Works by more than 60 Irish poets, from 18th century to modern times, include "Stella's Birthday" by Swift; Goldsmith's "Stanzas on Woman"; "The Harp that Once Through Tara's Halls" by Moore; Yeats's "To the Rose upon the Rood of Time"; "Strings in the Earth and Air" by Joyce; plus verses by lesser-known poets.
Bob Blaisdell is a published adapter, author, editor, and an illustrator of children's books and young adult books. He teaches English in Brooklyn at Kingsborough Community College. He is a reviewer for the San Francisco Chronicle and Christian Science Monitor and the editor of more than three dozen anthologies for Dover Publications. Email him at Robert.Blaisdell@Kingsborough.edu
In contrast to the previous poetry anthology I read, this was much easier and enjoyable to digest. I appreciated the introduction as well as the short lines describing each poem. Overall, these poems were very lyrical and beautiful. I especially enjoyed the works of the female poets that were collected in this book!
Some favorites: The Student and His Cat The Deserted Home Dirge on the Death of Art O’Leary O Donall Oge: Grief of a Young Girl
Well, this was a charming little book, and a genuine treat to read; I was held in rapt fascination as I read delightful poems of young love and young couples who left beloved Erin for America, but ever-maintaining a fierce love and longing for their homeland.
This would have received five stars, if it had excluded a few of the selections whose benefit, frankly, is likened unto a five-ton antique elephant carven of ivory and gilt in gold-- It is kept because it is an antique, and valuable, but no one has sentimental attachment to it. I would never say that those pieces written in dialect are without value, but och! for my own personal uses, they were with only marginal benefit.
In hindsight, the entire book seemed like a build up to W.B. Yeats, who was by far my favorite. I am glad I read this in little chunks over a few months. I expect the repetitive subject matter would become grating in large doses. The recurring themes of communion with nature, resisting oppression, and longing for a lost homeland (both physical and political) permeate these poems. But, a page or two a day reads like a quiet walk on a dewy, spring morning. I expect to revisit this anthology from time to time to recapture that Irish ambiance I loved so much when I was there.
This was a very enjoyable collection of Irish verse. It felt almost like listening to The Irish Rovers - all the same notes, the sorrow of migration, the cheeky street ballads, the songs of protest to English rule.