This pioneering anthology introduces many previously neglected eighteenth-century writers to a general readership, and will lead to a re-examination of the entire canon of Irish verse in English. Between 1700 and 1800, Dublin was second only to London as a center for the printing of poetry in English. Many fine poets were active during this period. However, because Irish eighteenth-century verse in English has to a great extent escaped the scholar and the anthologist, it is hardly known at all. The most innovative aspect of this new anthology is the inclusion of many poetic voices entirely unknown to modern readers. Although the anthology contains the work of well-known figures such as John Toland, Thomas Parnell, Jonathan Swift, Patrick Delany, Laetitia Pilkington and Oliver Goldsmith, there are many verses by lesser known writers and nearly eighty anonymous poems which come from the broadsheets, manuscripts and chapbooks of the time. What emerges is an entirely new perspective on life in eighteenth-century Ireland. We hear the voice of a hard working farmer's wife from county Derry, of a rambling weaver from county Antrim, and that of a woman dying from drink. We learn about whale-fishing in county Donegal, about farming in county Kerry and bull-baiting in Dublin. In fact, almost every aspect of life in eighteenth-century Ireland is described vividly, energetically, with humor and feeling in the verse of this anthology. Among the most moving poems are those by Irish-speaking poets who use amhrán or song meter and internal assonance, both borrowed from Irish, in their English verse. Equally interesting is the work of the weaver poets of Ulster who wrote in vigorous and energetic Ulster-Scots. The anthology also includes political poems dating from the reign of James II to the Act of Union, as well as a selection of lesser-known nationalist and Orange songs. Each poem is fully annotated and the book also contains a glossary of terms in Hiberno-English and Ulster Scots.
Limited preview - 1998 - 623 pages - History
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References from web pagesStylus - Verse in English from Tudor and Stuart Ireland In the same way that Andrew Carpenter’s 1998 anthology "Verse in English from Eighteenth-Century Ireland" changed our perception of Irish writing in English ... www.styluspub.com/ books/ BookDetail.aspx?productID=87553 UCD - School of English & Drama His anthology of Verse in English from Eighteenth-Century Ireland appeared in 1998 and a companion volume, Verse in English from Tudor and Stuart Ireland, ... www.ucd.ie/ englishanddrama/ staff/ carpenter.htm MoreRobert Mahony - Review Essay: Retrieving Eighteenth-Century ... Irish identities across the social spectrum are easily discerned in Andrew Carpenter's Verse in English from Eighteenth-Century Ireland. ... muse.jhu.edu/ journals/ eighteenth-century_life/ v023/ 23.1er_leerssen.html Publications 1997-1998 - ECLRNI, the Eighteenth Century Literature ... Andrew Carpenter, Verse in English from Eighteenth-Century Ireland: an anthology. Cork: Cork University Press, 626 pp. ... www.tcd.ie/ English/ eclrni/ publications_1997_1998.php Corvey CW3 Journal Verse in English from Eighteenth-Century Ireland. Cork: Cork UP, 1998. Wu, Duncan. ed. Romantic Women Poets: An Anthology. Oxford: Blackwell, 1998. ... www2.shu.ac.uk/ corvey/ cw3journal/ issue%20two/ maryTighebib.html LessPlaces mentioned in this book Maps KML
 | Dublin - Page 265By Lord Viscount Clare tat that time Robert Nugent Esq.l'. Howth Hill is on the northern side of Dublin bay, about eight miles from the city,more pages: 9 14 29 54 128 164 278 340 359 369 |
 | Drogheda - Page 425There's no story in the mouth of woman or child from Drogheda to Monaghan but the madness and the revelry of Patrick O'Finegan. ...more pages: 498 505 |
 | London - Page 54Tate earned a living as a dramatist and poet in London and is perhaps best known for rewriting Shakespeare's King Lear to give the play a happy ending ...more pages: 90 126 153 194 214 235 253 347 356 377 |
More | Belfast - Page 388fill of Conne[H]ys Ale The Connaughtman's Visit to DUBL1N This is one of many eighteenth,century poems about countrymen visiting Dublin or Belfast. ...more pages: 403 471 535 573 |
 | Rome - Page 4037. t Rome is an impostor who. by means of menial reservations and hocus pocus. can deceive nations and trample on Englishmen who now do kick at the ...more pages: 10 50 104 175 323 327 426 498 585 |
 | Green, Oh - Page 57310 Oh! the wearing of the Green, Oh! the wearing of the Green! May the curse of Cromwell darken each traitor to the Green! When l went down to Belfast ...more pages: 574 |
 | Paris - Page 126Many Jacobite supporters were in France and Spain; the Jacobite court was near Paris.more pages: 87 214 215 293 370 507 508 509 573 |
 | Oxford - Page 319He was educated at Oxford but retumed to lreland when he inherited an estate in County Cavan. The poem which follows is one of very few describing ...more pages: 58 107 145 147 582 |
 | Charlotte - Page 235His daughter Charlotte, famous for her Reliques of lrish Poetry, edited hts works for publication and they appeared in four volumes shortly before he ... |
 | Randers - Page 129The latter word is probably derived from the Dutch kanten 'lace', since lace pattern,books from Randers were widely available during the seventeenth ... |
 | Murcia - Page 369 |
 | Belturbet - Page 506All jobs did get in Belturbet, at threshing up their bedding. And through Cavan l taught a plan, that took the best of trading, l was three days in ... |
 | Edinburgh - Page 490He was educated in England and qualifted as a doctor in Edinburgh, after which he spent his life as a physician in the army, He travelled widely with ...more pages: 347 535 |
 | Glasgow - Page 58After studying in Glasgow. Leyden and Oxford, he became a freethinker, a deist and a fervent controversialist. Toland wrote many theological and ...more pages: 231 535 |
 | Arklow - Page 568'5 The insurgents failed to take the town of Arklow from government forces. 1s. These few lines emphasise the effect which the need to send troops to ... |
 | Clonmel - Page 466But all appeals failed, and the three young men were executed in Clonmel on 2 December 1 780. See James Kelly, 'The Abduction of Women of Fortune in ... |
 | Cambridge - Page 379George Sackville Cotter was the son of Sir George Cotter of Cork and was educated at Cambridge. His two,volume Poems consisting of Odes. Songs. ...more pages: 135 |
 | Ashford - Page 585Oh. from the spoiler's touch thy treasure screen. To bask beneath Contentment's beam serene! t The Tighe family home was at Rossana. near Ashford. Co. ... |
 | Tralee - Page 19Newry and Tralee. Some of the verse in the chapbooks was well,known, but much of it seems to have been written locally, some of it commemorating local ...more pages: 85 |
 | Athlone - Page 506To lniss's and Clare 1 did repair, l decently was used, 1n Banagher l was Journeyman, my shuttle ne'er refused; ln Athlone when l was known, ...more pages: 290 |
 | Pembroke - Page 145Wharton and Pembroke both 'reigned' as lords lieutenant of 1reland. Swift's Tory credentials are seen clearest in his close relationship with Robert ... |
 | Kilcock - Page 516He took to his heels and he never cried stop Till he came to a place that they now call Kilcock.' 2. Orange in support of the succession from William ... |
 | Athens - Page 324is a reference to Fenius Farsa, the king of Scythia who. according to the traditional history of lreland, founded a school for languages in Athens. ... |
 | Bona - Page 40capiet, per Criss,Cross. omnia Bona: Templa he will pull down, vomitans fire,out like Vulcano: Sic volo sic jubeo was still de jure Romano. ... |
 | Banagher - Page 506To lniss's and Clare 1 did repair, l decently was used, 1n Banagher l was Journeyman, my shuttle ne'er refused; ln Athlone when l was known, ... |
 | Liverpool - Page 320SAMUEL WHYTE f1733,1758,1811l Samuel Why te was born tn a ship crossing the irish Sea and first 'touched land' in Liverpool. ...more pages: 480 |
 | Enniscorthy - Page 567near Camolin, on 27 May, " Father Murphy's men took the town of Enniscorthy, with considerable loss of life, the next day, s The Mountain of Forth, ...more pages: 566 |
 | Assisi - Page 208Yet by the belt which St Francis [of Assisi] wore, and by the cross of Christ which St Patrick bore, by the beads of St Brigid [abbess of Kildare in ... |
 | Brunswick - Page 557i See Glossary, 2 Karl Wilhelm Ferdinand, duke of Brunswick t1735,1806l, one of the best generals and most widely respected rulers of eighteenth ... |
 | Philadelphia - Page xviiiThe Library Company of Philadelphia, The Free Library in Philadelphia, The University of Pennsylvania Library in Philadelphia. ... |
 | Galway - Page 498Waterford, Cork and Killamey to Galway and. eventually, back to Stradone. 3. See Glossary, 4. Slieve Gullion, the name of mountatns in both County ... |
 | Gibraltar - Page 300And know you'd much better to sleep with whole Bones, 30 Were you sent to Gibraltar, your Note you'd soon alter,4 And wish for good Claret, ... |
 | Abbeyfeale - Page 522To Kilshannick that joins Rathcormack, Besides Killarney and Abbeyfeale. The flowing Nore and the rapid Boyne, The river Shannon and the pleasant ... |
 | Hanover - Page 3261n Hibemia fair, in Scotland we reign, ln England great, and Hanover; So what need we care for France or for Spain, Or for Charley, your rakish rover? ... |
 | All,Saints - Page 450cards, and tea,cup tosses," No ancient trick or heathen rite At coming moon, or purely bright, On All,Saints' Day, or change of weather. ... |
 | Harrow - Page 249Of Plough or Harrow, hamess'd Ox or Steed. Thy Cultivation did not stand in need: lnto poor Earth a Parcel of You flung Thin,bedded with a Lock of ... |
 | Magay - Page 340The song was very popular and an even more vigorous, though unfortunately only fragmentary, version beginning 'De nite afore de fust of Magay' appears ...more pages: 442 |
 | Hispania - Page 83The world's your own and use it as you please: Now tell the glories of your noble name, How prince O Connor from Hispania came; Sprung from Milesian ... |
 | Downey - Page 504 |
 | Tempe - Page 235Convey your bard thro' Nature unconfmed, Licentious' in the search of wisdom range, Plunge in the depth, and wantorr in the change; Waft me to Tempe,' ... |
 | Los Angeles - Page xviiiThe Henry Huntington Library in Pasadena, The James Andrews Clarke Memorial Library in Los Angeles, and The Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center at ... |
 | Don Carlos - Page 161Don Carlos now began to find His Malice3 work as he design'd: The Winter,Sky began to frown, Poor Stella must pack off to Town. ... |
LessReferences to this bookFrom Google ScholarGreg Koos - 2001 - New Hibernia Review CURSO DE DOCTORADO, CULTURA E LITERATURA IRLANDESA, XVIII Y XIX ContentsThomas Mozeen ffl 1750 d 1768l | 314 | | | | | 320 | | | | Liam lnglis f170917601778l | 327 | | | | Anonymous poems from the 1760s | 338 | | | | | 1 | | | | | 356 | | | | | 364 | | | | | 375 | | | |
More | 99 | | | | | 128 | | | | | 135 | | | | | 145 | | | | | 151 | | | | | 7 | | | | | 164 | | | | | 182 | | | | | 197 | | | | | 163 | | | | | 231 | | | | | 241 | | | | | 253 | | | | | 260 | | | | | 268 | | | | | 278 | | | | | 296 | | | | | 302 | | | |
| 383 | | | | | 387 | | | | | 405 | | | | | 420 | | | | | 428 | | | | Brian Merriman tc 174917891805l | 446 | | | | Charlotte Brooke fc 174017891793l | 453 | | | | | 459 | | | | PatOKelly f17541791c 1812l | 468 | | | | | 475 | | | | | 482 | | | | | 490 | | | | | 498 | | | | Anonymous poems from the 1790s | 507 | | | | | 523 | | | | | 530 | | | | | 537 | | | | | | | | |
LessOther editions | by Andrew Carpenter Snippet view - 1998
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