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Crediting Poetry

Seamus Heaney's Nobel Lecture is a powerful defense of poetry as "the ship and the anchor" of our spirit within an ocean of violent, divisive politics and "world-sorrow." Beginning with the "creaturely existence" of his childhood in a thatched farmstead in rural County Derr, Heaney traces his path in "the wideness of language." It is a way forged by listening: to the "burbles and squeaks" of BBC and Radio Eireann from a wireless speaker, to the triple-rhyme in a line of Yeats', but also to the sound of gunfire in Ulster and the keening desolation of all the "wounded spots on the face of the earth." Out of all these sounds Heaney discovers the necessity of poetic order--"an order where we can at last grow up to that which we stored up as we grew."It is poetry's ability to convey the forces of the marvelous and the murderous together, Heaney writes, that gives it "at once a buoyancy and a holding," and persuades us of its "truth to life." Heaney's lecture not only finds a way of crediting poetry "without anxiety or apology," but it persuades us, eloquently and gracefully, of the "rightness" and "thereness" of our veritable human being.

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http://schema.org/description

  • "Heaney, a professor of poetry at Oxford and Harvard, calls poetry "the ship and the anchor" of our spirit."
  • "Seamus Heaney's Nobel Lecture is a powerful defense of poetry as "the ship and the anchor" of our spirit within an ocean of violent, divisive politics and "world-sorrow." Beginning with the "creaturely existence" of his childhood in a thatched farmstead in rural County Derr, Heaney traces his path in "the wideness of language." It is a way forged by listening: to the "burbles and squeaks" of BBC and Radio Eireann from a wireless speaker, to the triple-rhyme in a line of Yeats', but also to the sound of gunfire in Ulster and the keening desolation of all the "wounded spots on the face of the earth." Out of all these sounds Heaney discovers the necessity of poetic order--"an order where we can at last grow up to that which we stored up as we grew."It is poetry's ability to convey the forces of the marvelous and the murderous together, Heaney writes, that gives it "at once a buoyancy and a holding," and persuades us of its "truth to life." Heaney's lecture not only finds a way of crediting poetry "without anxiety or apology," but it persuades us, eloquently and gracefully, of the "rightness" and "thereness" of our veritable human being."@en

http://schema.org/genre

  • "Redes (vorm)"@en
  • "Interview"
  • "Authors' presentation copies (Provenance)"@en
  • "Lyrik"
  • "Uncorrected proofs (Printing)"
  • "Interviews"
  • "Electronic books"@en

http://schema.org/name

  • "Crediting Poetry"@en
  • "Crediting poetry the nobel lecture"@en
  • "Dank an die Poesie : Nobelpreisrede 1995 und zwei Gedichte"
  • "Crediting poetry"@en
  • "Crediting poetry"
  • "Crediting poetry : [the Nobel lecture, 1995]"
  • "Crediting poetry : The Nobel lecture"
  • "Dank an die Poesie : Nobelpreisrede 1995"
  • "Die Poesie würdigen : (Nobelpreis-Rede 1995) und ein Gespräch mit dem Literatur-Nobelpreisträger"
  • "Crediting poetry : the Nobel lecture"@en
  • "Crediting poetry : the Nobel lecture"
  • "Crediting poetry : [the Nobel lecture 1995]"