Seamus Heaney (b. 1939) was born and raised in Northern Ireland, an area torn
for decades by political, religious, and civil strife. He was educated at Queens
College, Belfast, where he later taught. His poems are rooted in both the culture
of his native Northern Ireland and in his own life experiences, and many of
them touch on themes of nature, history, and politics. Hailed as the contemporary
successor to the tradition of William Butler Yeats, Heaney won the Nobel Prize
for Literature in 1995.
Major works of poetry by Heaney Death of a Naturalist (1966) Door into the Dark (1969) Wintering Out (1972) North (1975) Selected Poems 1965-1975 (1980) Sweeney Astray (1984) Station Island (1984) The Haw Lantern (1987) New Selected Poems 1966-1987 (1990) Seeing Things (1991) Electric Light (2001)
Heaney and the Web This detailed biography
of Heaney includes links to Heaney reading from several of his poems, including
"The Tollund Man."
This link
offers an excerpt of an interview with Seamus Heaney in which he describes his
fascination with the Bog People.
This page
provides the complete text of Heaney's Nobel lecture, which he delivered in
Stockholm in 1995 upon receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature. |