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Hallaig and Other Poems: Selected Poems of Sorley MacLean Reprint [Paperback / softback]

4.19/5 (42 ratings by Goodreads)
  • Format: Paperback / softback, 224 pages, height x width x depth: 195x130x15 mm, weight: 198 g
  • Pub. Date: 14-Nov-2014
  • Publisher: Polygon An Imprint of Birlinn Limited
  • ISBN-10: 1846973023
  • ISBN-13: 9781846973024
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  • Price: 23,04 €
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  • Format: Paperback / softback, 224 pages, height x width x depth: 195x130x15 mm, weight: 198 g
  • Pub. Date: 14-Nov-2014
  • Publisher: Polygon An Imprint of Birlinn Limited
  • ISBN-10: 1846973023
  • ISBN-13: 9781846973024
Other books in subject:
This selected works of Sorley MacLean brings together published poetry from MacLean's own edited volumes of Poetry. The poems will be given in their original Gaelic with English translations and introduced by Angus Peter Campbell and Aonghas Mac Neacail.





Sorley MacLean was born on the island of Raasay in 1911. He was brought up within a family and community immersed in Gaelic language and culture, particularly song. He studied English at Edinburgh University from 1929, taking a first-class honours degree. Despite this influence, he eventually adopted Gaelic as the medium most appropriate for his poetry. He translated much of his own work into English, opening it up to a wider public. He fought in North Africa during World War II, before taking up a career in teaching, holding posts on Mull, in Edinburgh and finally as Head Teacher at Plockton High School. Amongst other awards and honours, he received the Queen's Gold Medal for Poetry in 1990. He died in 1996 at the age of 85.

Reviews

'A collection that explodes the cliche of Gaelic poetry' * Guardian on Sorley MacLean: Collected Poems * 'Convincingly demonstrates why MacLean was as important an influence on the badachd as Eliot and Pound were on English-language poetry' * Sunday Herald on Sorley MacLean: Collected Poems * 'One of the very greatest of the Gaelic poets - and one of the great love poets of the world' -- Iain Crichton Smith

Sorley: conversing with colleagues xvii
Angus Peter Campbell
Sorley, discovered and remembered xxviii
Aonghas MacNeacail
The Heron
2(4)
Conchobhar
6(1)
A Highland Woman
6(2)
Calvary
8(1)
Kinloch Ainort
8(2)
Glen Eyre
10(4)
Cornford
14(2)
The Clan MacLean
16(2)
From The Tree of Strings
18(4)
Aros Burn
22(1)
The Old Song
22(4)
The Woods of Raasay
26(14)
Poems to Eimhir
II Reason and Love
40(2)
III Never has such turmoil
42(1)
IV Girl of the yellow, heavy-yellow, gold-yellow hair
42(2)
VI In spite of the uproar of slaughter
44(1)
VIII I thought that I believed from you
44(2)
XI Often when I called Edinburgh
46(1)
XII Four there are to whom I gave love
46(1)
XIII To my eyes you were Deirdre
46(2)
XV Three Paths
48(2)
XVII Multitude of the skies
50(1)
XVIII Prayer
50(6)
XIX I gave you immortality
56(2)
XXII I walked with my reason
58(2)
XXIX Dogs and Wolves
60(2)
XXX A Bolshevik who never gave heed
62(1)
XXXII Let me lop off with sharp blade every grace
62(1)
XXXV Come before me, gentle night
62(2)
XLII Shores
64(2)
XLIII But for you the Cuillin would be
66(2)
XLVI We are together, dear
68(1)
XLVII Remorse after the kisses
68(2)
XLIX My boat was under sail and the Clarach
70(1)
L Grief is only a nothing
70(2)
LIV You were dawn on the Cuillin
72(1)
LV I do not see the sense of my toil
72(2)
LVII A face haunts me
74(8)
LIX Carmichael, I often think
82(2)
From The Cuillin (1989)
84(96)
`She to whom I gave ...'
92(1)
If I Go Up to Yonder Town
92(2)
William Ross and I
94(2)
The Prodigal Son
96(1)
The Nightmare
96(2)
Springtide
98(1)
Going Westwards
98(4)
Heroes
102(2)
Death Valley
104(2)
An Autumn Day
106(2)
Paradise Lost: the Argument
108(2)
Lights
110(1)
Culloden 16.IV.1946
110(4)
A Girl and Old Songs
114(4)
Hallaig
118(4)
Two MacDonalds
122(2)
A Memory of Alexander Nicolson, One of My Uncles
124(2)
A Ruined Church
126(1)
Funeral in Clachan
126(4)
Creagan Beaga
130(1)
In the Big Park
130(2)
The Broken Bottle
132(1)
Id, Ego and Super-Ego
132(2)
Palach
134(2)
The National Museum of Ireland
136(2)
At Yeats's Grave
138(2)
The Lost Mountain
140(2)
Elegy for Calum I. MacLean
142(14)
From The Cave of Gold
156(4)
Poem (by John Cornford)
160(1)
Screapadal
160(10)
Spring 1937
170(2)
Festubert 16/17.V.1915
172(8)
Index of titles and first lines 180
Sorley MacLean was born on the island of Raasay in 1911. He was brought up within a family and community immersed in Gaelic language and culture, particularly song. He studied English at Edinburgh University from 1929, taking a first-class honours degree.