Seamus Heaney says: '...There is a brutality and a ruthlessness and a cruelty and casualness and abusiveness about 'slashed and dumped.'...in a sense you are administering the shock to yourself as well as hopefully to the world and the reader that this is what's being done...'dumped' is a brutal ending and is meant to be.' '...It is very true to say that work done by writers is quite often an attempt to give solid expression to that which is bothering them...They feel they have got it right if they express the stress.' The Grauballe ManAs if he had been poured the black river of himself. like a basalt egg. His hips are the ridge The head lifts, that has tanned and toughened. Who will say 'corpse' And his rusted hair, in a photograph, but now he lies hung in the scales on his shield, |
Seamus Heaney was born in 1939. He was brought up on a farm near Bellaghy, County Derry. His first book, Death of a Naturalist, was published in 1966 and since then he has published poetry, criticism and translations which have established him as one of the leading poets of his generation. In 1995 he was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature. Opened Ground: Poems 1966-96 was published in 1998. The Heaney poems on this site are The Perch, The Grauballe Man and Blackberry Picking. |
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