Door into the Dark

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Door into the Dark
DoorIntoTheDark.jpg
First edition (Faber and Faber)
Author Seamus Heaney
LanguageEnglish
Publisher Faber and Faber
Publication date
1969
Media typePrint
Pages64 pp
ISBN 9780571101269
Preceded by Death of a Naturalist  
Followed by Wintering Out  

Door into the Dark (1969) is a poetry collection by Seamus Heaney, who received the 1995 Nobel Prize in Literature. [1] Poems include "Requiem for the Croppies", "Thatcher" and "The Wife's Tale". Heaney has been recorded reading this collection on the Seamus Heaney Collected Poems album.

Contents

Related Research Articles

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The airship of Clonmacnoise is the subject of a historical anecdote related in numerous medieval sources. Though the original report, in the Irish annals, simply mentioned an apparition of ships with their crews in the sky over Ireland in the 740s, later accounts through the Middle Ages progressively expanded on this with picturesque details. First the ships were reduced to one ship over Teltown from which a crewman threw and then recovered a fishing-spear. Then the scene shifted to the abbey of Clonmacnoise, and later to Britain, and the fishing-spear was changed to an anchor which snagged on some feature of a church. The sailor who climbed down to release it was also said to be in danger of drowning in the thicker air of this lower world. The story was retold by Seamus Heaney in a well-known poem collected in his 1991 volume, Seeing Things.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">1995 Nobel Prize in Literature</span> Award

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References

  1. "The Nobel Prize in Literature 1995". NobelPrize.org. Retrieved 2022-06-29.