Seamus Heaney

Seamus Heaney, born in 1939, was a revered Irish poet and Nobel Laureate celebrated for his lyrical craftsmanship and deep connection to Irish heritage. Hailing from County Derry, Northern Ireland, Heaney's poetry often explored themes of rural life, history, and the Troubles.

His seminal works, such as "Death of a Naturalist" and "North," showcase his mastery of language and imagery, earning him international acclaim.

During a career spanning fifty years,  Heaney's commitment to celebrating the beauty and complexity of the Irish landscape, coupled with his profound empathy for the human experience, earned his recognition as one of the most celebrated writers of his generation and one of the major poets of the 20th century.

Irish Identity

 

With work in the 1960’s arising from the Civil Rights marches and particularly the 1968 baton charge in Derry (at which Heaney was present), – The Ministry of Fear, Act of Union, Requiem for the Croppies, Heaney was considered a nationalist and republican poet.

Heaney has stated “There is no doubt you can't do anything with Requiem for the Croppies which was written in 1966, fifty years after 1916 – and again it was out of my dream life. It was pre-Troubles entirely and I didn't read it during the Troubles – but it was part of the '98 dream life. Actually, I remember in 1968 when David Hammond, Michael Longley and myself did the tour called Room to Rhyme, I read that poem in different milieus. There would have been a very Official Unionist audience in Armagh Library, for example, and I felt I was opening a space for this kind of identity within their Ulster, as it were, and that was certainly the thinking in choosing to read it then.

In 1983, he had famously rebuked the editors of the Penguin Book of Contemporary British Poetry – in a friendly manner but in earnest – for including him among its authors. It was the label British that irked him:

Don't be surprised if I demur, for, be advised

My passport's green.

No glass of ours was ever raised

To toast The Queen.

Those words were written in An Open Letter, for a Field Day pamphlet, a project started by Heaney’s good friend Brian Friel, the playwright and short-story writer, together with the actor Stephen Rea. Field Day started as a push to create a theatre for Northern Ireland away from Belfast but expanded into a wider cultural project. Heaney and three other poets joined the board to give it more heft. In 1991, Field Day produced its own anthology of Irish writers to counteract what it felt was British colonisation, not only of their land but also their literature: Jonathan Swift, Oliver Goldsmith, Richard Sheridan, Oscar Wilde and more recently Yeats and now Heaney himself were claimed as greats of English writing. 

Heaney outlined “My problem came clear in one simple way, the time that Thatcher was in power and there was talk of going on a British Council tour and I said, ‘No, I am not going to go on Margaret Thatcher’s tour at all’. I suggested that the tours be co-sponsored with the Irish Cultural Relations Committee and I think that was done a couple of times, which was fair enough, but that kind of partnership has now come into political reality and in the new conditions there is co-sponsorship, if you like, of identity.”

Heaney also turned down the offer of Poet Laureateship of the United Kingdom at the turn of the century, commenting, "I've nothing against the Queen personally: I had lunch at the Palace once upon a time." He stated that his "cultural starting point" was "off-centre". It was proffered as a great symbol of a reconciliation – but Heaney responded “symbols we don’t need. We need reality”.

During Queen Elizabeth II’s well-received visit to Ireland in 2011 during her speech at Dublin Castle, once the centre of British power in Ireland, at the top table, sandwiched between David Cameron, then prime minister, and the Duke of Edinburgh, was Seamus Heaney.

Heaney explained at the time, “Open Letter was a few years ago and was always meant to characterise the culture itself rather than the person. Ted Hughes had just died, and the Good Friday Agreement had just come into force. Truth to tell I swore when I saw where I was placed – just sheer social anxiety, Marie was in a little bit more of a homely situation, between the Taoiseach and Cardinal Brady! So at that time I thought – come on now, do the decent thing here, and I actually got on easily and merrily with the Duke.”

Seamus Heaney was born on 13 April, 1939 in rural County Derry, in Northern Ireland. He was the eldest of nine children born to Patrick Heaney, a cattle farmer, and Margaret McCann, and grew up on the family farm of Mossbawn. Heaney’s childhood was a peaceful and simple one: in his Nobel lecture, he called it ‘an intimate, physical, creaturely existence… in suspension between the archaic and the modern’. The people, landscapes and memories of his upbringing would inform his poetry throughout his life.

Heaney describes the rhythms of life in Mossbawn in vivid detail – the churning of butter, gathering of rainwater and other long disappeared rituals of rural life. He also talks about growing up Catholic in the days before the violence of the Troubles in Northern Ireland, and how this informed daily interactions and his later worldview.

In 1951, Heaney began his studies at St Columb’s College in Derry, leaving the family home to become a boarder there. He poignantly describes the separation from his parents in the poem ‘The Conway Stewart’, from his final collection, Human Chain. Among his classmates at St Columb’s was the poet and academic Seamus Deane, who would become a lifelong friend and, later, a fellow director of the Field Day Theatre Company. Heaney went on to Queen’s University Belfast in 1957 to study English Language and Literature, and graduated with First Class Honours. After earning his diploma from St Joseph’s College of Education in 1962, he began his career as a teacher.

In 1965, he married Marie Devlin, who had grown up near the poet, in Ardboe, County Tyrone, on the shores of Lough Neagh. Together they had three children. They lived in Belfast until 1972, when they moved to County Wicklow in the Republic of Ireland. This was the first time that Heaney had devoted himself completely to his own writing and the family spent four years in Glanmore Cottage, a small gate lodge owned by their friend. In creative terms, the Glanmore years were an extremely productive period and though he was never to live in Northern Ireland again, Heaney’s early life there and the ongoing political situation would continue to inform his work. In 1975, he took up a teaching post at Carysfort College of Education in Dublin and, the following year, moved with his family to a new home in the city's neighbourhood of Sandymount, where he would live for the rest of his life.

Throughout the 1980s and 1990s, Seamus Heaney’s international reputation grew. His work gained a devoted readership in the US in particular, where, from 1982 onwards, he spent four months every year teaching at Harvard University. As his work was translated into other languages, he also found a readership beyond the English-speaking world. He took his role as an ambassador for poetry seriously, advocating its relevance and necessity in his lectures as Oxford Professor of Poetry and perhaps most memorably in his 1995 Nobel lecture, ‘Crediting Poetry’. He travelled extensively, delivering lectures, taking part in festivals and summer schools, and giving readings around the world.

The Nobel Prize in Literature 1995 was awarded to Seamus Heaney "for works of lyrical beauty and ethical depth, which exalt everyday miracles and the living past"

Heaney was also an accomplished translator. His 1999 version of the Old English epic poem Beowulf became an international bestseller. Other works include translations from Middle Irish, such as Sweeney Astray and The Midnight Verdict.

In Ireland, he became an increasingly public figure and was frequently called upon to comment on political situations, such as the Northern Ireland Peace Process. It was a duty he took seriously, as reflected in poems such as ‘From the Republic of Conscience’, written for Amnesty International, and ‘Beacons at Bealtaine’, a specially commissioned poem which he read in Dublin on 1 May 2004, at a ceremony to mark the accession of ten new countries to the European Union.

Among his peers in the literary community, Heaney is perhaps best remembered for his generosity of spirit and unstinting support of younger writers, championing them in public and encouraging them in private correspondence. (He was particularly devoted to sending postcards to friends and family.) Famously, an early recipient of this support was the young Paul Muldoon, but there were countless others to whom he acted as a guiding spirit. He was a supporter and patron of many poetry organisations and prizes - including Poetry Ireland, the Poetry Archive, the Irish Literary Society and Poetry Aloud. 

His untimely death in Dublin on 30 August 2013, after a short illness, prompted a huge outpouring of grief in his native Ireland and around the world.

In 2004, the Seamus Heaney Centre for Poetry opened at Queen’s University Belfast, Heaney’s alma mater, and offers undergraduate and postgraduate tuition in creative writing as well as events and a poetry prize. In 2011, Heaney donated his literary papers and notebooks to the National Library of Ireland, so that they would find a permanent home in Ireland and be accessible to scholars and anyone with an interest in his work. The Heaney papers are among the most consulted of Library’s collections. Manuscripts and notebooks from this collection form the basis of a major new exhibition, Listen Now Again, which opened in July 2018 in the Bank of Ireland Culture and Heritage Centre at College Green in Dublin. In 2016, the Seamus Heaney HomePlace opened in his home village of Bellaghy, County Derry. An award-winning arts and literary centre, it houses a permanent exhibition celebrating his life and poetry, amid the landscape that inspired it.