a humane reason and at the
same time to grant the religious intensity of the violence its de-
plorable authenticity and complexity. And when I say religious, I am
not thinking simply of the sectarian division. To some extent the
enmity can be viewed as a struggle between the cults and devotees of
a god and goddess. There is an indigenous territorial numen, a
tutelar of the whole island, call her Mother Ireland, Cathleen Ni
Houlihan, the poor old woman, the Shan Van Vocht, whatever; and
her sovereignty has been temporarily usurped or infringed by a new
male cult whose founding fathers were Cromwell, William of Orange
and Edward Carson, and whose god-head is incarnate in a rex or
caesar resident in a palace in London. What we have is the tail-end of
a struggle in a province between territorial piety and imperial power.
Now I realise that this idiom is remote from the agnostic world of
economic interest whose iron hand operates in the velvet glove of
'talks between elected representatives', and remote from the political
manoeuvres of power-sharing; but it is not remote from the psychol-
ogy of the Irishmen and Ulstermen who do the killing, and not
remote from the bankrupt psychology and mythologies implicit in
the terms Irish Catholic and Ulster Protestant. The question, as ever,
is 'How with this rage shall beauty hold a plea?' And my answer is,
by offering 'befitting emblems of adversity'. 19
often falls between the stools of poetry and politics instead of build-
ing a mythic bridge.
After the passage quoted above, Heaney tells how he found
'befitting emblems' in P.V. Glob's The Bog People, and swore his
vow to the Tollund Man. What is the precise 'emblematic' rele-
vance of these mummified figures to the 'man-killing parishes' of
Northern Ireland? The prototype developed by 'The Tollund Man'
is a scapegoat, privileged victim and ultimately Christ-surrogate,
whose death and bizarre resurrection might redeem, or symbolise
redemption for,
Tollund Man' varies its angle of approach and moves with the
dynamic of a pilgrimage, 'The Grauballe Man' has more the air of a
set-piece, arrival, its subject celebrated because he's there, rather
than summoned into being by the poet's need:
As if he had been poured
in tar, he lies
on a pillow of turf
and seems to weep
the black river of himself.
The grain of his wrists
is like bog oak,
the ball of his heel
like a basalt egg.
Little adulteress,
before they punished you
you were flaxen-haired,
undernourished, and your
tar-black face was beautiful.
Being killed for adultery is one thing; being tarred and feathered is
another ... [Heaney] seems to be offering his 'understanding' of the
situation almost as a consolation ... It is as if he is saying, suffering
like this is natural; these things have always happened; they hap-
pened then, they happen now, and that is sufficient ground for un-
derstanding and absolution. It is as if there never were and never will
be any political consequences of such acts; they have been removed
to the realm of sex, death and inevitability. 22
The frank adjectives capsize what has previously been rather a dec-
orative dawdle of a sonnet ('Pash of tallow, perishable treasure';
'Diodorus Siculus confessed/ His gradual ease among the likes of
this'). They also capsize a good deal else in North. Heaney told
John Haffenden: '['Strange Fruit'] had ended at first with a kind of
reverence, and the voice that came in when I revised was a rebuke
to the literary quality of that reverent emotion.' 24
'Bog Queen' has the advantage of dealing directly with the
goddess herself, so that questionable behaviour on the part of her
acolytes may be ignored. The female figures in the poems,
perhaps understandably, bear a family resemblance to one
another: 'The pot of the skull,/ The damp tuck of each curl'; 'My
skull hibernated/ in the wet nest of my hair'; 'They unswaddled
the wet fern of her hair'; 'my brain darkening'; 'your brain's
exposed/ and darkened combs'. However 'Bog Queen', although
over-amplified like 'The Grauballe Man', renews that well-worn
genre the aisling by presenting Ireland as her landscape, weather,
'INNER EMIGRE' OR 'ARTFUL VOYEUR'? NORTH 47
Since this is the one Bog poem with true Irish antecedents, 25 it can
begin with an apt analogue of dormant nationhood ('I lay waiting/
between turf-face and demesne wall'), and end with an equally
plausible 'rising':
These lines, and the poem's clearly shaped symbol, speak for
themselves. But Heaney sometimes asks too much of his myth, as
if all statement has been shunted off to Part II, as if 'archetypes'
remain above or below argument. ('Punishment' suggests the con-
trary.) A number of his comments on poetry nudge it towards the
visual arts - a surprising development from such a rhythmic
prodigy: 'the verbal icon'; 'a search for images and symbols'; 'The
poetry I love is some kind of image or visionary thing'; 'a painter
can lift anything and make an image of it'. 26 The notion of
'befitting emblems' also requires examination. Their original
context is section II of 'Meditations in Time of Civil War', where
Yeats defines the purpose of his art in terms of 'founding' his
Tower:
that after me
My bodily heirs may find,
To exalt a lonely mind,
Befitting emblems of adversity.
Yeats's 'emblems' are the many facets of the Tower and of his
poetry as a whole. Heaney seems to regard a symbol or myth as
sufficiently emblematic in itself: 'beauty' pleading with 'rage' within
the icon of 'The Grauballe Man' - Man and poem synonymous -
rather than through any kind of dialectic. Nor does the myth, as the
resemblances between the poems suggest, undergo much evolution.
48 EDNA LONGLEY
I reach past
The river bed's washed
Dream of gold to the bullion
Of her Venus bone.
The two methods are not compatible. One gains its poetry by em-
bodiment of a specific, personal situation; the other has degenerated
into a messy historical and religious surmise - a kind of Golden
Bough activity, in which the real differences between our society and
that of Jutland in some vague past are glossed over for the sake of
the parallels of ritual. 28
Whereas 'Bogland' enacted the stages of the poet's thrust into the
past, he now obtains ready access: 'Kinned by hieroglyphic peat ...
to the strangled victim' ('Kinship');
ocean-deafened voices
warning me, lifted again
in violence and epiphany.
The longship's swimming tongue
was buoyant with hindsight -
it said Thor's hammer swung
to geography and trade,
thick-witted couplings and revenges,
the hatreds and behindbacks
of the althing, lies and women,
exhaustions nominated peace,
memory incubating the spilled blood.
given the zeugma 'lies and women'!). And does the idea of the
North really provide an umbrella for the not very Nordic north of
Ireland, fertility rites and capital punishment in prehistoric
Denmark, and the conquests of the Vikings in Ireland - coming to
or from the north? Although all these different places, time-zones
and moral worlds clearly strike genuine imaginative chords in
Heaney, why attempt to unify them into a mythic confederation?
Perhaps again in order to stress the obvious: 'these things have
always happened', as Carson says, and as Morrison finally puts it:
'His allusions to former cultures amount to a sort of historical
determinism. ' 29 Yet determinism, the plundering of the past for
parallels, circular thinking (all incidentally features of Republican
and Loyalist ideology) once more insist on 'territorial piety', on a re-
ligious-anthropological, even slightly glamorous way of apprehend-
ing the conflict, beside which 'talks between elected representatives'
indeed look dull. In the last three quatrains of 'North' the longship
adds an aesthetic to the subject-matter it has already supplied:
(An echo of Yeats there.) Carson praises the poem's initial evoca-
tion of remembered funerals:
but then comments: 'all too soon, we are back in the world of
megalithic doorways and charming, noble barbarity'. 30 The worthy
root-emotion of 'Funeral Rites' is that of 'The Tollund Man' -
Heaney's passionate desire to 'assuage' 31 - but he goes to such ritu-
alistic lengths as to obliterate his starting-point:
I would restore
the great chambers of Boyne,
prepare a sepulchre
under the cupmarked stones ...
Somnambulant women,
left behind, move
through emptied kitchens
imagining our slow triumph
towards the mounds.
Hercules and Antaeus represent two different kinds of poet: the first
composes his own poetry; the second is composed by his own poetry.
The first is the self-assertive poet, the political poet, who has a
definite vision of things, who chooses his style and his words, who
decides what kind of poet he is going to be. The second kind of poet
is he whom Martin Heidegger calls the 'more daring' ... because he
works from the heart and ... articulates a song 'whose sound does
not cling to something that is eventually attained, but which has
already shattered itself even in the sounding ... ' 36
... is a love-nest
in the grass.
I think that the recent English language tradition does tend towards
the 'well-made poem', that is towards the insulated and balanced
statement. However, major poetry will always burst that corseted
and decorous truthfulness. In so doing, it may be an unfair poetry; it
will almost certainly be one-sided. 42
The vision of 'The Other Side' is absent from North: 'the legions
stare/ from the ramparts'. The 'Mossbawn' poems (though not the
learned debate about the place-name's origin in 'Belderg') prove the
local textures that Heaney's panoptic view omits. 'The Seed
Cutters' also shows how the English dimension of his technique
lives on in a concreteness and empiricism reminiscent of nothing so
much as Edward Thomas's 'Haymaking' (written during the First
World War): 'All of us gone out of the reach of change- I Immortal
in a picture of an old grange'. Preoccupations salutes the varied
influences that have fertilised Heaney's imagination, and which
render irrelevant the false distinction between 'well-made' and
'major' poetry, rather than good and bad. (No real poem is 'well-
made' in any limited sense; no major poem ill-made.) Heaney here
seems to join ranks with Montague and Thomas Kinsella, who in
different ways, and often too self-consciously, have stressed the
European and transatlantic alliances which should be reflected in
the outlook and technique of Irish poetry.
The Deane interview epitomises the intensive pressure on
Heaney, including his own sense of duty: to be more Irish, to be
more political, to 'try to touch the people', to do Yeats's job again
instead of his own. Printed in the first issue of the journal Crane
Bag, it heralds successive, obsessive articles on the relevance of his
poetry to the Northern conflict. Again, Deane sets the tone with an
attack on Conor Cruise O'Brien:
But surely this very clarity of O'Brien's position is just what is most
objectionable. It serves to give a rational clarity to the Northern posi-
tion which is untrue to the reality. In other words, is not his human-
ism here being used as an excuse to rid Ireland of the atavisms which
gave it life even though the life itself may be in some ways brutal? 44
Heaney demurs ('O'Brien's ... real force and his proper ground is
here in the South' 45 ); nor is he responsible for the conscription of
his poetry to bolster pre-set Nationalist conceptual frameworks, to
endorse 'an Irish set of Archetypes, which form part of that collec-
tivity unearthed by Jung, from which we cannot escape'. 46 But one
of O'Brien's 'clarities' is his distrust of the 'area where literature
'INNER EMIGRE' OR 'ARTFUL VOYEUR'? NORTH 61
NOTES
Edna Longley's piece combines the New Critical concern with the poetry's
canonical worth and formal qualities which we saw in Ricks's review (essay
1) and the political preoccupations visible in O'Brien's essay (no. 2). It
makes wide reference to English poets (Edward Thomas, Lawrence, Auden,
Larkin, Ted Hughes, Geoffrey Hill) as well as those from south (Yeats,
Kavanagh) and north (Hewitt, Montague, Mahon) of the Irish border. It
assumes knowledge of Burntollet where Loyalist groups attacked Civil
Rights marchers in 1969 and Vinegar Hill where the Wexford rising was
brutally crushed in 1798 (pp. 34, 51).
Certain terms of traditional 'rhetoric' are used: 'zeugma' (p. 51) is a figure
in which two words are yoked together although only one of them is strictly
appropriate to the intended meaning; 'asyndeton' (p. 57) is the omission of
normally expected conjunctions; 'chiastic' (p. 58) usually indicates a figure
in which the order of words in one clause is reversed in the next but is here
used about a similar reversal of letters in juxtaposed words. Ed.]
64
THE TIMOROUS AND THE BOLD 65
Your trail
broken from haggard to stable,
a straggle of fodder
stiffened on snow,
comes first-footing
the back doors of the little
barons: resentful
and impenitent,
carrying the warm eggs.
For the inheritor, the poet, his matching activity is the writing of
verse, a performance which has to be of that virtuoso quality that
will make people stare and marvel at this fascinating, almost
archaic, skill, still oddly surviving into the modern world. The
sturdy neatness of Heaney's verse forms in the first two volumes
and the homely vocabulary emphasise this traditional element, en-
abling us to treat them as solid, rural objects, authentically heavy,
not as some fake version of pastoral. But the alliance I spoke of has
yet deeper implications.
In Part 2 of 'A Lough Neagh Sequence' (from Door into the
Dark) we are given what, for want of a better word, may be called
a description of an eel:
a muscled icicle
that melts itself longer
and fatter, he buries
his arrival beyond
light and tidal water,
investing silt and sand
with a sleek root
To realise suddenly,
whip off the mat
that was larval, moving-
and scald, scald, scald.
Even in this frame of myth, which has its consoling aspects, the
violence becomes unbearable. The poet begins to doubt his own
reverence, his apparent sanctification of the unspeakable:
70 SEAMUS DEANE
The sheer atrocity of the old ritual deaths or of the modern political
killings is so wounding to contemplate that Heaney begins to show
uneasiness in providing it with a mythological surround. To speak
of the 'man-killing parishes' as though they were and always would
be part of the home territory is to concede to violence a radical pri-
ority and an ultimate triumph. It is too much. Yet how is the vio-
lence, so deeply understood and felt, to be condemned as an
aberration? Can an aberration be so intimately welcomed?
This is surely the nub of the matter- 'a dream of loss/and origins'.
Origin is known only through loss. Identity and experience are in-
evitably founded upon it. Yet Heaney's loss of his Antaeus-
strength and his Herculean postscript to it (in Part II of North) is
only a brief experiment or phase, leading to the poem 'Exposure'
which closes the volume. In 'Exposure', the sense of loss, of
having missed
Forgiveness has to find its nerve and voice at a time when the conta-
mination has penetrated to the most secret and sacred sources. The
ground itself is 'flayed or calloused'. It is perhaps in recognition of
this that Heaney's voice changes or that the tense of his poems
changes from past to future. What had been the material of nostalgia
becomes the material of prophecy. The monologue of the self
becomes a dialogue with others. The poems become filled with
voices, questions, answers, guesses. In part, the poet has gained the
confidence to project himself out of his own established identity, but
it is also true, I believe, that the signals he hears from the calloused
ground are more sibylline, more terrifying and more public than
those he had earlier received. The recent dead make visitations, like
the murdered cousin in 'The Strand at Lough Beg' or as in 'The
Badgers', where the central question, in a very strange poem, is:
Perhaps the poet was playing aspects of his own choice off
against one another. Leaving Belfast and the security of a job in
the University there, he became a freelance writer living in the
County Wicklow countryside, at Glanmore. In so far as he was
leaving the scene of violence, he was 'timorous'; in so far as he
risked so much for his poetry, for the chance of becoming 'pure
verb' ('Oysters'), he was 'bold'. The boldness of writing con-
fronted now the timorousness of being there, gun, not pen, in
hand. The flute-like voice of Ledwidge had been overcome by the
drum of war, the Orange drum. But this, we may safely infer, will
not happen to Heaney:
In such lines the sense of omen and the sense of beauty become one.
In Field Work violence is not tamed, crisis is not domesticated, yet
they are both subject to an energy greater, more radical even, than
themselves. By reiterating, at a higher pitch, that which he knows,
his familiar world, Heaney braves that which he dreads, the world
of violent familiars. They - his Viking dead, his dead cousin and
friends, their killers - and he live in the same house, hear the same
white goose pass overhead as their imaginations are stimulated by a
story, a legend, a sense of mystery.
It is not altogether surprising, then, to find Heaney accompanying
Dante and Vergil into the Inferno where Ugolino feeds monstrously
on the skull of Archbishop Roger. The thought of having to repeat
the tale of the atrocity makes Ugolino's heart sick. But it is precisely
that repetition which measures the scale of the atrocity for us,
showing how the unspeakable can be spoken. Dante's lines:
have behind them Aeneas's grief at having to retell the tragic history
of the fall of Troy:
Atrocity and poetry, in the Irish or in the Italian setting, are being
manoeuvred here by Heaney, as he saw Lowell manoeuvre them,
into a relationship which could be sustained without breaking the
poet down into timorousness, the state in which the two things
limply coil. Since Field Work, Heaney has begun to consider his lit-
erary heritage more carefully, to interrogate it in relation to his
Northern and violent experience, to elicit from it a style of survival
as poet. In this endeavour he will in effect be attempting to reinvent
rather than merely renovate his heritage. In his work and in that of
Kinsella, Montague and Mahon, we are witnessing a revision of our
heritage which is changing our conception of what writing can be
because it is facing up to what writing, to remain authentic, must
always face - the confrontation with the ineffable, the unspeakable
thing for which 'violence' is our helplessly inadequate word.
NOTES
[This is the first essay in the volume to break with both the traditional
politico-literary and the New Critical approaches (represented respectively
by essays 2 and 1 and combined in essay 3). Instead, we find a commitment
to the ideological dimension of the poetic act influenced by both left-wing
(Theodor Adorno, Raymond Williams) and conservative (Harold Bloom,
Rene Girard) theorists. Ed.]
kingdom, pitiful events which I myself saw and in which I took a con-
siderable part'. [Ed.]
7. On Thomas Kinsella's use of the Gaelic tradition, see Deane's Celtic
Revivals (London, 1985), pp. 142-5. [Ed.]
5
Representation in Modern
Irish Poetry
EAMONN HUGHES
78
REPRESENTATION IN MODERN IRISH POETRY 79
A zippo lighter
and a quilted jacket.
two rednecks troughing
in a gleamy diner,
the flinty chipmarks on a white enamel pail.
Paisley putting pen to paper
in Crumlin jail ... 5
One half of one's sensibility is in a cast of mind that comes from be-
longing to a place, an ancestry, a history, a culture, whatever one
wants to call it. But consciousness and quarrels with the self are the
result of what Lawrence called 'the voices of my education'. 25
For any speaker of it, a given language is at once either more or less
his own or more or less someone else's, and either more or less cos-
mopolitan or more or less parochial - a borrowing or a heritage, a
passport or a citadei.2 6
1966 might with some justice be seen as the pivotal year in the de-
velopment of the present political situation in Northern Ireland. On
the one hand Terence O'Neill's 'liberal unionism' seemed to offer
hopeful signs, but Ian Paisley had already achieved some promi-
nence. The possibilities of a North-South 'rapprochement' seemed
strong, but Catholics were being shot and their businesses burned.
The poem is concerned with this balance, no matter how tentatively
and unsuccessfully. The fear and hostility in the poem are obvious,
but there are three balancing factors which have to be ignored if the
poem is to read as a simple expression of bigotry. Firstly, the poem
is about a part of Heaney's own experience; it is, like everything
else in this sequence, a lesson learnt in his 'singing school'. The
voice describing these events is made, in part, by them and cannot
deny them. Placing the poem in Heaney's work as a whole confirms
that what it describes cannot be merely denied. It is one of his
'craftsman' poems in which there is an explicit or implicit compari-
son between a craft and poetry making. It would therefore be
doubly out of character for Heaney to reject completely the
drummer. Finally, the line, 'He is raised up by what he buckles
under' (N, p. 68), carries the sense of how any craftsman, including
Heaney, working within rules and conventions, is better for such
discipline. There is a surprising allusion within the line. The only
other appearance of a form of the word 'buckle' occurs in
'Fosterage' where G.M. Hopkins is 'his buckled self' (N, p. 71), a
reference to 'The Windhover' and its central pun on the word
'buckle':
Brute beauty and valour and act, oh, air, pride, plume here
Buckle! AND the fire that breaks from thee then, a billion
Times told lovelier, more dangerous, 0 my chevalier! 30
Here again rule and convention are seen as both a constriction and
a spur to better craftsmanship. The line quoted from 'Orange
Drums ... 'paraphrases these lines from 'The Windhover' and while
REPRESENTATION IN MODERN IRISH POETRY 87
blood of his own children'; 'Quarrel by cudgelling' - ' ... that holm-
gang/ Where two berserks club each other to death! For honour's
sake, greaved in a bog, and sinking' (N, p. 70). This is the most
pessimistic note of the entire sequence. In between these two paint-
ings is 'Gigantic Chaos turning his brute hips/ Over the world ... '
(N, p. 70) which can only be 'The Colossus (Panic)', although it is
not a 'Black painting' nor is it in the same room as them. 33 The
order in which Heaney consciously places these paintings offers a
gruesome commentary by analogy on Ireland. The old sow eating
her farrow is evident in 'Saturn devouring his son'; a mass evacua-
tion flees before the figure of chaos and we are left with 'two
berserks' locked in a holmgang, the almost obsolete word connot-
ing the 'anachronistic passions' 34 at large in the North. The poem
enables us to construct this analogy between Goya's paintings and
Northern Ireland, but it is only by placing the poem back in the se-
quence that we can evaluate it. The preceding poems in the se-
quence are almost entirely enmeshed in local actualities. 'Summer
1969' suffers the opposite fate. Here the cosmopolitan dominates
and Ireland is represented only by analogy. The poem's importance
in the sequence lies in Goya as a model of artistic response:
location in time and space, and more importantly by the fact that
the poet is once again on home ground. McLaverty, in Heaney's
description of him, possesses 'fidelity to the intimate' while being
sensible of 'the great tradition that he works in' 35 and the virtues
of patience and a sense of the value of words. He is an exemplary
presence: the writer as a congruence of the forces at work in
Northern Ireland. What is notable about the poem is that it not
only moves the poet back to his own place but also back in time,
against the flow of the sequence so far. 1962 is a time of origins:
'me newly cub bed in language' (N, p. 71 ), and the preceding
poems are therefore partially revoked. The 'ministry of fear' is
not denied, but the focus has shifted to the idea of a second
ministry, and a new beginning. Other voices are present in
the poem: McLaverty's voice, obviously, but it in turn is a
conflation of Hopkins, Mansfield, and Chekhov. 36 Affection for
McLaverty and his role as foster-father draws Heaney back into
Irish history.
There are undercurrents in the poem, however, which belie this,
perhaps sentimental, reading. The 'words ... like obols' (N, p. 71)
may be highly valued but the simile suggests a death of the self. Nor
is McLaverty's teaching straightforward. The advice, 'Go your own
way./ Do your own work', is ironical, especially when followed by
references to models more suited to the short-story writer than to
the poet. In this way the poem distances the voices within it and
suggests that the poet's own voice, while acknowledging its compo-
nents, must speak for itself. The heart of the poem is the restraint
proposed by McLaverty which is opposed to the violence of Goya.
This restraint can be just as vulnerable and open as Goya's over-
statement.
'Exposure' (N, pp. 72-3) is the consequence of the previous five
poems of the sequence. It presents us with the poet at the moment
of writing. As with 'Fosterage' it is located in a specific time and
place: 'It is December in Wicklow' (N, p. 72). The title bespeaks the
poet's sense of vulnerability away from the protection of fosterage
and the question the poem poses is 'who is responsible for this ex-
posure?'; is it the poet himself or is it a failure of the cultural tradi-
tions evident in the rest of the sequence. Those traditions are here
present only as hints and traces: Yeats may be present in the
diction; Joyce, Montague and Kinsella in the fire imageryY Neil
Corcoran identifies Osip Mandelstam as the primary presence in the
poem with a secondary reference to Ovid in exile. 38 The English
poetic tradition is replaced by others just as the country replaces
90 EAMONN HUGHES
the city, the South ironically replaces the eponymous North, and
the historical replaces the contemporary:
NOTES
[Eamonn Hughes's essay is the first one in this collection to draw attention
to the literary commonalty which 'Northern poets' like Paul Muldoon and
Tom Paulin share with Heaney (See Further Reading, p. 268). His theoreti-
cal perspective is more coherent and less idiosyncratic than Deane's (essay
4), responding to an influential line of thinking which passed from the
Russian Formalists into structuralism and poststructuralism.
Volosinov, Bakhtin, Saussure and Kristeva enable him to examine
Heaney's development in North in terms of a sustained analogy with lin-
guistic phenomena, thus mediating between more ideologically partisan
readings like those of Longley (essay 3) and Deane. Heaney's 'An Open
Letter' (p. 78) was first published as a Field Day Pamphlet (Derry, 1983)
and can be found in Ireland's Field Day (London, 1985). Michael
McLaverty (b. 1907) was a Belfast short-story writer and novelist (p. 88).
Ed.]
'Clacked', for once, does not rebuke the 'tongue' of other people;
'plates' finds itself soothed out into 'palate', rather like 'oysters' into
'estuary'.
But indignation flickers, and though it is appeased it is not
expunged.
95
96 CHRISTOPHER RICKS
So in the end, having next riddled the oysters (they are something of
a riddle themselves) as 'The frond-lipped, brine-stung/Glut of privi-
lege', the poem is stung too:
The word 'prey' feels how intimate may be the bonds between
trusting and tasting. Both the first and this last poem in the book
speak of 'my tongue'.
Field Work is alive with trust (how else would field work be pos-
sible?), and it could have been created only by an experienced poet
secure in the grounded trust that he is trusted. Heaney is the most
trusted poet of our islands. (Larkin is now trusted not to produce
bad poems, but not necessarily to produce poems.) Field Work is an
even better book than North, Heaney's last collection, in that it is
more profoundly exemplary. One poem is admittedly sceptical of
the word 'exemplary' when applied to poets, as is clear from the
question which the poet, lodged in the ninth circle of Hell, puts to
his wife when ('Aided and abetted by Virgil's wife') she visits his
damnation. About the poets now alive, he asks:
but this time the food is not outre like oysters. What hope is there,
after a killing? Only this - and if we insist on prefacing it with
'only', we have already sold the pass:
and carrots
With the tops and mould still fresh on them.
After all, one near-fetched sense of the word 'mould' would bring it
into contention with 'fresh'. Heaney's sense of the word here (the
brown earth, not the green mildew) is manifestly unmistakable, but
the force of the line is partly a matter of the other sense's being
tacitly summoned in order to be gently found preposterous.
Nothing can more bring home the innocent freshness of carrots
with the earth still on them than the calm rejection- utterly unut-
terable - of the dingier sense of 'mould'.
Heaney practises this beneficent sleight throughout the poems. It
is there earlier in this same poem in the line, 'As if the unquiet
founders walked again', where the faltering sense of 'founders' is
felt under the feet of the line, a line which walks so differently from
'And today a girl walks in home to us'. The founder of modern
Ireland may perhaps founder. Or here:
NOTE
[An Augustan point of reference is established in Ricks's first paragraph
(the quotation is from Gay's 'Trivia', Book III, 11.195-8) and this is rein-
forced by the invocation (p. 98) of Peri Bathous (largely if not entirely by
Pope: see Edna Leake Steeves [ed.], The Art of Sinking in Poetry [New
York, 1968]). This is the second review by Ricks to figure in this volume
(see essay 1) and his (not quite serious?) assimilation of Heaney into an
English tradition rooted in the eighteenth century shows again a New
Critical canonical preoccupation. But the approach is now less analytical
and more widely discursive, the tone more playful, in tune with a changing
critical climate (as I suggest in my Introduction). Ricks's sharing of a liter-
ary camaraderie with the poet is very different, certainly, from the 'author-
itative' stance with which Leavis took 'the line of wit' as a touchstone to
judge other poetry in Revaluation (London, 1936). Ed.]
7
102
REVIEW OF FIELD WORK 103
The modulations of this, all the way from the faintly mincing over-
tones of 'It was all crepuscular and iambic' and the calculated liter-
ariness of the last two overbred lines, to the simple unadorned
perception of the rabbit, might help to assuage certain fears about
Heaney which Jon Silkin has expressed in a review. 2 Silkin argued
roughly that the later Heaney was in danger of sacrificing the
realist force of his early work to a gathering 'deftness', a rich tech-
nical virtuosity which couldn't easily be combined with his raw
materials; and indeed there did seem a risk at one point, as
Heaney's forms grew leaner and leaner, that he would have a
problem in unifying an almost unrivalled technical resourcefulness
with the social and material taproots of his art. The relation
between different sorts of materiality is in this sense a problem of
form, not just a 'theme'. What is perhaps most impressive about
Field Work, however, is that this problem seems more out in the
open, and in the best of the volume triumphantly resolved: lan-
guage can be granted its own material workings without detriment
to its status as a realist medium:
The characteristics devices of the first two stanzas - the nearly ex-
cessive terseness, the austere elegance of image, the curious blend of
reticence and density - open out undisruptively onto the plainer
notations of the third verse.
Another way in which Heaney differs from Yeats is that, if he is
indubitably a 'major' poet, he isn't obviously so - not major in the
same way, not major in an epoch of major poetry. Nobody could
doubt from Yeats's tone that he believes poetry to be an intrinsi-
cally superior genre to, say, fiction, whereas it would be difficult
for Seamus Heaney to believe this. Whatever Yeats's harebrained
and repellent fantasies, he wrote out of an historical crisis where the
impulse to 'totalise' was urgent. Heaney, whatever evidence of
global imperialist crisis he may find on his doorstep, handles that
evidence in the style of an 'end-of-ideologies' writer. Most of the
poems in Field Work are superb, but the plain truth is that Heaney
doesn't really have much to 'say' which is inherently more complex
or compulsive than a whole range of more 'minor' writers. A lot of
what Yeats had to 'say' was nonsense, but he did after all have a lot
to say. This is not, of course, just a quantitative matter: it is much
more a question of historical situation, which is to say, among
other things, that it isn't a matter of entirely blaming Heaney. But
nor is it a matter of letting him off the hook by dint of some histor-
ical determinism. Heaney has been much praised, and properly so;
he probably is one of the finest English-language poets of the
century. But it is perhaps not surprising that he has been praised by
a criticism which invests deeply in 'experience' and little in 'ideas'.
On the latter score, Heaney does not show up particularly well in a
comparison with much less technically accomplished writers, even if
there is little to fault him on the former.
NOTE
[Terry Eagleton's theoretical concerns are Marxist but this does not emerge
strongly here (the review was written for Stand, a non-academic literary
magazine). He does draw attention to the political implications of Heaney's
poetic stance in a way that anticipates David Lloyd's essay (no. 11) below.
But Eagleton's basic approach here is comparable with that of Eamonn
Hughes (essay 5) in its dual awareness of the language of literature and the
way that literature can be seen as functioning like a language. In Criticism
106 TERRY EAGLETON
and Ideology (1976; London, 1978, p. 79) Eagleton had made use of
Barthes's distinction in Writing Degree Zero between the text which 'may
so "foreground" its signifiers as to radically deform, distantiate and defa-
miliarise its signified'; and that which strictly curbs 'such excess in apparent
humble conformity to the logic of its "content"'. 'This key Formalist/
structuralist idea animates his debate with Stand's editor, Jon Silkin.
Eagleton's aim is to suggest that Heaney's development is not determined
by the rigour of this 'either/or' formulation: that he is increasingly able to
do both these things. Ed.]
There are some lines in poetry which are like wool in texture and
some that are like bare wires. I was devoted to a Keatsian woolly line,
textured stuff, but now I would like to be able to write a bare wire.
(Seamus Heaney to Fintan O'Toole, 1984)
107
108 NEIL CORCORAN
This tiny anecdote about the shot wild duck is a story already told
('he says') - like the already much written-over pilgrimage to
Station Island, like the Buile Suibhne - which Heaney now tells
again, in his own words. The bird is 'badly shot', as some of the
shades in 'Station Island' have been badly (wickedly, cruelly) shot,
in Northern sectarian murders. 'He' in 'Widgeon' blows his own
cries on the dead bird's voice box, just as Heaney briefly and
poignantly returns a voice to the dead in the 'Station Island' se-
quence, a voice which remains, nevertheless, entirely his own voice
too; and as, in 'Sweeney Redivivus', his own voice sounds through
the 'voice box' of Sweeney, the bird-man.
WRITING A BARE WIRE 1 09
stone was 'lifted' from the beach at Inishowen. At the northern tip
of Co. Donegal, lnishowen is at the opposite side of Lough Foyle
from the Magilligan internment camp. Heaney is therefore
prompted into mythologising the stone in the terms of a Dantean
analogy, imagining it as 'A stone from Phlegethon,/bloodied on the
bed of hell's hot river'; but he rejects the grandiose comparison in
deflating embarrassment ('but not really'), before concluding the
poem in the self-deflating contemplation of how he might appear to
the Magilligan guards:
The incapacity for the political role is subtly rebuked in those lines
by the pun which makes over the 'Irish Free State' into a phrase for
the disengagement of poetry, and by the allusion itself which refuses
the obligation Hamlet finds so overwhelming, to 'set right' the times
that are 'out of joint'. 'Sandstone Keepsake' inherits, it may be, the
guilt and anxiety of 'Exposure', but seems more ironically assured
of the poet's peripheral status: the most the poem may aspire to is
the 'veneration' of the political victim. This self-presentation, with
its let-downs and erosions, casts its shadow far into Station Island.
'STATION ISLAND'
Station Island, or St Patrick's Purgatory, is a small rocky isle in the
middle of Lough Derg in Co. Donegal which, since early medieval
times, has been a place of pilgrimage for Irish Catholics. The three-
day pilgrimage (which Seamus Heaney himself made three times in
his youth) involves a self-punitive routine of prayer, fasting and
barefoot walking around stone circles or 'beds', thought to be the
remains of ancient monastic cells. From the very earliest times,
Lough Derg has inspired popular legend and literature, in particular
medieval accounts of miracles and visions, and historical narratives
about the suppression of the pilgrimage in the eighteenth century,
112 NEIL CORCORAN
What I first loved in the Commedia was the local intensity, the ve-
hemence and fondness attaching to individual shades, the way per-
sonalities and values were emotionally soldered together, the
strong strain of what has been called personal realism in the cele-
bration of bonds of friendship and bonds of enmity. The way in
which Dante could place himself in an historical world yet submit
that world to scrutiny from a perspective beyond history, the way
he could accommodate the political and the transcendent, this too
encouraged my attempt at a sequence of poems which would
explore the typical strains which the consciousness labours under
in this country. The main tension is between two often contradic-
tory commands: to be faithful to the collective historical experi-
ence and to be true to the recognitions of the emerging self. I
hoped that I could dramatise these strains by meeting shades from
my own dream-life who had also been inhabitants of the actual
Irish world. They could perhaps voice the claims of orthodoxy and
the necessity to recognise those claims. They could probe the valid-
ity of one's commitment.
WRITING A BARE WIRE 113
The shades Heaney meets in the poem, then, have all been 'inhabi-
tants of the actual Irish world', whether personally known friends
and acquaintances, or writers known from their work; and their
conversations turn, in some way, on the living of a proper life or on
the production of a proper work. The revenants are advisers, from
beyond the grave, on the poet's responsibilities in the realms of
morality and of art.
In I, a prelude to the pilgrimage itself, the encounter, on a
Sunday, is with the unregenerate 'sabbath-breaker', Simon Sweeney,
a figure of fascination as well as fear, with his advice to 'Stay clear
of all processions'. The advice is set against the orthodox pieties of
a crowd of women on their way to mass, in a scene which contains
(in 'the field was full/of half-remembered faces') a sudden echo of
the opening of the medieval poem of vision and pilgrimage, Piers
Plowman, and its 'field full of folk' - a reminder that poetry in
English, as well as in Italian, has its tradition of the dream-vision,
and that 'Station Island' self-consciously inherits from it. In II, the
ghost is William Carleton, encountered appropriately on the road
to Lough Derg, and not on the island itself, since, after visiting
Station Island in his youth, he subsequently renounced Catholicism
and wrote 'The Lough Derg Pilgrim' as a denunciation of its bar-
barities and superstitions (hence the reference to 'the old fork-
tongued turncoat'). The 'ghost' of III is the inanimate 'seaside
trinket' which, for Heaney as a child, had been redolent of the
death of the girl who owned it (she was, in fact, Agnes, the sister of
Heaney's father, who died of TB in the 1920s).
In Section IV Heaney meets a priest who had died on the foreign
missions shortly after his ordination. (This was a man called Terry
Keenan, still a clerical student when Heaney knew him.) The
section meditates on the ratifying role of the priesthood in Irish
society, and its effect on the priest himself, 'doomed to the decent
thing'. V includes three separate encounters with teachers or
mentors of Heaney's, including his first teacher at Anahorish
School, Barney Murphy, and- interestingly in this context- Patrick
Kavanagh. VI recalls, with affectionate tenderness, a very early
sexual experience and, after 'long virgin/Fasts and thirsts' under the
dominion of Catholic doctrine on sexual morality, a later satisfying
and fulfilling one. The ghost of VII is a man Heaney had played
football with in his youth, the victim of a sectarian murder in
Northern Ireland. (Heaney is remembering William Strathearn,
killed by two off-duty policemen in a particularly notorious
114 NEIL CORCORAN
ness far away, a space' in VI; 'the granite airy space/1 was staring
into' in VIII; and, in XII, after the pilgrimage. 'It was as if I had
stepped free into a space/alone with nothing that I had not
known/already'. This final linking of the blank space with freedom
comes after Heaney has been counselled by Joyce; and the whole of
'Station Island' discovers its enabling and releasing alternative in its
exemplary artist figures. Joyce is, implicitly, the repository of a new
kind of personal and cultural health when Heaney takes his hand
'like a convalescent' and feels an 'alien comfort' in his company. In
this sense, the pilgrimage to the island in the poem is a large paren-
thesis, the brackets of which are closed by William Carleton at one
end, and by James Joyce at the other- artists offering, on the main-
land, their alternatives to the orthodoxies of the island, alternatives
which ironically echo the very first advice Heaney is given in the
poem, the unregenerate Simon Sweeney's 'Stay clear of all
processions'.
Carleton's essential significance for the poem is clarified by
Heaney's essay, 'A tale of two islands', where 'The Lough Derg
Pilgrim', with its portrait of a culturally and materially deprived
Ireland, is opposed to Synge's much better known account, in his
plays and prose, of the Aran Islands- in Heaney's opinion, a glam-
orising of the reality in the interests of the Irish Literary Revival.
The 'two islands', 'Station' and 'Aran', represent two different
Irelands, realities put to virtually opposed literary and ideological
uses. Carleton, in fact, is regarded very much as a nineteenth-
century equivalent of Patrick Kavanagh - a teller of the true tale,
from the inside, but also from a position of estrangement, of Irish
rural life ('not ennobling but disabling'). In his appearance in
'Station Island', he counsels Heaney in a righteous anger (of which
Heaney knows himself- it seems, shamefully- incapable) and also
in the redemptive necessity, for the Irish writer, of a memory and
sensibility schooled by politics as well as by the natural world:
'"We are earthworms of the earth, and all that/has gone through us
is what will be our trace"'. The word associated with Carleton in
'Station Island' is 'hard'. Defining his 'turncoat' politics, Heaney
has him say, "'If times were hard, I could be hard too'"; and when
he departs in the final line, he 'headed up the road at the same hard
pace'.
His hardness is matched by Joyce's 'straightness'. In XII, 'he
walked straight as a rush/upon his ash plant, his eyes fixed straight
ahead'; and when he departs, 'the downpour loosed its screens
118 NEIL CORCORAN
'swim
out on your own and fill the element
with signatures on your own frequency,
echo soundings, searches, probes, allurements,
elver-gleams in the dark of the whole sea.'
Given the interest and complexity of its conception, and the per-
sonal urgency of its themes, it is unfortunate that, in my opinion,
WRITING A BARE WIRE 119
'Station Island' is far from entirely successful. There are some excel-
lent things in it. Section III, for instance, with its extraordinarily
inward and intimate evocation of the way the young Heaney is
almost erotically possessed by the child's death, is as good as any-
thing he has written. And the poem's most Dantean moments -
McCartney's rebuke, and the fading of some of the shades - have
the kind of heartbreaking poignancy which shows the lessons learnt
from the 'Ugolino' translation in Field Work.
Nevertheless, it seems to me that the narrative and dramatic
structure of the sequence is peculiarly inhibiting to Heaney's truest
poetic gifts and touch. The encounters come to seem predictable
and over-schematic. The dialogue is sometimes very heavy handed:
'Open up and see what you have got' and 'Not that it is any conso-
lation, I but they were caught' are jaw-breakingly unlikely from
people in any kind of passion. The symbols seem over-insistent,
particularly when one remembers the great grace and delicacy with
which the literal slips into the symbolic in some of the earlier work.
There are moments of distinct bathos: when, in IX, after seeing the
vision of the trumpet, Heaney tells us he 'pitched backwards in a
headlong fall', and we are suddenly closer to slapstick than to sym-
bolic reverie; and, more subtly perhaps, when the Joycean voice of
XII seems so much more accommodating, concerned and hortatory
than anything Joyce ever wrote himself - for the good reason,
perhaps, that its marine imagery is much more Heaney-like than
Joycean, much closer to 'Casualty' and 'Oysters' than to the
Portrait. Finally, there are some uncertainties in the handling of
verse form, particularly in Heaney's rather ragged variations on the
Dantean terza rima. The form is notoriously difficult in English, but
Heaney's variations on it are bound to summon much too closely
for comfort Eliot's tremendous imitative approximation of it in the
second section of 'Little Gidding', and Yeats's use of it in a poem
Heaney admires in Preoccupations, 'Cuchulain Comforted'.
All of this is perhaps to say, in another way, that Seamus
Heaney's true distinction as a poet is a lyric distinction, and that the
successful larger forms he has so far found are forms which accom-
modate, even while they provoke and extend, his lyricism. While I
cannot think that 'Station Island' with its narrative and dramatic
exigencies, is such a form, it is clearly a necessary poem for Heaney
to have written, one that defines a painful realignment between
himself and his own culture, and brings him to that point of newly
steadied illumination where it might be said of his work, as it is
120 NEIL CORCORAN
said of its symbol, the polyp supported by a candle, that 'the whole
bright-masted thing retrieved/A course and the currents it had gone
with/Were what it rode and showed.'
'SWEENEY REDIVIVUS'
Seamus Heaney's engagement with the figure of Sweeney from the
medieval Irish poem Buile Suibhne lasted over ten years - from his
earliest attempts at a translation in 1972 until its eventual publica-
tion, as Sweeney Astray, in 1983 in Ireland and in 1984 in England.
Sweeney, in the poem, is a possibly real seventh-century Ulster king
who offends the cleric St Ronan, and is punished by being cursed
after the Battle of Moira in 637. Driven mad and transformed into
a bird, he flies, exiled from family and tribe, over Ireland and as far
as Scotland. The poem's narrative is frequently interrupted by
Sweeney's poignant lyric expressions of his own misery, and by his
equally sharp and tender celebrations of the Irish landscape, partic-
ularly its trees. Sweeney is therefore, as well as being a mad, exiled
king, a lyric poet; and in Robert Graves's account of Buile Suibhne
in The White Goddess he describes it as 'the most ruthless and
bitter description in all European literature of an obsessed poet's
predicament'.
Heaney recognises in the poem a crucial point in the changeover
from a pagan to a Christian culture in Ireland, and he is also inter-
ested in it for political and topographical reasons; but in the intro-
duction to his version, he spells out too some of the implications of
a recognition similar to Graves's:
Yeats himself is, I presume, 'The Master' in the poem of that title
in the sequence, which could be written almost as an allegory of
what the critic Harold Bloom has called the 'anxiety of influence':
the 'master' as the precursor, the poet against whom Heaney's own
art must struggle in order properly to define and articulate itself.
Heaney imagines Yeats as a 'rook' in the 'tower' of, presumably, his
art and of his Protestant Ascendancy culture (just as Yeats did live
in a tower, and entitled one of his major books The Tower); and
the gradual coming to terms with him is the discovery that 'his
book of withholding/ ... was nothing/arcane, just the old rules/we all
had inscribed on our slates', the discovery that Yeats's notoriously
private mythology conceals an apprehensible human and political
meaning and relevance. Heaney's measuring of himself against this
magisterial authority, which has sounded the Sweeney note of en-
terprising, wily self-assertion, is also, however, combined with an
envious humility -
'In Illo Tempore'- its title taken from the words which introduced
the reading of the gospel in the old Latin mass - is perhaps
Heaney's most straightforward and personal rehearsal of the theme
(released, it may be, by the Sweeney mask, but not much indebted
to it). Imagining Catholicism as a language one has lost the ability
to speak, consigning it to 'il/o tempore', 'that time', the poem is
sadly resigned rather than gratefully released; and in this it is at
one, perhaps, with the reverence still felt, at some level, for the out-
grown republican images in 'The Old Icons'- 'Why, when it was all
over, did I hold on to them?' In these poems, which are among the
best in 'Sweeney Redivivus', resolve and regret merge to create a
peculiarly chastened tone, which is also peculiarly honest.
The poem which closes 'Sweeney Redivivus', and the whole of
Station Island, 'On the Road', may be read as a kind of summary of
Heaney's career to date, and the statement of an intention for the
future, as it inherits and brings to fulfilment the volume's imagery of
journeying, pilgrimage, quest and migration. The poem opens with
that figure common in the earlier work, Heaney-as-driver, but now
with the driver behind the steering wheel's 'empty round'. This is an
emptiness, a space suddenly filled with the rich young man's ques-
tion about salvation. Christ's invitation, accompanied by the sudden
'visitation' of the last bird in Station Island, provokes a response in
which Heaney is translated out of that early figure and its present
emptiness, into Heaney-as-Sweeney. The flight which follows, with
its swooping and dipping rhythms, seems similarly to translate
Christ's injunction out of the realm of religion - Heaney/Sweeney
migrating from 'chapel gable' and 'churchyard wall' - into the realm
of art, as it ends inside a 'high cave mouth' beside the prehistoric
cave drawing of a 'drinking deer'. This is presumably related to that
'deer of poetry .. ./in pools of lucent sound' which appears in 'A
Migration' in Part One; but in 'On the Road', its nostril is 'flared//
at a dried-up source'. It is a source, nevertheless, which provides
Heaney with at least the possibility of some arid renewal:
The 'font' in a church usually contains holy water, used to make the
sign of the cross; but this dry 'font of exhaustion' is perhaps Seamus
Heaney's equivalent of Yeats's 'foul rag-and-bone shop of the heart'
at the end of 'The Circus Animals' Desertion', that point of desola-
tion from which, alone, the new inspiration may rise. In that poem,
Yeats reviews the stages of his career in some detail, and in 'On the
Road', Heaney may be thought to review his own, more glancingly,
in little verbal echoes of his earlier work. The road 'reeling in' re-
members the roads that 'unreeled, unreeled' in that other poem of
flight, 'Westering', at the end of Wintering Out; 'soft-nubbed' and
'incised outline' recall the archaeological diction of North, as the
poem's chain of optatives ('I would roost ... ', 'I would migrate .. .',
'I would meditate .. .') make again one of the characteristic gram-
matical figures of North; the 'undulant, tenor/black-letter latin'
recalls the 'sweet tenor latin' of 'Leavings', and the phrase 'broke
cover' recalls the badger that 'broke cover in me' in 'The Badgers',
both in Field Work. This unobtrusive self-allusiveness makes it
plain how much in Heaney's earlier 'source' is now 'dried-up', and
how much directed energy and effort must go into the construction
of any new 'book of changes'.
This is the final stage of self-knowledge and self-declaration to
which the Sweeney mask has brought Heaney; and I find the se-
quence of exceptional originality and authority. Sweeney has been a
more subtle, responsive and intimate means of self-dramatisation
than the sometimes creaking machinery and over-earnestness of
'Station Island'. The mask has provided the opportunity for a new
kind of autobiographical poetry- not 'confessionally' flat and pre-
sumptuous, not as edgily invisible as the Eliotic personae, not
risking the sometimes histrionic grandiloquence of Yeats. Sweeney
is, above all, the name for a restless dissatisfaction with the work
already done, a fear of repetition, an anxiety about too casual an
assimilation and acclaim, a deep suspicion of one's own reputation
and excellence. He is, therefore, also an instruction to the critic,
ending his account of a poet still in mid-career, against too
definitive a conclusion. As Sweeney's creator and alter ego re-
minded John Haffenden, 'the tune isn't called for the poet, he calls
the tune'.
NOTES
[Taken from one of the two most useful and influential 'introductory'
studies of Heaney (Blake Morrison's [London, 1982; new edition 1993] is
the other one), it is in the nature of this essay largely to explain itself as it
goes along. It is essentially another piece of New Criticism seeking to
present Heaney as a major poet and to emphasise his authority as a
significant living writer. Other writers (Dante, Carleton, Joyce, Denis
Devlin, Sean O'Faolain, Austin Clarke) and works (Buile Suibhne, Piers
Plowman, Graves's White Goddess) tend to be here for their intertextual
significance for Heaney rather than as touchstones in evaluating his poetry.
Only Eliot and Yeats are used in this latter way. Stations (p. 121) was a
pamphlet published in Belfast in 1975. 'Envies and Identifications: Dante
and the Modern Poet' (pp. 112-13) appeared in the Irish University
Review (15:1, Spring 1985, 5-19); 'A tale of two islands: reflections on the
Irish Literary Revival' (p. 117) in P.J. Drudy (ed.), Irish Studies, 1
(Cambridge, 1980), 1-20. For the interviews with Heaney by Deane
(pp. 121-2) and Haffenden (p. 128) see Further Reading, p. 267 below.
Ed.]
9
Reading T.S. Eliot and reading about T.S. Eliot were equally forma-
tive experiences for my generation. One of the books about him
which greatly appealed to me when I first read it in the 1960s was
The New Poetic 1 by the New Zealand poet and critic, C.K. Stead.
The title referred to that movement, critical and creative, which was
instituted in the late nineteenth century against discursive poetry,
and which Stead judged to have culminated in England with the
publication of The Waste Land in 1922. One of his purposes was to
show how in The Waste Land Eliot made a complete break with
those popular poets of the day whom Eliot's contemporary, the
Russian poet Osip Mandelstam, would have called 'the purveyors
of ready-made meaning' 2 - bluff expositors in verse of arguments or
narratives which could have been as well conducted in prose. Stead
also provided instruction and delight by sussing out titles and
reviews of books which 'the new poetry' was up against: such as
Anna Bunston's Songs of God and Man, perceived by the literary
pages to have 'freshness and spirituality'; Augusta Hancock's
Dainty Verses for Little Folk which were 'written in the right
spirit'; and Edwin Drew's The Chief Incidents in the Titanic Wreck,
which 'may appeal to those who lost relatives in this appalling cata-
strophe'. These popular volumes (of February 1913) were possessed
of a strong horsepower of common-sense meaning. The verse was a
metrical piston designed to hammer sentiment or argument into the
public ear. This was poetry that made sense, and compared to its
129
130 SEAMUS HEANEY
Poetry's special status among the literary arts derives from the audi-
ence's readiness to concede to it a similar efficacy and resource. The
poet is credited with a power to open unexpected and unedited
communications between our nature and the nature of the reality
we inhabit.
The oldest evidence for this attitude appears in the Greek notion
that when a lyric poet gives voice, 'it is a god that speaks'. And the
attitude persists into the twentieth century: one thinks of Rilke's re-
statement of it in his Sonnets to Orpheus and, in English, we may
cite the familiar instance of Robert Frost's essay, 'The Figure a
Poem Makes'. For Frost, any interference by the knowing intellect
in the purely disinterested cognitions of the form-seeking imagina-
tion constitutes poetic sabotage, an affront to the legislative and ex-
ecutive powers of expression itself. 'Read it a hundred times,' he
says of the true poem. 'It can never lose its sense of a meaning that
once unfolded by surprise as it went.' 'It begins in delight, it in-
clines to the impulse, it assumes direction with the first line laid
down, it runs a course of lucky events and ends in a clarification of
life - not necessarily a great clarification, such as sects and cults are
founded on, but in a momentary stay against confusion.' 6
In this figure of the poem's making, then, we see also a paradigm
of free action issuing in satisfactorily achieved ends; we see a path
projected to the dimension in which, Yeats says, 'Labour is blos-
soming or dancing where/The Body is not bruised to pleasure
soul'? And just as the poem, in the process of its own genesis,
exemplifies a congruence between impulse and right action, so in its
repose the poem gives us a premonition of harmonies desired and
not inexpensively achieved. In this way, the order of art becomes an
achievement intimating a possible order beyond itself, although its
relation to that further order remains promissory rather than oblig-
atory. Art is not an inferior reflection of some ordained heavenly
system but a rehearsal of it in earthly terms; art does not trace the
given map of a better reality but improvises an inspired sketch of it.
My favourite instance of this revision of the Platonic schema is
Osip Mandelstam's astonishing fantasia on poetic creation, entitled
132 SEAMUS HEANEY
- since Dante was the pretext for the thing - 'A Conversation about
Dante'. A traditional approach to Dante, naturally enough, might
involve some attention to the logical, theological and numerological
significances which devolve from the number 3, there being three
Persons in the Holy Trinity, three lines in each stanza of The Divine
Comedy, three books in the whole poem, thirty-three cantos in each
book, and a rhyme scheme called terza rima. All this can press upon
the mind until Dante is gradually conceived of as some kind of
immense scholastic computer, programmed by Aquinas, and print-
ing out the triadic goods in response to whatever philosophical,
metrical and arithmetical data it has been fed. Dante, in other
words, is often studied as the great example of a poet whose tongue
is governed by an orthodoxy or system, whose free expressiveness is
under the strict control of a universe of rules, from the rules of
metre to the commandments of the church. Now, enter
Mandelstam. Nothing, he implies, could be further from the truth.
The three-edged stanza is formed from within, like a crystal, not
cut on the outside like a stone. The poem is not governed by exter-
nal conventions and impositions but follows the laws of its own
need. Its composition had all the spontaneity of a chain reaction, of
an event in nature:
performs impeccably in itself? ... This baton is far from being an ex-
ternal, administrative accessory or a distinctive symphonic police
which could be done away with within an ideal state. It is no less
than a dancing chemical formula which integrates reactions percepti-
ble to the ear. I beg of you not to regard it merely as a supplementary
mute instrument, invented for greater visibility and to provide addi-
tiona! pleasure. In a certain sense this invulnerable baton contains
within itself all the elements in the orchestra. 8
could dwell in amity with doctrine, writing a poetry which was in-
tellectually pure, emotionally robust and entirely authentic. An un-
constrained, undebilitated mind measured itself against impositions
and expectations which were both fundamental and contingent to
it. Its discipline, however, proved equal to its challenges, so that a
pun on the work choler, meaning both outburst of anger and
emblem of submission, could hold the psychic and artistic balance;
and a rhyme of 'child' with 'wild' could put the distress of his per-
sonal predicament in a divinely ordained perspective. 10
Moreover, what holds for George Herbert also holds for the T.S.
Eliot who wrote Four Quartets. As C.K. Stead also pointed out,
this was a poet very different from the one who wrote The Waste
Land, one who turned from an earlier trust in process and image to
embrace the claims of argument and idea. To this grave and senior
figure, the example of Dante was also important, although his
import was significantly different for Eliot than for Mandelstam.
Both men, interestingly enough, were turning to the great Florentine
at a moment of mid-life crisis, Eliot's first essay appearing in 1929
and Mandelstam's being written, though not published, in the early
1930s. (One thinks again of preserving jars in the dark garden.)
Mandelstam was interested primarily in vindication by language,
Eliot in salvation by conversion. Eliot's essay ends with an evoca-
tion of the world of the Vita Nuova, of the necessary attempt to
enter it, an attempt 'as difficult and hard as rebirth', and bows out
with the declaration that 'there is almost a definite moment of ac-
ceptance when the New Life begins'. Here, ten years before the
Quartets began in earnest, Eliot's writing looks forward to the con-
cerns of those poems. What obsessed Mandelstam and shook him
into heady critical song - namely, the sensuous foragings and trans-
ports of the body of poetic language - hardly seems to interest Eliot
at all. He is much more preoccupied with the philosophical and reli-
gious significances which can be drawn from a work of art, its truth
quotient rather than its technique/beauty quotient, its aura of cul-
tural and spiritual force. There is a stern and didactic profile to the
Dante whom Eliot conjures up and, as he embraces a religious faith,
it is to this profile he would submit in order that it be re-created in
his own work.
The Eliot of The Waste Land, on the other hand, reproduced in
his poem a sense of bewilderment and somnambulism, a flow of
inventive expressionist scenes reminiscent of those which Virgil
and Dante encounter in The Divine Comedy. In the Inferno,
13 6 SEAMUS HEANEY
What is geography?
A description of the earth's surface.
What is the earth?
The planet or body on which we live.
What is the shape of the earth?
Round, like a ball.
Of what is the earth's surface composed?
Land and water.
Just a minute ago I said that the habit of observation did not
promise any irruption of the visionary. Yet here it is, a rhythmic
heave which suggests that something other is about to happen -
although not immediately. The colloquial note creeps back and the
temptation to inspired utterance is rebuked by the seal who arrives
partly like a messenger from another world, partly like a dead-pan
comedian of water. Even so, he is a sign which initiates a wonder as
he dives back into the deep region where the poem will follow,
wooed with perfect timing into the mysterious. Looking at the
world of the surface, after all, is not only against the better judge-
ment of a seal; it is finally also against the better judgement of the
poet.
It is not that the poet breaks faith with the observed world, the
world of human attachment, grandfathers, Lucky Strikes and
Christmas trees. But it is a different, estranging and fearful element
which ultimately fascinates her: the world of meditated meaning,
of a knowledge-need which sets human beings apart from seals and
herrings, and sets the poet in her solitude apart from her grand-
father and the old man, this poet enduring the cold sea-light of her
own wyrd 14 and her own mortality. Her scientific impulse is sud-
denly jumped back to its root in pre-Socratic awe, and water stares
her in the face as the original solution:
In the three lectures which follow, I shall explore the ways in which
W.H. Auden, Robert Lowell and Sylvia Plath each contrived to
become 'an antenna'. And in concluding this one, I want now to
offer two further 'texts' for meditation. The first is from T.S. Eliot.
Forty-four years ago, in October 1942, in wartime London, when
he was at work on 'Little Gidding', Eliot wrote in a letter to
E. Martin Browne:
In the midst of what is going on now, it is hard, when you sit down
at a desk, to feel confident that morning after morning spent fiddling
with words and rhythms is justified activity - especially as there is
never any certainty that the whole thing won't have to be scrapped.
And on the other hand, external or public activity is more of a drug
than is this solitary toil which often seems so pointless. 16
And the scribes and Pharisees brought unto him a woman taken in
adultery; and when they had set her in the midst,
They say unto him, Master, this woman was taken in adultery, in
the very act.
Now Moses in the law commanded us, that such should be stoned:
but what sayest thou?
This they said, tempting him, that they might have to accuse him.
But Jesus stooped down, and with his finger wrote on the ground, as
though he heard them not.
So when they continued asking him, he lifted up himself, and said
unto them, He that is without sin among you, let him first cast a
stone at her.
And again he stooped down, and wrote on the ground.
And they which heard it, being convicted by their own conscience,
went out one by one, beginning at the eldest, even unto the last: and
Jesus was left alone, and the woman standing in the midst.
When Jesus had lifted up himself, and saw none but the woman,
he said unto her, Woman, where are those thine accusers? hath no
man condemned thee?
She said, No man, Lord. And Jesus said unto her, Neither do I
condemn thee: go, and sin no more.
NOTES
[Heaney explains (Preocccupations: Selected Prose 1968-1978 [London,
1980], pp. 13-14) that his early essays were written in the days of
'Practical Criticism' (another way of describing what I am calling New
Criticism) and although later essays like this one are more discursive and
allusive than those in Preoccupations they are still predominantly New
Critical. Heaney must be aware that poststructuralists like Barthes and
Foucault claim that authors don't matter; certainly he insists on seeing the
value and the different modes of operation of poetry as inseparable from
the strenuously committed life of the poet. Hence his attention to Eastern
European poetry where this connection seems obvious.
The range of Heaney's literary reference (constantly relevant to his own
poetry as his expositors are well aware) can only be represented adequately
here by a sequence of editorial end-notes. Ed.]
11. See Richard EHmann, The Identity of Yeats (2nd edn, 1964; London,
1975), p. xxiv.
12. Elizabeth Bishop, Complete Poems (London, 1970), pp. 72-4.
13. Elizabeth Bishop, Geography III (London, 1977).
14. Word used in the Old English elegiac tradition for 'fate' or 'ordained
course of events'. See B.J. Timmer, 'Wyrd in Anglo-Saxon Prose and
Poetry', Neophilologus, 26 (1940-1), 24-33,213-28.
15. Frost to Walter Prichard Eaton, 18 September 1915. Selected Letters,
ed. Lawrance Thompson (London, 1965), p. 191.
16. E. Martin Browne, The Making of Eliot's Plays (Cambridge, 1969),
p. 158.
17. Yeats, A Vision (London, 1974), p. 25.
10
Seamus Heaney's new collection of critical pieces falls into two sec-
tions. The first brings together reviews, articles and lectures con-
cerned with some poets who are more or less close to Heaney's own
work: Kavanagh, Larkin, Walcott, all writers who problematise the
notion of the poet's (literal) 'place', the poet's 'Here' -ness, as Larkin
might have thought it. This is followed by considerations of a body
of work which raises questions of the poet's place in language -
poetry in translation - firstly from the Irish and then from the lan-
guages of the Eastern bloc. Finally, the second section of the book
comprises Heaney's ruminations on 'the government of the tongue'
in Auden, Lowell and Plath, the substance of his T.S. Eliot
memorial lectures.
Near the end of the collection of essays, reviews and lectures,
Heaney calls to mind Lowell's refusal to read at President Johnson's
White House Festival of Arts in the 1960s. Lowell remarked then
that 'every serious artist knows that he cannot enjoy public cele-
bration without making subtle public commitments'. 1 Since he
quotes this with approval, Heaney must have been troubled by a
similar thought when invited to give the T.S. Eliot memorial lec-
tures in 1986. Certainly, the essays gathered together here address
the pressing issue of conscience. Indeed Heaney focuses on 'the role
of the poet as consCience, one who wakens us to a possible
147
148 THOMAS DOCHERTY
as such. The problem is set out right from the start, when Heaney
indicates that:
In the course of this book, Mandelstam and other poets from Eastern
bloc countries are often invoked. I keep returning to them because
there is something in their situation that makes them attractive to a
reader whose formative experience has been largely Irish. There is an
unsettled aspect to the different worlds they inhabit, and one of the
challenges they face is to survive amphibiously, in the realm of 'the
times' and the realm of their moral and artistic self-respect, a chal-
lenge immediately recognisable to anyone who has lived with the
awful and demeaning facts of Northern Ireland's history over the last
couple of decades.
(p. xx)
Might we not nowadays affirm ... that the shortest way to Whitby,
the monastery where Caedmon sang the first Anglo-Saxon verses, is
via Warsaw and Prague?
(pp. 40-1)
The drawing of those characters is like poetry, a break with the usual
life but not an absconding from it. Poetry, like the writing, is arbi-
trary and marks time in every possible sense of that phrase. It does
not say to the accusing crowd or to the helpless accused, 'Now a so-
lution will take place', it does not propose to be instrumental or ef-
fective. Instead, in the rift between what is going to happen and
whatever we would wish to happen, poetry holds attention for a
152 THOMAS DOCHERTY
all the way through this collection that Heaney regards that suffer-
ing in the east as the primary condition of great poetry. It is this
that he wishes to identify himself with; but this necessitates the
flight from home, in every sense of the word, the flight from
comfort and from the known; it requires a desire to sail into the
unknown, to make the real move eastwards. In this, the reader of
poetry would, perhaps for the first time, acknowledge its difficulty,
would release poetry into its full incomprehensibility and obscurity.
And she or he would thus find a mode of emancipation from the
self and from the claim upon identity, a claim which fundamentally
reposes in imperialist thinking, and in the desire not to hear the
Other, not to hear the discordant music of Eliot's Keatsian nightin-
gale whose song is a kind of 'poison in the ears', a song of discord,
not a harmony: 'Jug jug'. In this way, poetry becomes not the
repository of the possibility of anamnesis; rather, it opens the poss-
ibility of a future in which, to put this in Rilke's words here cited
(in translation) by Heaney: 'You must change your life' (p. 14).
NOTES
[Thomas Docherty's review is the clearest example in this New Casebook
of 'deconstruction', a mode of analysis favoured by Jacques Derrida and
other poststructuralists. It is not at first easy to follow and you might find it
helpful to reread the detailed account of its linguistic ploys and reversals
provided in the Introduction to this volume. Docherty detects an underly-
ing binary opposition between 'identity' and 'alterity' in Heaney's dis-
course. By displaying how such terms achieve their meaning through their
difference from each other, each carrying the 'trace' of the other, Docherty
sets out to overturn Heaney's preferred hierarchy (in which 'identity' is
privileged over 'alterity'). Docherty suggests that it is 'the ghostly presence
of a theology' (the authority with which Jesus writes in the dust in
Heaney's last long quotation) (p. 144 above) which prevents the poet from
abandoning 'imperialist thinking' in aesthetic and ideological matters alike.
This piece is like Eagleton's review of Field Work (essay 7) in drawing at-
tention to the political implications of Heaney's aesthetic stance in the
pages of a general literary magazine. Ed.]
I
I believe they are afflicted with a sense of history that was once the
peculiar affliction of the poets of other nations who were not them-
selves natives of England but who spoke the English language ... A
desire to preserve indigenous traditions, to keep open the imagina-
tion's supply lines to the past ... to perceive in these a continuity of
communal ways, and a confirmation of an identity which is threat-
ened - all this is signified by their language.
(Seamus Heaney, 'Englands of the Mind', Preoccupations, p. 150)
155
156 DAVID LLOYD
only an aid to an archaeology of the Irish genius, but the very foun-
dation on which an Irish literature might construct a distinctive
identity:
identification of the writer with that spirit of the nation which his re-
searches reveal supplies his relation to the 'entail of feeling' which
links him to his patrimony; that identification similarly ensures the
revitalisation of the relation of his language to native place or
ground, despite the fact that that language will, as MacCarthy was
only too aware, be English; and thirdly, the revitalised relation of
writer to place sutures that writer's formerly ruptured identity, en-
suring, as if to complete the topology, his relation to the paternal
spirit or genius of the nation. Since nationalism offers a theory of the
integration of the individual subject with the destiny of the race, it is
not surprising that the dynamic sketched above resembles that of the
'family romance' by which, supposedly, the victory of the race over
the individual is achieved. 10 As in the family, so in the nation, as na-
tionalist ideologists have so often stressed. Within the triangle of his
family romance, the writer mediates between his motherland and a
symbolic fatherland. He elevates his imaginary relation with the land
of his birth to an identification with a spiritual nation which is that
of his forefathers in the double sense of their possession and his
inheritance. His identity is thus assured in assuring the quasi-
procreative relationship between land and culture.
The recourse to the 'racial archetype', in the ever more
commodified and familiar images of Irish nationalism, and the ma-
nipulation of the relation of Irishness to Irish ground, linked as
these are through Kathleen Nf Houlihan, the motherland, together
produce the forms in which the aestheticisation of Irish politics is
masked. Aesthetics, understood here to be ultimately the concept
of man as producer and as producer of himself through his prod-
ucts, posits an original identity which precedes difference and
conflict and which is to be reproduced in the ultimate unity that
aesthetic works both prefigure and prepare. The naturalisation of
identity effected by an aesthetic ideology serves to foreclose histor-
ical process and to veil the constitution of subjects and issues in
continuing conflict, while deflecting both politics and ethics into a
hypothetical domain of free play. 11 This is, par excellence, the
domain of culture, envisaged by Arnold as the end of historical
process and as the timeless zone within time where one may cultiv-
ate one's 'best self' beyond or outside historical conflict. Aesthetic
politics in turn represents images of origin and unity to convey an
ethical demand for the political coherence which will override
whatever differences impede a unification in continuity with
original identity.
160 DAVID LLOYD
history joins with a persuasive insinuation that the reasons for repe-
tition lie in the nature of Irish identity. It is the argument of this
essay that such mystifications are inherent in the cultural and aes-
thetic thinking which dominates both the Irish and the English tra-
ditions, and that the apparent freedom of the aesthetic realm from
politics is in itself a crucially political conception. The political
function of aesthetics and culture is not only to suggest the possibil-
ity of transcending conflict, but to do so by excluding (or integrat-
ing) difference, whether historically produced or metaphysically
conceived, in so far as it represents a threat to an image of unity
whose role is finally hegemonic. 15 The poetics of identity is inti-
mately involved in both the efficacy and the contradictions of aes-
thetic politics and political aesthetics.
II
And when we look for the history of our sensibilities I am convinced,
as Professor J.C. Beckett was convinced about the history of Ireland
generally, that it is to what he called the stable element, the land
itself, that we must look for continuity.
(Heaney, 'The Sense of Place')
With that suppression the writer can forget or annul the knowledge
of writing's power both for dispossession and subjection - 'I look
down' - and represent it instead as the metaphorical continuation
of a work which has already been taken as a metaphor for writing.
What assures that continuity, both across generations and across
the twenty-year span of the writer's own history, is the symbolic
position of the father in possession of and working the land.
Standing initially as a figure for the writer's exclusion from identity
with land and past, the father, by way of his own father, slides
across into the position of a figure for continuity:
I had a great sense of release as they were being written, a joy and a
devil-may-careness, and that convinced me that one could be faithful
to the nature of the English language - for in some sense these poems
are erotic mouth-music by and out of the anglo-saxon [sic] tongue-
and, at the same time, be faithful to one's own non-English origin,
for me that is County Derry.
HEANEY AND THE POETICS OF IDENTITY 167
Anahorish
My 'place of clear water',
the first hill in the world
where springs washed into
the shiny grass ...
I have always listened for poems, they come sometimes like bodies
come out of a bog, almost complete, seeming to have been laid down
a long time ago, surfacing with a touch of mystery. They certainly
involve craft and determination, but chance and instinct have a role
in the thing too. I think the process is a kind of somnambulist en-
HEANEY AND THE POETICS OF IDENTITY 169
For all their rigid, dualistic schematisation, which is only the more
rigid for its pretension to be instinctual and unsystematic, and for
all the inanity of the content of that dualism - oral, feminine, un-
conscious image and emotion versus cultured, masculine, conscious
will and intelligence - such formulations acutely register the form of
integration which is projected. Non-differentiation lies in the matter
which precedes all difference and is regained in the product which is
the end of difference, the aesthetic object, the poem. Culture repeats
primary cultivation, its savour is oral, racy of the soil. Masculine
and feminine marry likewise in the moment the poem is forged out
of their difference, reproducing a unity of word and flesh always
assumed to pre-exist that difference. In the insistent formalisation
of this rigidly gendered representation of difference, Heaney elides
the complex and often contradictory heterogeneity of Irish social
formations and their histories, recapitulating his similar dualisation
of the oral and literate elsewhereY
Only when special and explanatory status is pleaded for this con-
solatory myth do contradiction and difference return, to use a
Heaneyish notion, with a vengeance, as in the series of bog poems
which commences with 'The Tollund Man' in Wintering Out, and
is extended through North. The origin of these poems in P.V.
Glob's The Bog People is doubtless familiar, but it is as well to re-
produce Heaney's own account:
sition, the appositions 'Naked except for!fhe cap, noose and girdle,'
and 'Bridegroom to the goddess' slip between the poet and the victim.
The immediacy of that relation, brought thus to the very brink of
identification, facilitates the elimination of human agency, which is
distilled to thematically equivalent operations of sacrifice (by which
the corpse is worked 'to a saint's kept body') and poetic rememora-
tion which reverses, by analogy with exhumation, the direction of
sacrifice without invalidating it. The subordination of human agency
to aesthetic form is reinforced in the second section as the two atroci-
ties there described are contained within the faintly redeeming notion
of their possible germination, their flesh scattered like seed:
III
So much in Ireland still needs to be done ... the definition of the
culture, and the redefinition of it. If you could open students into
trust in their own personality, into some kind of freedom and cultiva-
tion, you could do a hell of a lot. 24
From David Lloyd, Anomalous States: Irish Writing and the Post-
Colonial Moment (Dublin, 1993), pp. 13-40. (First published in
Boundary, 2:13, 2-3 [1985).)
HEANEY AND THE POETICS OF IDENTITY 181
NOTES
[David Lloyd is like Thomas Docherty (essay 10) in privileging 'difference',
'the dialectical contrary to the concept of identity' (n. 15 below). In the
main line of poststructuralist thought he sees the latter concept as governed
by the Western intellectual tendency to postulate a humane centre for all
discursive activity. 'Difference' for Lloyd is 'that which cannot be assimi-
lated to the unity of identitarian thinking' (n. 15 below). Lloyd's own
thought is systematically Marxist, following Adorno (nn. 15 and 23) and
Gramsci (n. 11). He insists that social and political existence implies 'divi-
sions' impervious to the ideology of identity: first between the non-
productive and the productive worker (p. 176 above) and then between the
developing postcolonial polity and neo-imperialism (pp. 161 and 180
above). According to Lloyd, the concern with identity manifested by
Heaney's poetry (and the tradition in which it stands) ignores and conceals
these divisions. His introduction to Anomalous States in which the essay
was republished (Dublin [1993], pp. 1-12) makes explicit the relationship
of his approach to that of other 'postcolonial theorists' like Franz Fanon,
Homi K. Bhabha and Gayatri C. Spivak. (On all three see Selden and
Widdowson, A Reader's Guide to Contemporary Literary Theory [Heme!
Hempstead, 1993], pp. 188-97, 200-2.) Ed.]
I am, however, obliged to Craig Raine of Faber and Faber for the fol-
lowing 'approximate figures', whose 'general lesson is sound and
obvious enough': 'We would probably have printed 2000-3000 copies
of his first book, whereas now we would print somewhere in the
region of 20,000 copies' (letter, 12 October 1983).
29. See Matthew Arnold, 'The Function of Criticism in the Present Time',
Lectures and Essays, pp. 265-6: 'Force till right is ready; and till right
is ready force, the existing order of things, is justified, is the legitimate
ruler' (original emphasis).
30. John Kenneth Galbraith, The New Industrial State, 2nd edn
(Harmondsworth, 1974), especially ch. 5, 'Capital and Power'. The
analysis, if not the conclusion, of this study is valuable, and challeng-
ing to any materialist view of the current economy.
31. Arnold, 'On the Study of Celtic Literature', pp. 296-7.
12
I
This essay investigates the construction of feminine figures, and the
vocabulary of roles allotted to them by two prominent contempo-
rary Irish poets, John Montague and Seamus Heaney. Feminine
figures and more or less abstract ideas of femininity play a major
role in the work of both: how should this centrality of the feminine
be interpreted? Is it, as it most usually announces itself, to be taken
as a celebration? Or does it flatter to deceive, as has been remarked
about Matthew Arnold's perhaps analogous celebration of the
alleged Celtic virtues of passion, sensuousness, non-rational insight
(see Cairns and Richards, 'Woman' 1)? I have chosen to discuss the
work of male poets, believing strongly that both 'gynocritics' - the
'naming', recovery and revaluing of women's writing - and the per-
sistent demystifying of representations of women in men's work
must continue in tandem. The social and cultural construction of
gender is a continuously occurring process, in which it is certainly
not yet time to stop intervening. I shall argue that even able and
185
186 PATRICIA COUGHLAN
II
Turning to the representation of gender roles in Heaney's work in
particular, we find that he tends towards two opposing and possibly
complementary representations of gender interaction. One con-
structs an unequivocally dominant masculine figure, who explores,
describes, brings to pleasure and compassionates a passive feminine
one. The other proposes a woman who dooms, destroys, puzzles
and encompasses the man, but also assists him to his self-discovery:
the mother stereotype, but merged intriguingly with the spouse.
Members of the first group, representing masculine domination, are
'Undine' and 'Rite of Spring', in which the man's victory is achieved
in agricultural terms; 'Punishment' and 'Bog Queen', which
combine an erotic disrobing narrative (as in Renaissance and other
love poetry) and a tone of compassionate tenderness, with a very
equivocal result; and the political group including 'Ocean's Love to
Ireland', 'Act of Union' and 'The Betrothal of Cavehill', which
usually rehearse narratives of rape and sexual violation. The second
group contains 'The Tollund Man', 'The Grauballe Man' and the
intense and intriguing 'Kinship', which merges mother and spouse
as well as active and passive and, I shall argue, functions primarily
as a masculine-identity myth, despite its political ending and the
political criticism it has chiefly attracted.
In Heaney's first two collections, the most prominent form of at-
tention to gender roles is what may be termed vocational: an alloca-
tion of special domains to the masculine and feminine, of a
triumphantly traditional kind. Masculine actors find the greater
space: in Death of Naturalist, the very first poem 'Digging' fore-
shadows later, explicitly sexual, bog poems, with its all too rele-
vant succession of phallic surrogates - pen, 'snug as a gun', spade -
and its sensuously rich material which waits passively to be 'dug'
('He ... buried the bright edge deep', in the 'squelch and slap I Of
soggy peat' [p. 12]). The active prowess of the speaker's male ances-
tors is stressed, and he is concerned to present his own displace-
THE REPRESENTATION OF WOMEN 191
bog burials, with the rather vaguely realised notion of the land of
Ireland as seeker of sacrifices, from nationalist political tradition. 12
In his bog poems Heaney sexualises the religious conceptions of
Celtic and north European prehistory. 13 Gender in Celtic and other
early mythologies was a metaphysical concept, one of several
dyadic means of cosmic organisation (male:female lining up with
black:white, left:right, north:south, and so forth); a proper service
to male and female divinities of earth and air was connected with
successful cultivation. 14 This is, of course, markedly different from
the predominantly sexual interpretation of gender in our culture,
which sees it as inextricably bound up with individual personal
identity and affective fulfilment, an understanding deriving from
Christian theology, the European tradition of courtly love, and the
insights of psychoanalysis, among other sources. Heaney's archais-
ing projection of specifically sexual feeling on to agricultural prac-
tices ('Rite of Spring', 'Undine') (Door into the Dark, pp. 25, 26)
and human sacrifices to a fertility goddess (the bog poems) seems to
be a bid to reach past urban and intellectual social forms and their
accompanying thought-world, which are implicitly judged as
wanting, to a notional state of physical naturalness and 'anonymi-
ties' whether folk or prehistoric. An obvious casualty of this
attempt, were it to succeed, would be the impulse to individual self-
determination and reflexivity. This is an impulse noticeably present
in the self-construction of poets, but it is its assumed absence as a
defining figure in the lives of Irish rural people and Iron Age Danes
which seems to be being celebrated. Thus a disjunction appears
between the speaking subjects of these writings and their unspoken
objects. In particular the female figures in this conjured world are
the epitome of a general silence, at the opposite pole from the de-
scribing, celebrating, expressing poet. Whether active or passive,
these figures are spoken for, and this division is a highly
problematic one.
The two successive poems, 'Rite of Spring' and 'Undine' are
perhaps the first examples of an attempt to project sexual feelings
into a landscape (Door into the Dark, pp. 25, 26). They are there-
fore ancestors of the more famous bog poems, but differ from them
in using the second model I have outlined at the outset, one of male
activity and female passivity. They project onto a water-pump and
a stream respectively the figure of a sexually willing woman, who
waits to be coaxed into satisfaction by farming skill: 'It cooled, we
lifted her latch,/Her entrance was wet, and she came' (p. 25). This
THE REPRESENTATION OF WOMEN 193
his eye-lids,/His pointed skin cap'). But here it is also made an effect
of erotic absorption and incorporation by a female energy con-
ceived as both inert and devouring. 19 If one turns the motif this way
round, for the moment understanding it primarily as a way of
thinking about woman rather than about Irish political murder, it
reveals an intense alienation from the female. Eros-Thanatos pair-
ings generally do seem to rely on a perception of woman as channel
for masculine fear and desire, and this is no exception. 20 When one
readmits into one's mind the poem's parallel between Stone Age
sacrifices to the fertility goddess and Irish political murders in the
1970s, one's increased awareness of the erotic-aesthetic frisson in
the first section makes the analogy seem all the more shaky and
difficult to assent to. Can this sexual thrill really have anything
other than mischief to bring to our thought about the actual perpe-
tration of torture and murder? 21
'Kinship' at the dead centre of the collection North, also represents
a centre of Heaney's project. Developing a hint at the end of the
earlier 'Bogland' ('The wet centre is bottomless', Door into the Dark,
p. 56) it presents Ireland's bogland as above all an encompasser -
ruminant, storer, embalmer, 'insatiable bride', swallower, mideen,
floe. At the end of the passage is a disrobing moment: the ground
'will strip/its dark side' as if undressing. As the poem's hero pulls out,
then replaces, a turf-spade in the bog, 'the soft lips of the
growth/muttered and split', leaving the spade-shaft 'wettish/as I sank
it upright .. .' (North, p. 42). Following this moment of phallic dis-
covery (evidently granted with some reluctance by the bog) and rein-
sertion, recalling Heaney's many earlier digging and ploughing
passages, there is an explicit merging of birth and death - 'a bag of
waters/and a melting grave' - in this personified ground, a 'centre'
which, unlike Yeats's, 'holds' (North, p. 43 ). The poet identifies
himself as having grown out of this bog 'like a weeping willow/in-
clined to/the appetites of gravity'. In a turn to the overtly political at
the end of this poem, he addresses Tacitus, Roman describer of Celtic
Europe, wryly acknowledging the practice of 'slaughter for the
common good' (which presumably represents both the ritual human
sacrifices described in the Germania and Northern Ireland's deaths):
Report us fairly,
First, taking this passage politically, one might argue that the
evident irony in the expression 'slaughter for the common good'
does not solve the more general problem of a projection of the
mythic and ritual onto history and the resulting blockage of ratio-
nal understanding and possible action. The poet compulsively pred-
icates his claim to intuitive identification with his landscape on
personifying it as feminine and equating it with death ('The goddess
swallows/our love and terror'). As others have suggested, this
further entangles the gloomy facts of Irish political history with the
heady rhetoric of nationalist ideology instead of interrogating
them. 22 My second point concerns the poem's real priorities. It pri-
vatises and sexualises the political. Its early sections show much
greater intensity than the later (which has probably contributed un-
noticed to critics' questioning of the ending): the charged personal
ode to the bog as mother and partner - giver and receiver of the
spade-phallus - is no more than tenuously related to political refer-
ences at the end, which risk seeming merely dutiful. I think the real
focus is on the speaker's private myth of identity formation, on
wresting a self from 'feminine' unbounded indeterminacy of the
bog. This poem attempts a synthesis of the stereotypes of feminin-
ity: the bog-goddess is imagined as both mother and spouse, and as
destroyer and provider, but it is still persistently (and in both
senses) the ground on which the speaker's self and his very identity
is predicated. The feminine is thus once again an Other but not
really envisaged as an alternative subject or self: a relation of com-
plementarity, certainly, but not of equality, and one which en-
shrines difference in the oppressive sense of that word.
Following the privatised and sexualised bog-Ireland poems, there
is also a series of poems in North which mount a specifically politi-
cal gender-historical narrative of English conquest and colonisation
in Ireland. This series includes 'Ocean's Love to Ireland' and 'Act of
Union'. Both these poems employ the conceit representing political
conquest by acts of sexual possession, and 'Act of Union' makes
the male/English violator its speaker; and/or: it is a love poem to a
pregnant spouse. There is a crucial ambiguity about the sexual act
198 PATRICIA COUGHLAN
... I caress
The heaving province where our past has grown.
I am the tall kingdom over your shoulder
That you would neither cajole nor ignore.
Conquest is a lie ...
(North, p. 49)
In the second stanza, the familiar moment when the land is taken
as spouse(' ... to bed me down/Among my love's hideouts, her pods
and broom') allows us to identify the 'bridegroom' equivocally in
three possible ways: either as an autobiographical splinter of the
poet, or as an IRA man on the run and living rough in the country-
side, or as the rock itself 'marrying' the prone land it surveys so
dominantly. So the familiar reprise of nationalist attachment to the
land as a betrothal to death is complicated by the ethnically double
male presence in the poem: the 'Adam untouched' figure of
Cavehill, which is made to represent the culturally masculine in-
transigence of northern Protestantism, disdaining converse with the
land-as-Eve; and the presumably Catholic 'bridegroom', who 'beds
down' in the land. Even the culturally feminine Catholic/nationalist
figure is biologically male: may we read this as a discreet Utopian
moment in which all (males) may merge their differences in a
general bedding down in the (female) land? As to politics, this may
be an improvement; but as to gender, it is the status quo as in all
the other poems: politics is seen in terms of sexuality, but not the
reverse. The mildly humorous characterisation of the rock as phallic
stops short of demythicising Genesis, however wry it is about
northern Protestant no-surrendering: the gender there was before
gender was already male.
It may seem that I am ignoring one of the prominent develop-
ments of Heaney's later work, namely his 'marriage poems', partic-
ularly in Field Work, and indeed the sprinkling of earlier personal
love poems. I believe, however, that these poems are mostly also
recuperable to this broadly dualistic active-passive pattern I have
outlined. 23 Poem VI in the sequence 'Station Island', for example
('Freckle-face, fox-head, pod of the broom'), is motivated by an
autobiographical 'plot', but centres on the constitutively masculine
gestures of watching and actively desiring an uncommunicative and
200 PATRICIA COUGHLAN
and what one might term a genial voyeurism is typical of the love
poems in general: 'The Skunk' is a classic example (Field Work,
p. 48). 24 'Polder' (Field Work, p. 51), one of the 'marriage poems',
is a kind of psychologised reprise of 'Kinship', shorn of political ex-
trapolation. It retains the land-woman metaphoric equation: in the
combined metaphor of possession and origination re-employed
from 'Kinship', the woman is the territory where the man, 'old
willow', has his 'creel of roots', and 'I have reclaimed my polder ,fall
its salty grass and mud-slick banks'. One might read the sequence
Field Work itself, and its stress on the erotic excitement of retracing
physical marks and stains on the spouse's limbs, as working to
fetishise woman's body in much the same way as Montague's The
Great Cloak does. 25
So must we not conclude that the poetry of Montague and
Heaney as a whole is insistently and damagingly gendered? Its mas-
culine personae, whether in the narrative of personal identity, or
that of nationality, must, it seems, possess or be possessed by a
counter-force personified as feminine: an encounter of the genders
as of aliens - dog eat dog, possess or be swallowed up - is forever
occurring, even within and beneath politics. On this evidence, it
remains very difficult for men, when they imagine self-formation as
a struggle, to escape conceiving that struggle, however metaphori-
cally or virtually, as against the feminine. The integral self counted
as so precious to the capacity for expression of these poets is won
against a necessarily subordinated ground of merely potential, never
actual feminine selves. In Lacanian terms, they seem to be stuck in
the self/not-self dualism of the mirror stage, failing to arrive at an
acknowledgement of the existence of an autonomous subjectivity in
others: a structure common to sexism and racism. 26 Just as 'every
document of civilisation is a document of barbarism>,2 7 in
Benjamin's phrase, so one is tempted to conclude that every feat of
self-discovery by these masculine poets entails the defeat of a femi-
nine ego. Or as Irigaray puts it:
THE REPRESENTATION OF WOMEN 201
the/a woman fulfils a twofold function- as the mute outside that sus-
tains all systematicity; as a maternal and still silent ground that nour-
ishes all foundations - ... 28
NOTES
Patricia Coughlan identifies her own practice in terms of the second of two
modes prescribed for feminist criticism by Elaine Showalter. The first, 'gyn-
ocritics' was to be concerned with the woman as writer. The second, 'the
feminist critique', was to demonstrate how 'the hypothesis of a female
reader changes our apprehension of a given text, awakening us to the
significance of its sexual codes' ('Towards a Feminist Poetics', Women
Writing and Writing about Women, ed. Mary Jacobus (London, 1979,
pp. 25-6). The essay's wide range of reference to anthropology, psychology
and the history of mythology and to critics like Walter Benjamin, Homi K.
Bhabha and Luce lrigaray carefully subserves this purpose. I have, with the
author's permission, excised from the original text of her essay a section
devoted exclusively to John Montague's work. Montague remains,
however, a comparative foil to Heaney in the development of her argument
and the reader may wish to refer to his New Selected Poems (Newcastle,
1990) which contains all the poems discussed. Ed.]
version seems a modern and hybrid construct. See Mac Carra, Celtic
Mythology, pp. 66, 86.
19. See Corcoran, Seamus Heaney, pp. 96ff., for an informed and intelli-
gent commentary from a general point of view on these poems.
Longley, Poetry in the Wars, pp. 140-69 gives a trenchant discussion
which makes some good demystificatory points, but insists on a for-
malist and depoliticising understanding of poetry which is itself open
to question ('Poetry and politics, like church and state, should be sepa-
rated' [p. 185]). Elmer Andrews (The Poetry of Seamus Heaney
[London, 1988]) is sensitive and painstaking, but his formalist
approach tends to perpetuate the reification of gender-roles.
20. See Mills, Women, Nature and Psyche, pp. 157ff. on Freud, Marcuse
and the notion of the 'primal horde': 'Because woman was
Eros/Thanatos/Nirvana in "immediate" union she represented the
threat of "mere nature" - "the regressive impulse for peace which
stood in the way of progress - of Life itself"' (p. 157, quoting
Marcuse's Eros and Civilization [1972]). One might add that Heaney's
repeated meditations on the bog bodies are, of course, not at all con-
cerned to open the enquiry anthropologically towards a rational in-
vestigation either of Stone Age religious and agricultural behaviour, or
of Irish politics, but to make 'offerings or images that were emblems'
(Heaney interview, 1977, quoted in Corcoran, Seamus Heaney, p. 96).
21. As Edna Longley has well said: 'Heaney does not distinguish between
involuntary and voluntary "martyrdom", and the nature of his "arche-
type" is such as to subsume the latter within the former' (Poetry in the
Wars, 151).
22. On the irony in the last section of 'Kinship', see Corcoran, Seamus
Heaney, p. 119, against other commentators who accuse Heaney of a
crude nationalism (Longley, Poetry in the Wars, pp. 185-210 and
Morrison, Seamus Heaney, pp. 68, 81).
23. With the exception of the early 'Lovers on Aran', in which for once the
stress is on a quality of mutuality and indistinguishableness in the
lovers' relation: 'Did sea define the land or land the sea? .. .' (Death of
a Naturalist, p. 4 7), and occasional other poems such as no. X of the
Glanmore Sonnets ('I dreamt we slept in a moss in Donegal .. .') (Field
Work, p. 42).
24. The engagingly self-mocking 'Sweeney's Returns' even discerns that
voyeuristic structure as a comedy, but scarcely to the extent of dis-
mantling it (Station Island, p. 114 ).
25. Uohn Montague, The Great Cloak (Dublin, 1978). See, for instance,
poems like 'Snowfield' (p. 11) and 'Don Juan's Farewell' (p. 19). Ed.]
It is fair to say, however, that Heaney's The Haw Lantern (London,
1988) marks a general turn away both from mythicising in the earlier
THE REPRESENTATION OF WOMEN 205
manner, and from sexual stereotyping in love poetry; but it is not yet
clear whether this does signal a new politics in the most general sense.
26. As Homi K. Bhabha says, 'Colonial power produces the colonised as a
fixed reality which is at once an "other" yet entirely knowable and
visible' ('The Other Question: Difference, Discrimination and the
Discourse of Colonialism', 0. Francis Barker et al. [eds], Literature,
Politics and Theory [London, 1986], p. 156). On the mirror stage and
entry into the symbolic order as a passage beyond dualism, see J.P.
Mueller and W.J. Richardson, Lacan and Language; a Guide to Ecrits
(New York, 1982), p. 136. I thank Nick Daly for discussion of this
point.
27. Walter Benjamin, 'Theses on the Philosophy of History', Illuminations,
ed. Hannah Arendt, trans. Harry Zohn (London, 1992), p. 248. [Ed].
28. Luce Irigaray, Speculum of the Other Woman, p. 365.
13
Ana-; or Postmodernism,
Landscape, Seamus
Heaney
THOMAS DOCHERTY
206
POSTMODERNISM, LANDSCAPE, SEAMUS HEANEY 207
tic - and political - act which aims to 'suture' the wound to Ireland
which is the border.
'The Grauballe Man' is, in a sense, a poem on poetry itself; its
writing is precisely this kind of therapeutic anamnesis:
I have always listened for poems, they come sometimes like bodies
come out of a bog, almost complete, seeming to have been laid down
a long time ago, surfacing with a touch of mystery. 4
past, not just in terms of his search for 'images and symbols ade-
quate to our predicament'/ but, rather, in terms of the very his-
toricity of the present, his present as a moment in flux, his spatial
present as a moment bifurcated, divided, a moment when space has
gone critical, differential, historical rather than antiquarian. As
Deane suggests, the mythologisation of history is more of a wound
than a salve. 8
The poem's crucial turn lies in a stanza which is itself an inter-
stitial stanza:
modernism at its end but in the nascent state, and this state 1s
constant. 9
Time surfaces, a little like the body in the bog which is also, for
Heaney, the poem itself in which time - or in my preferred term
here, historicity - exposes itself.
This 'temps qui s'expose' is prefigured, as Virilio points out, in
the techniques of photography and cinema. 16 Those techniques, of
course, were precisely the techniques which Benjamin feared, on the
grounds that they would make history less accessible, would dere-
alise it in some wayY However, this derealisation is nothing more
nor less than the denial of the availability of the coupe immobile,
the denial of the still; and it bears repeating that the still itself is the
very opposite of historicity as such; the still, or the coupe immobile
which enables a stable knowledge of the past, the pastness of the
past, is a kind of epistemological myth, however necessary.
Heaney's text, however, is not about the pastness of the past but its
presence. This is in accord with the living in a critical space of
Ireland which Virilio would see as a paradigmatic postmodern con-
dition. As a result of the movement away from perspectivism and
its pieties towards cinematism, the inhabiting of time has sup-
planted the inhabiting of space itself. It is this issue which Heaney's
poem is addressing: the anamnesis of history.
In anamnesis, according to Plato in Meno, we have something
which Modernism articulated much later as a Proustian souvenir
involontaire. In this, there is not so much a moment of knowledge
of the past, but rather an actual recreation of the past, now present
fully: it is, as it were, the actualisation of the virtual. 18 It is this
POSTMODERNISM, LANDSCAPE, SEAMUS HEANEY 213
CURT CUTS
the curt cuts of an edge
Through living roots awaken in my head
(Heaney, 'Digging')
214 THOMAS DOCHERTY
I am afraid.
Sound has stopped in the day
And the images reel over
And over. ... 26
I had to read from Martin Luther King's famous 'I have a dream'
speech. 'I have a dream that one day this nation will rise up and live
out the full meaning of its creed' - and on that day all men would be
able to realise fully the implications of the old spiritual, 'Free at last,
free at last, Great God Almighty, we are free at last.' But, as against
the natural hopeful rhythms of that vision, I remembered a dream
that I'd had last year in California. I was shaving at the mirror of the
bathroom when I glimpsed in the mirror a wounded man falling
towards me with his bloodied hands lifted to tear at me or to
imploreY
This can be easily translated back into Heaney's text. Here, the idea
of the chin as a visor which is raised above the throat suggests a
literal 'disfiguration' in the sense that the face disappears in a par-
ticular way. It implies a closeness of the eye and the mouth, or, as
Lowell would have thought this, a closeness of 'Eye and Tooth'. In
Lowell's poem of that name, we have an examination of a particu-
lar kind of justice, the justice of a biblical mode (eye for eye, tooth
for tooth, etc.) which is placed at the service of a political ideology,
218 THOMAS DOCHERTY
NOTES
[In his review of Heaney's The Government of the Tongue (essay 10 above)
Thomas Docherty envisaged the poet beginning to hear 'the alterity, the in-
comprehensible otherness' as a preferable alternative to his 'imperialist
thinking'. In this later essay Docherty finds this projected shift of awareness
already accomplished in 'The Grauballe Man' which he diagnoses as a
'postmodernist poem'. One of his main aims is to provide an adequate
definition of postmodernism and my own Introduction tries to summarise
his conclusions. But another aim is to 'raise the stakes' of the poem (and
possibly of other related poems) so that Heaney is seen as engaging experi-
mentally with a wider range of contemporary issues than has yet been
acknowledged in recent criticism of his work.
Docherty assumes knowledge of Plato's dialogue, Meno, of the writing
of Robbe-Grillet, Lowell and Fredric Jameson, of the sculpture of Richard
Long as well as the paintings of Cezanne and Picasso, but the main chal-
lenge to the reader is linguistic. Docherty's first sentence (p. 206 above),
for instance, offers three meanings for the Greek prefix upon which his
argument is hinged, but the OED definition (up, in place or time, back,
again, anew) usefully complements what the 'play' of Docherty's critical
text provides. The following short glossary is similarly intended to bring
dictionary definitions fruitfully to bear on Docherty's sometimes cryptic
vocabulary:
220 THOMASDOCHERTY
1. See, for example, Seamus Deane, 'The Timorous and the Bold', in his
Celtic Revivals (London, 1985); Elmer Andrews, The Poetry of Seamus
Heaney (London, 1988); Neil Corcoran, Seamus Heaney (London,
1986). In their 'Introduction' to The Penguin Book of Contemporary
British Poetry (Harmondsworth, 1982), Blake Morrison and Andrew
Motion made a polemical claim for Heaney as '[t]he most important
new poet of the last fifteen years', one in the forefront of a new 'depart-
ure' in poetry 'which may be said to exhibit something of the spirit of
postmodernism'. The hesitancies in this final phrase reveal the fact that
their notion of postmodernism was extremely underinformed and un-
dertheorised. Antony Easthope trounces their suggestion in his piece,
'Why Most Contemporary Poetry Is So Bad', PN Review, 48 (1985),
pp. 36-8, where he also argues that 'The Grauballe Man' is, in fact,
'resolutely pre-modernist'. Both views miss some essential points of
what is at stake in the postmodern, as I'll argue here.
2. Paul Virilio, L'espace critique (Paris, 1984). At the simplest level, this
corresponds to an organisation of life in terms of 'quality time' or 'labour
time' rather than its organisation in terms of the 'metropolis' and the
'suburbs'. Cf. the work of Gilles Deleuze, especially with regard to the
idea that social, political and psychological life are all organised around
'lines of flight', making territorialisations and deterritorialisations.
3. Seamus Heaney, Preoccupations (London, 1980), pp. 148-9. For a
more detailed explication of this aesthetic in Long, see Thomas
Docherty, After Theory (London, 1990), pp. 22-4.
POSTMODERNISM, LANDSCAPE, SEAMUS HEANEY 221
223
224 STAN SMITH
And the same vigour comes out in another little word that is like a
capillary root leading down into the whole sensibility of Kavanagh's
place. In the first line, 'the bicycles go by in twos and threes'. They
do not 'pass by' or 'go past', as they would in a more standard
English voice or place, and in that little touch Kavanagh touches
what I am circling. He is letting the very life blood of the place in
that one minute incision. 4
'Pass by' may be a sly dig at Yeats's horseman. Heaney, at the fron-
tier, we note, is suddenly through, as if by magic without any ap-
parent act of transit, only in a simile passing from behind, passing
out between. The 'From' of the poem's title takes up but also takes
on the title of W.H. Auden's play On the Frontier. In 'Sounding
226 STAN SMITH
'Second thoughts' thus become the first fruits of thinking itself, and
the poem's second thoughts, moving out from between, end at a
watery margin which is also a crossing point, a place of negotiation
between opposing forces which figures the stance of one whose end
is peace, 'in midstream/Still parleying, in earshot of his peers'.
Whereas the early Auden stands repeatedly transfixed 'Upon this
line between adventure', caught 'Between attention and attention',
ordered to 'Turn back' before he reaches any frontier by a man
with a gun, because 'There is no change of place', 8 Heaney's prepo-
sitional space is a different one, not transfixed but moving 'with
guarded unconcerned acceleration' from 'out between'. In 'Station
Island' the ghost of William Carleton speaks of his own hardness in
a hard time as maybe containing a lesson for the poet, "'whoever
you are, wherever you come out of"'. Freedom may be found in
displacing oneself. But, as Heaney observes in 'The Sense of Place',
citing Carson McCullers, 'to know who you are, you have to have a
place to come from'.
The Celtic Twilight, for all its naiveties, was 'the beginning of a dis-
covery of confidence in our own ground, in our place, in our
speech, English and Irish', a discourse 'that would bind the people
of the Irish place to the body of their world'. This bodiliness of a
world 'instinct with signs', I shall suggest, is important. Heaney's
model here is Patrick Kavanagh's assertion that 'Parochialism is
228 STAN SMITH
less concerned in his criticism to speak about the actual tones and
strains of poetic language than to evoke the impersonal, impersonat-
ing, mask-like utterance which he takes all poetry to be. We are re-
minded how persona derives from personare, meaning 'to sound out
through', how the animation of the verb lives in the mask's noun-like
impassiveness. For Yeats, the poet is somebody who is spoken
through. 10
Poetry's special status among the literary arts derives from the audi-
ence's readiness to concede to it a similar efficacy and resource. The
poet is credited with a power to open unexpected and unedited com-
munications between our nature and the reality we inhabit. 11
what I had in mind was this aspect of poetry as its own vindicating
force. In this dispensation, the tongue (representing both a poet's
23 0 STAN SMITH
All the same, as I warm to this theme, a voice from another part of
me speaks in rebuke. 'Govern your tongue,' it says, compelling me to
remember that my title can also imply a denial of the tongue's auto-
nomy and permission. In this reading, 'the government of the tongue'
is full of monastic and ascetic strictness. One remembers Hopkins's
'Habit of Perfection', with its command to the eyes to be 'shelled',
the ears to attend to silence and the tongue to know its place. 14
Its place here is firmly in the cheek. It's noticeable that Heaney
nominates an equally Romantic, inspirational source for this coun-
tervailing instruction: 'a voice from another part of me ... com-
pelling me'. Yet it is an impersonal 'one' who remembers, not from
the poet's original place, but from a position where the voice
THE DISTANCE BETWEEN 231
assumes, not the vatic authority of the bard, but that of a well-
placed member of the literary ascendancy, languidly calling up
fellow members of the club. Just which place is it that Heaney is
knowing about, here?
A moment in The Haw Lantern sneakily qualifies this authority,
reminding us from what part of himself that voice may in fact have
spoken, as well as what he may know better, in the fourth of his
sonnet elegies for his mother:
Slyly coiled in the 'in-law maze' of the tongue, in the poem's absolv-
ing 'touch of love', the voices wait to speak out through the mask:
'Couldn't you do the Yeats touch?' One thinks too, that is, of
Joyce, deflating Yeats's flattery of Lady Gregory: 'The most beauti-
ful book that has come out of our country in my time. One thinks
of Homer.' 15
The tone is very different from Yeats's, a 'billet-doux', a
nursery rhyme, quiet, casual, governed, wishing no harm, its
blushful whimsy calling up the de la Mare of Peacock Pie. But
there is an altogether more strident resonance to the bird, recall-
ing that peacock which screamed among a rich man's flowering
lawns in Yeats's 'Ancestral Houses', betokening the end of a civil-
isation, adding a deeper darkness to the gathering dark. 'The
future's not our own'. But neither is the past. This levelled land-
scape reqmres a prayer for its future precisely because of that
past:
his instinctive being and his appetitive intelligence are knocked out of
alignment. He feels like a traitor among those he knows and loves. 18
Recent Northern Irish poetry, he says, reveals the same double dis-
placement. The way to cope with 'the strain of being in two places
at once, of needing to accommodate two opposing conditions of
truthfulness simultaneously' 19 is not despair, however, but Jung's
strategy of finding a 'displaced perspective' in which the suffering
individual can outgrow particularist allegiance while managing to
'keep faith with ... origins', 'stretched between politics and transcen-
dence ... displaced from a confidence in a single position by his dis-
position to be affected by all positions, negatively rather than
positively capable'. 20
The echo of Keats's 'negative capability' as an answer to
Wordsworth's 'egotistical sublime' indicates the way out Heaney
was to find from the Northern Irish deadlock from Field Work
onwards. It is in the 'lyric stance', in language as itself a site of dis-
placement, 'the whispering gallery of absence', 'the voice from
beyond', 21 that the writer can seek the hopeful imaginary resolu-
tion of real conflicts. Heaney's poetry has pursued language as po-
litical metaphor and metonymy through to its source, to a
recognition of language as both place of necessary exile and site of
a perpetual return home. Station Island is the product of such a
recognition, a volume full of departures and returns. Displacement
is here seen not as exile but as freedom, whether in the wide-blue-
yonder of America or the poetically licensed otherworlds of Dante's
Divine Comedy. The loving fidelity of the emigre who, like
Wordsworth, is necessarily now just 'visiting' that which he's left
behind provides the motive force for the volume, and a poem such
as the ironically entitled 'Away from it All' catches some of the
complexities of such a position. In The Haw Lantern Heaney goes a
step further, beyond the margins altogether, to deconstruct those
blarney-laden tales of nativity, decentring and redefining a self-
regarding Irishness. In the words of the title poem, it is not enough
to bask in 'a small light for small people'. The modest wish to
'keep/the wick of self-respect from dying out,/not having to blind
them with illumination' is too limited, too easy an ambition. Now
'it takes the roaming shape of Diogenes/with his lantern, seeking
one just man' to be the true measure of this field, scrutinising with a
gaze which makes 'you flinch .. ./its blood-prick that you wish would
test and clear you'. The terror of being tested, assessed, and the
THE DISTANCE BETWEEN 235
The old man is as much a victim as the writer. His illiterate fidelities
are the object of Stephen's scepticism, the substance of what Stephen
rejects; and yet they are a part of Stephen himself. Stephen is angry
23 6 STAN SMITH
that all his culture can offer him for veneration is this peasant oracle,
yet understanding the ruination that he and the old man share, he is
not prepared to struggle to the death. 23
[T]he poet who uses a diction must be very sure of the audience
which he addresses. He dare not be merely spokesman of their senti-
ments and habits, for he must purify the one and correct the other.
Yet he dare not be quite at odds with his age, but must share with his
readers certain assumptions ... At this point, discussion of diction
THE DISTANCE BETWEEN 237
Except that this time it was not so much a matter of attaching oneself
to a living symbol of being rooted in the native ground; it was more a
matter of preparing to be unrooted, to be spirited away into some
transparent, yet indigenous afterlife. The new place was all idea, if
you like; it was generated out of my experience of the old place but it
was not a topographical location. It was and remains an imagined
realm, even if it can be located at an earthly spot, a placeless heaven
rather than a heavenly place. 31
and tongs at the prayers for the dying' comes alive in the echo back
to the coal hammer of the opening, the household implements of
the previous poem and the soldering iron, bucket and 'fluent
dipping knives' of this. In another poem in the sequence the simple
chore of folding sheets 'hand to hand' and 'touch and go' opens up
these dead metaphors by figuring them forth in real space as
enacted moments in a complicated relation:
in fact the subtext of the whole sequence, even at the level of its
prepositions. 'Adjusted' (actually from adjuxtare) according to the
OED was early confused with the idea of an equalising 'justice' (ad
justus) which put things in their proper place, thus establishing a
kind of punning relation with 'adequate'; and the poet enacts this
adequation by juxtaposing them in his own 'genuinely well-/
adjusted adequate betrayal'. 'Pronouncing words "beyond her'"
thus overlays the simple speech act with the pronouncement of an
edict of expulsion by and from the tongue's seat of government.
This in turn opens up the politic adjustments of 'manage': in 'affect-
ing' incompetence (all she could manage) she adroitly manoeuvres
the son to fall fittingly back into his place ('decently relapse').
The Latinate pun is most brilliantly affected, however, in the con-
clusion of the poem:
swim
out on your own and fill the element
with signatures on your own frequency.
Heaney here gives a subtle, original twist to the cliche of the poet
finding his own voice. It is no accident, then, that the poem which
follows this and opens the next sequence, 'The First Gloss', should
instruct the poet to hold his pen like a spade ('Take hold of the
shaft of the pen'), in an intensely physical act of writing which
recalls the resolution in the first poem of his first collection:
I had a real problem: Write a poem for the Phi Beta Kappa at
Harvard that had to be spoken aloud, and be concerned with learn-
ing. And that poem is precisely about the distance that intervenes
between the person standing up in Sanders' Theatre, being the
donnish orator, and the child, pre-reflective and in its pre-writing
odd state. 38
Neil Corcoran39 sees this as a holy water font, and so it is. But it is
also the font of print itself, which is where all new texts find their
origins. Here, in the punning metaphoric overlaying of particular
life and printed page, Heaney figures forth that relation between
place and displacement which is the very ground of his writing.
NOTES
[Stan Smith is particularly concerned to justify the Heaney of The Haw
Lantern (a book in which some reviewers found a diminution of imagina-
tive power). He examines Heaney's later poetic language, its combination
of bareness of diction with syntactic vigour, and particularly its preposi-
tional manoevres. His approach combines an interest in the grammar and
syntax of poetry prompted by the English critic Donald Davie with a post-
structuralist awareness of the shifts and contradictions of textual
structures.
Smith's essay shows not only the influence of key theoretical works like
Derrida's On Grammatology (see my Introduction, p. 15 above) but a
more pervasive resort to the general assumptions which have followed in
the wake of Saussure. The 'binary' way 'place' and 'displacement' define
each other (p. 224) offers Smith a way of acknowledging Saussure's major
premiss that meaning is determined by the difference of one arbitrary
250 STAN SMITH
Paradigms of Possibility:
Seamus Heaney
RICHARD KIRKLAND
252
PARADIGMS OF POSSIBILITY 253
typical Ulster poet (with 'Ulster' probably taking a wry look back at
Kavanagh) and his environment. Perhaps the intention was to play
this stereotyped image against the specific differences Chambers en-
countered in his consideration of particular poets: an aim frustrated
by Chambers' own reluctance to dispense with that homogeneous
model. However, Turner's cartoon provides a visual representation
of most of the features of the paradigm I have previously outlined.
In the foreground is the figure of the poet sporting clipped goatee
beard, checked shirt and ill-fitting jacket. His right hand clutches a
loose leafed manuscript, his left is upraised in a gesture of enuncia-
tion. In the background is a divided landscape sundered (or linked)
by the figure of the poet. To the left is an image of a rural agrarian
location, to the right, the barbed wire, burning houses and broken
glass of a riot-torn Belfast, Derry, Portadown, or wherever. The
foregrounded figure of the poet mediates our reading of the back-
ground. Northern Ireland is not encountered through the poetry in
his hand but through the values embodied in the stance he adopts.
Moreover it is only the poet figure who can link the two disparate
landscapes in continuity. The urban/rural divide signals one form
of fracture while gesturing both to a temporal discontinuity
(past/present) and a conflict, understood empirically, between
reality and image. It is only possible to quantify these juxtaposi-
tions by recourse to the central figure who can embody, reconcile,
and represent the oppositions within his own example. A critical
practice which destabilises this centre cannot, therefore, hope to
access the privileged continuities it offers.
This paradigm was most fully tested by the publication, one year
later, of Heaney's North, a collection which relied heavily on the
mediating figure of the poet to reconcile the mythological elements
of the work to the political actuality which became its insistent
function. While there is a danger of overstressing Heaney's reliance
on this model within a reductive argument ill-equipped to analyse
its complications, it is fair comment to note that Heaney's painful
agonisings through North about the role of the poet within society
are best understood as a series of abdications and reaffirmations
from and to the paradigm as I have previously outlined it.
Moreover, in interview, Heaney could comment:
One can hardly resist the suspicion that North itself, as a work of
art, has succumbed to this notion; Heaney seems to have moved -
unwillingly perhaps - from being a writer with the gift of percision
(sic), to become the laureate of violence - a mythmaker, an anthro-
pologist of ritual killing, an apologist for 'the situation', in the last
resort, a mystifier. It make (sic) North a curiously uneven book ....
No-one really escapes from the massacre, of course - the only way
you can really do that is by falsifying issues, by applying wrong
notions of history instead of seeing what's before your eyes.
I couldn't say, of course, that I had found a voice but I had found a
game. I knew the thing was only word-play, and I hadn't even the
guts to put my name to it. I called myself Incertus, uncertain, a shy
soul fretting and all that. I was in love with words themselves, but
had no sense of a poem as a whole structure and no experience of
how the successful achievement of a poem could be a stepping stone
in your life. Those verses were what we might call 'trial-pieces', little
262 RICHARD KIRKLAND
Michael Parker has helpfully noted that this poem has its genesis
in a guided tour of South Derry undertaken by Heaney for the
benefit of the Jamaican poet Louis Simpson. 34 Encountering a
childhood acquaintance, Heaney is cast as a mediator between the
two men, who concomitantly embody aspects of his own lyric
persona. It is in this mediation that a reconciliation of the
parochial with the universal is made possible. Heaney as the artic-
ulate expression of his community is asked 'for help' by its voice-
less, 'bewildered' aspects. Embodying the location through the
relationship of dialect to territory, Heaney's strategy is, at first,
'cunning'; a mode of evading the awkward confrontation. This is
eased by the shift the poem takes towards formal closure through
its emphasis on the poetic voice; a transformation which Parker
notes approvingly: 'As a result of the stranger's presence, and
because of the increased sophistication of his technique, he is able
to re-cover his country, rediscover its familiar features and figures
by means of metaphor and allusion that "make strange".' While
this reading of the process delimits the full range of poetic co-
herencies available it should be noted that it allows Heaney a
closure which would be unobtainable in any other form. Rather
than suggesting a rediscovery of the location, the pressure implicit
to the concept of 'making strange' formalises Heaney's initial
264 RICHARD KIRKLAND
NOTES
[Richard Kirkland is interested in poetry as a cultural 'product' and in
whether Heaney's poetry contributes to the kind of cultural initiative re-
quired to push Northern Irish society forward and through its present social
and political arrest. He sees Heaney's readiness to function within the para-
meters of New Criticism as a serious drawback in this connection. Like
Jonathan Dollimore ('Culture and textuality', Textual Practice, 4 [1990],
91-100), whose 'cultural materialism' he to some extent shares, Kirkland is
keen to divest literary studies of a 'lingering attachment to Englit.' and is
deeply suspicious of critical modes with a compliant relationship to what he
calls 'ineffable statement' (p. 261 above). He shares with David Lloyd (essay
11) a belief that the 'identitarian' thinking which lies behind New Criticism
is allied to that which underpins the bourgeois status quo; and that the
critic's 'theoretical procedure' (p. 259 above) should undermine both. He
refers on p. 253 above to Chapter 4 of his book Literature and Culture in
Northern Ireland since 1965 entitled 'Unconscious Partitionism: Northern
Criticism in the Nineteen-eighties'. Ed.]
5. David Lloyd, "'Pap for the Dispossessed": Seamus Heaney and the
Poetics of Identity', Anomalous States: Irish Writing and the Post-
Colonial Moment (Dublin, 1993), p. 15.
6. John Carey, 2 June 1991, cited in Declan Kiberd's 'Heaney's Magic',
the Sunday Tribune (9 June 1991), p. 21.
7. Roland Barthes, Criticism and Truth, trans. Katrine Pilcher Keuneman
(London, 1987), p. 143.
8. Kiberd, 'Heaney's Magic', 21.
9. George Moore, Hail and Farewell (1911), ed. Richard Allen Cave
(Gerrards Cross, 1985), p. 56.
10. It is an awareness of 'Heaney's quasi-institutional acceptance on both
ideas of the Atlantic as a major poet' which led to Lloyd's 'Pap for the
Dispossessed'. [See essay 11. Ed.]
11. Theo Dorgan, 'Heaney's Vision Throws Light on the Ordinary',
Sunday Tribune Books Supplement (9 June 1991), p. 3.
12. John Keyes, 'A Dramatic Conversation', Fortnight, 288 (October
1990), 25. For a similar early example of this tendency see: John
Haffenden, 'Meeting Seamus Heaney', London Magazine (June 1979),
5-28.
13. Michael Parker, Seamus Heaney: The Making of the Poet (Dublin,
1993).
14. William Wordsworth, 'The Oxford Authors', ed. Stephen Gill
(Oxford, 1987), p. 603.
15. For a fuller, if contentious, reading of this phenomenon see Lloyd,
'Pap For the Dispossessed', pp. 14-18.
16. Clive James, Review of Wintering Out, Observer (26 November
1972), p. 25.
17. Antony Easthope, Literary Into Cultural Studies (London, 1991),
pp. 9-10.
18. Fortnight, 81 (5 April, 1974), 12-13.
19. This cartoon was republished in Troubled Times: Fortnight Magazine
and the Troubles in Northern Ireland 1970-91, ed. Robert Bell eta!.,
(Belfast, 1991), p. 106. A later cartoon of Heaney by Peter Brookes
used to illustrate Lachlan MacKinnon's review of Seeing Things ('A
Responsibility to Self', Times Literary Supplement, 4601, 7 June 1991,
p. 28) presented Heaney's head as the contours of Ireland itself.
Although it is unlikely that Brookes knew of Turner's earlier cartoon,
questions of mediation and embodiment, this time to an all-Ireland
state, are similarly represented.
266 RICHARD KIRKLAND
20. James Randall, 'An Interview with Seamus Heaney', Ploughshares, 5:3
(1979), 18-19.
21. Edna Longley, '"Inner Emigre" or "Artful Voyeur"? Seamus Heaney's
North', Poetry in the Wars (Newcastle, 1986), p. 140.
22. Conor Cruise O'Brien, 'A Slow North-east Wind', The Listener
(25 September 1975), pp. 23-4.
23. Lloyd, 'Pap for the Dispossessed', p. 14.
24. Cianin Carson, 'Escaped From the Massacre?', The Honest Ulsterman,
50 (Winter, 1975), 183-6.
25. Cianin Carson, The Irish For No (Oldcastle, 1987).
26. Easthope, Literary Into Cultural Studies, pp. 16-17.
27. Roland Barthes, Writing Degree Zero, trans. Annette Lavers and Colin
Smith, ed. Susan Sontag (New York, 1968), p. 47.
28. Seamus Heaney, 'Feeling Into Words', Preoccupations: Selected Prose
1968-78 (London, 1980), p. 45.
29. Ibid., p. 13.
30. Most infamously in Desmond Fennell's pamphlet, 'Whatever You Say,
Say Nothing': Why Seamus Heaney is No. 1 (Dublin, 1991). Fennell's
work forms possibly the most sustained attack on Heaney's poetry,
particularly from within Ireland itself.
31. Lloyd, 'Pap for the Dispossessed', p. 35.
32. Fennell, 'Whatever You Say, Say Nothing', p. 21.
33. Randall, 'An Interview With Seamus Heaney', p. 18.
34. Parker, The Making of the Poet, p. 189.
Further Reading
I have grouped these suggestions for further reading into sections and,
except in the final section, I have listed them chronologically. This is so
that the reader can relate dates of publication, where appropriate, to the
time-span covered in the Introduction.
INTERVIEWS
According to Rand Brandes, 'dozens of interviews' with Heaney have been
published ('Secondary Sources: a Gloss on the Critical Reception of Seamus
Heaney, 1965-1993' Colby Quarterly [Spring, 1994), pp. 63-77). The
most influential are:
Randall, James, 'An Interview with Seamus Heaney' Ploughshares, 5:3
(1979), 7-22.
Haffenden, John (ed.), interview with Seamus Heaney, Viewpoints: Poets in
Conversation with John Haffenden (London: Faber and Faber, 1981),
pp. 57-75.
Kinahan, Frank, interview with Seamus Heaney, Critical Inquiry (Spring
1982), 405-14.
Deane, Seamus, 'Unhappy and at Home', interview with Seamus Heaney,
The Crane Bag Book of Irish Studies, ed. Mark Patrick Hederman and
Richard Kearney (Dublin: Blackwater Press, 1982), pp. 66-72.
267
268 FURTHER READING
Burris, Sydney, The Poetry of Resistance: Seamus Heaney and the Pastoral
Tradition (Athens, GA: Ohio University Press, 1990).
Andrews, Elmer (ed.), Seamus Heaney: a Collection of Critical Essays
(Basingstoke and London: Macmillan, 1992).
Hart, Henry, Seamus Heaney: Poet of Contrary Progressions (Syracuse,
NY: Syracuse University Press, 1992).
Parker, Michael, Seamus Heaney: the Making of the Poet (Dublin: Gill and
Macmillan, 1993 ).
O'Donoghue, Bernard, Seamus Heaney and the Language of Poetry (Hemel
Hempstead: Harvester Wheatsheaf, 1994).
Foster, J. Wilson, The Achievement of Seamus Heaney (Dublin: Lilliput,
1995).
Durkan, Michael J. and Rand Brandes, Seamus Heaney: A Reference Guide
(New York: G.K. Hall, 1995).
Garratt, Robert F. (ed.), Critical Essays on Seamus Heaney (NY: G.K. Hall;
London: Prentice-Hall, 1995).
CONTEXTS
List A assembles some books which help the reader to place Heaney among
the Northern poets and in the Northern Irish context. List B is of books
which assume a broader Irish, archipelagic or world context.
A
Brown, Terence, Northern Voices: Poets from Ulster (London: Gill and
Macmillan, 1977).
Stewart, A.T.Q., The Narrow Ground: the Roots of Conflict in Ulster
(London: Faber, 1977).
Ormsby, Frank (ed.), Poets from the North of Ireland (Belfast: Blackstaff
Press, 1979; revd, enlarged edn, 1990).
Whyte, John, Interpreting Northern Ireland (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1990).
Hughes, Eamonn (ed.), Culture and Politics in Northern Ireland,
1960-1990 (Milton Keynes: Open University Press, 1991).
Ormsby, Frank (ed.), A Rage for Order: Poetry of the Northern Ireland
Troubles (Belfast: Blackstaff Press, 1992).
Corcoran, Neil (ed.), The Chosen Ground: Essays on the Contemporary
Poetry of Northern Ireland (Bridgend: Seren Books, 1992).
Wills, Clair, Improprieties: Politics and Sexuality in Northern Irish Poetry
(Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1993).
B
Dunn, Douglas, Two Decades of Irish Writing: A Critical Survey (Cheadle:
Carcanet, 1975).
Morrison, Blake and Motion, Andrew, The Penguin Book of
Contemporary British Poetry (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1982).
Paulin, Tom, Ireland and the English Crisis (Newcastle upon Tyne:
Bloodaxe, 1984 ).
FURTHER READING 269
271
272 NOTES ON CONTRIBUTORS
274
INDEX 275
Eagleton, Terry, 7-8, 14, 105-6, Haffenden, John, 46, 63, 127
153; Criticism and Ideology, Hammond, David, 152
105-6; Literary Theory: An Heaney, Seamus, growth of repu-
Introduction, 8 tation, 1-2, 155-6, 178-80,
Easthope, Anthony, 220, 261; 253-6; and 'intertextuality',
Literary Into Cultural Studies, 80-4, 217-18; and language,
256-7 5-7,8,36-7,56-7,68-9,80-5,
Einstein, Albert, 221 102-5, 166-9,223-8,236-49;
Eisenstein, Sergei M., 211 and Nationalism, 3-5, 59-61,
Eliot, T.S., 2, 7, 9-10, 127, 143; 197-8; and New Criticism, 1, 4,
'Dante', 135; Four Quartets, 9, 12, 16,145, 178,261-4;
9-10, 11, 135-6; 'Little 'politicisation' of his poetry, 4,
Gidding', 119, 236; The Waste 59-60, 69-70; 'Act of Union',
Land,9, 11,129-30 26-7,68,190, 197-8,218;
EHmann, Richard, 13 7 'After a Killing', 97-8; Among
Esenin, Sergei, 150 Schoolchildren, 118; 'An
Advancement of Learning', 191;
Falck, Colin, 39 'An Afterwards', 74, 97;
Fanon, Franz, 181 'Anahorish', 68, 167-8;
feminist criticism, 12-13, 201; see 'Antaeus', 70; 'An Aisling in the
gender Burren', 109-10; 'Alphabets',
Fennell, Desmond, 262, 266 240-1, 247-9; 'An Artist', 124;
Field Day Theatre Company, 4, 'At a Potato Digging', 33, 68;
207-8,255 'The Badgers', 72, 127; 'The
Formalism, 5, 7-8, 17, 91, 106; Betrothal of Cavehill', 190,
see Russian Formalism 198-9; 'Belderg', 49;
Foster, John Wilson, 32, 48 'Blackberry-Picking', 23;
Foucault, M., 6, 145 'Bogland', 34, 54, 196; 'Bog
Freud, Sigmund: 'family romance', Queen', 12, 46-7, 190; Bone
159, 182 Dreams, 48, 49-50, 53-4,
Frost, Robert, 3, 10-11, 143; 'The 193-4; 'Broagh', 68, 168; 'Bye-
Figure a Poem Makes', 131, Child', 36; 'Casualty', 119,
148; 'For Once, Then, 177-8; 'Churning Day', 22;
Something', 32; 'The Most of 'Clearances', 15, 231, 238,
It', 32 242-5; 'The Cleric', 125; 'Come
to the Bower', 48, 194; 'A
Gay, John, 101 Constable Calls', 38, 85; 'Cow
Geertz, Clifford, 93 in Calf', 191; 'A Daylight Art',
gender, 12-13, 14, 169, 185-205 241; 'Death of a Naturalist', 23,
Girard, Rene: Violence and the 191; Death of a Naturalist, 1, 2,
Sacred, 5 7,8,21-3,32-4,65,66-8, 103,
Glob, P.V.: The Bog People, 42, 190-1; 'Digging', 21, 67, 124,
69, 169-70, 191-2 162-5, 190-1,213-14; 'The
Goya,F.de,82,87-8 Digging Skeleton (after
Gramsci, Antonio, 181, 182 Baudelaire)', 69; 'The Diviner',
276 INDEX
2, 22; 'Docker', 32, 33; Door Spike', 110; 'The King of the
into the Dark, 1, 32, 34-5, 65, Ditchbacks', 107-8, 121;
66-8, 163; 'Drifting Off', 123, 'Land', 53, 'Kinship', 46, 49,
125; 'Elegy', 72-3, 177; 'Elegy 53-5,57-8,190, 195-7;
for a Still-Born Child', 44; 'Leavings', 127; 'Limbo', 36;
'Englands of the Mind', 54, 155; 'The Loaning', 110; 'A Lough
'Envies and Identifications; Neagh Sequence', 67;
Dante and the Modern Poet', 'Maighdean Mara', 68; 'Making
112-13, 122-4,236; Strange', 16, 110, 262-4;
'Exposure', 6, 29, 39, 58-9, 71, 'Midnight', 194; 'A Migration',
89-91; 'Feeling into Words', 126; The Ministry of Fear', 37,
41-2, 64,214, 223; Field Work, 38, 82-5; 'Mossbawn: Two
5,6, 7-8,66,71-6,90,95-101, Poems in Dedication', 57; 'The
102-5, 109, 114, 127, 155, Mud Vision', 226, 239, 243; 'A
176-8, 199-200, 233; 'The First New Song', 36-7, 68, 168, 187;
Flight', 123; 'The First Gloss', 'North', 50-1; North, 2-4, 5-6,
124, 125, 247; 'The First 11,25-9,30-1,37-61,65,
Kingdom', 124; 'Follower', 22; 69-71,78,80-90,97,118,127,
'The Forge', 54; 'For the 169,173, 197-99,258-61;'A
Commander of the "Eliza"', 33; Northern Hoard', 35-6;
'Fosterage', 39, 88-90; 'Ocean's Love to Ireland', 48,
'Fosterling', 1; 'Freedman', 68, 190, 197-8; 'The Old Icons',
37-8; 'From the Canton of 124, 126; 'The Old Team', 233;
Expectation', 224,240, 241; 'On the Road', 121, 123, 126-7,
'From the Frontier of Writing', 249; 'An Open Letter', 78, 253;
16, 224-6, 252-3, 262; 'From 'Orange Drums, Tyrone, 1966',
the Land of the Unspoken', 224, 25, 38, 85-7; 'The Other Side',
239, 240; 'From the Republic of 4, 35; 'Outlaw', 191; 'Oysters',
Conscience', 224, 228, 237; 7, 95-6, 119; 'Parable Island',
'Funeral Rites', 52, 'Gifts of 14,229,235,241-3;'A
Rain', 53, 68; 'Glanmore Peacock's Feather', 231-2;
Sonnets', 8, 74-5, 102-3, 'Personal Helicon', 31, 55; Place
103-4, 176-7; 'The God in the and Displacement: Recent
Tree', 122; 'The Government of Poetry of Northern Ireland,
the Tongue, 9, 129-44, 228-30; 14-15,224,233-4;'The
The Government of the Tongue, Placeless Heaven: Another Look
8,147-53,223,224,226,228, at Kavanagh', 238; 'The
229-31, 239; 'The Grauballe Plantation', 32; 'Polder', 200; 'A
Man', 13, 29, 42-5, 47, 57, Postcard from Iceland', 224,
190, 206-19; 'Grotus and 233; 'A Postcard from North
Coven tina', 240; 'The Harvest Antrim', 233; Preoccupations, 8,
Bow', 97; 'The Haw Lantern', 17,55, 145,151,167,168-70,
234-5; The Haw Lantern, 1, 91, 174, 178-9,214,232,262;
204-5,224-7,231-5,239-45; 'Punishment', 2-3,25-6,44-6,
'Hercules and Antaeus', 55, 70, 70, 124, 174-6, 195; The
172-3; 'The Hermit', 122; Redress of Poetry, 8; 'Requiem
'Holly', 124; 'Homecomings', for the Crappies', 34; 'Rite of
100; 'In Illo Tempore', 124, Spring', 162, 190, 192-3;
126; 'In the Beech', 124; 'Iron 'Sandstone Keepsake', 110-11;
INDEX 277