Book contents
- Small World
- Small World
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Foreword
- Permissions
- Acknowledgements
- Chapter 1 Swift as Classic
- Chapter 2 Burke in the USA
- Chapter 3 Tone: The Great Nation and the Evil Empire
- Chapter 4 Imperialism and Nationalism
- Chapter 5 Irish National Character 1790–1900
- Chapter 6 Civilians and Barbarians
- Chapter 7 Heroic Styles: The Tradition of an Idea
- Chapter 8 Ulysses: The Exhaustion of Literature and the Literature of Exhaustion
- Chapter 9 Dead Ends: Joyce’s Finest Moments
- Chapter 10 Elizabeth Bowen: Sentenced to Death
- Chapter 11 Elizabeth Bowen: Two Stories in One
- Chapter 12 Mary Lavin: Celibates
- Chapter 13 Emergency Aesthetics
- Chapter 14 Wherever Green is Read
- Chapter 15 The Famous Seamus
- Chapter 16 The End of the World
- Index
Chapter 15 - The Famous Seamus
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 03 June 2021
- Small World
- Small World
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Foreword
- Permissions
- Acknowledgements
- Chapter 1 Swift as Classic
- Chapter 2 Burke in the USA
- Chapter 3 Tone: The Great Nation and the Evil Empire
- Chapter 4 Imperialism and Nationalism
- Chapter 5 Irish National Character 1790–1900
- Chapter 6 Civilians and Barbarians
- Chapter 7 Heroic Styles: The Tradition of an Idea
- Chapter 8 Ulysses: The Exhaustion of Literature and the Literature of Exhaustion
- Chapter 9 Dead Ends: Joyce’s Finest Moments
- Chapter 10 Elizabeth Bowen: Sentenced to Death
- Chapter 11 Elizabeth Bowen: Two Stories in One
- Chapter 12 Mary Lavin: Celibates
- Chapter 13 Emergency Aesthetics
- Chapter 14 Wherever Green is Read
- Chapter 15 The Famous Seamus
- Chapter 16 The End of the World
- Index
Summary
That’s one of Seamus Heaney’s jokes. Once he had become famous, he told jokes, with a nice smirk of irony, about famous people being pestered. He began to be famous in 1966, after the publication of his first volume of poems, Death of a Naturalist. I’ve now known the famous Seamus, ‘Seamus Heaney’, longer than I knew him before the fame, when he was just Seamus Heaney or Seamus Justin Heaney, or Heaney, S. J., as his name appeared on examination lists at schools and universities that we attended together for eleven years. If you were named Seamus, you needed another initial, to distinguish you from the throng of Seamuses that emerged in Northern Ireland in the thirties and forties and have continued to emerge ever since. The name Seamus was the Irish version of James and a signal that the Northern Irish Catholic community was loyal to the Gaelic, and not to the British, account of things.
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- Information
- Small WorldIreland, 1798–2018, pp. 270 - 286Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2021