Archive for April, 2009

Apr 30 2009

W B Yeats – Celtic poet in new book

Widely recognized as one of the nobles of twentieth century poetry, Yeats was born in Dublin, where he was raised within an educated and creative environment. His father was the painter John Butler Yeats, and William also studied art, both in Dublin and London. During holiday, his family would often visit Sligo, in the west country. The rich traditional lore of the region was to prove a strong influence upon the poet for the remainder of his life.

At the age of twenty two, William moved with his family to England, where he lived for nearly a decade, returning to Ireland in 1896. While his early works are strongly rooted in traditional lore and symbolism, Yeats became deeply involved with the politics of his era and much of his later work centered around themes of Irish nationalism. During the nineteen twenties the writer became politician and served in the Senate of the newly formed Irish Free State. In 1923 William Butler Yeats was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature.

The Hosting of the Sidhe

(1899)

The host is riding from Knocknare
And over the grave of Clooth-na-bare;
Caolte tossing his burning hair
And Niamh calling Away, come away:
Empty your heart of its mortal dream.
The winds awaken, the leaves whirl round,
Our cheeks are pale, our hair is unbound,
Our breasts are heaving, our eyes are a-gleam,
Our arms are waving, our lips are apart;
And if any gaze on our rushing band,
We come between him and the deed of his hand,
We come between him and the hope of his heart.
The host is rushing ‘twixt night and day,
And where is there hope or deed as fair?
Caolte tossing his burning hair,
And Niamh calling Away, come away.

Our Secret Discipline: Yeats and Lyric Form written by Helen Vendler explores the form behind Yeatsian lyrical poetry. She says:

We cannot really appreciate Yeats’s poems by attending only to what they say. We must also understand the logic behind their style, the reasons that Yeats chose to write a sonnet instead of a ballad, or to make some poems nimble and rhythmic but others halting and dissonant. As Vendler rightly points out, few critics are willing to think about a poet’s entire career in these terms, to follow what she calls “the creative impulse and its elaboration” from youthful experiments to mature achievements. And even fewer possess the historical awareness to write persuasively, as Vendler does, about the impressive amplitude and versatility of the lyric form in English.

The fundamental difference between rhetoric and poetry, according to Yeats, is that rhetoric is the expression of one’s quarrels with others while poetry is the expression (and sometimes the resolution) of one’s quarrel with oneself. This is where Helen Vendler’s Our Secret Discipline begins. Through exquisite attention to outer and inner forms, Vendler explores the most inventive reaches of the poet’s mind. This book is a space-clearing gesture, an attempt to write about lyric forms in Yeats in unprecedented and comprehensive ways. The secret discipline of the poet is his vigilant attention to forms – whether generic, structural, or metrical. Yeats explores the potential of such forms to give shape and local habitation to volatile thoughts and feelings. Helen Vendler remains focused on questions of singular importance: why did Yeats cast his poems into the widely differing forms they ultimately took? Can we understand Yeats’s poetry better if we pay attention to inner and outer lyric form?  Chapters of the book take up many Yeatsian ventures, such as the sonnet, the lyric sequence, paired poems, blank verse, and others. With elegance and precision, Vendler offers brilliant insights into the creative process, and speculates on Yeats’s aims as he writes and rewrites some of the most famous poems in modern literature.

Source

Amazon

Originally posted 2008-04-19 10:44:56. Republished by Blog Post Promoter

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Apr 29 2009

Have you heard the one about the Lady of the Lake and a Dwarf?

Damosel In this lovely tale, drawn from Arthurian lore, Merlin commissions Damosel, the Lady of the Lake, to craft a wondrous sword for Arthur, the future king. Intertwined with Damosel’s tale is the story of Twixt, an insightful, clever dwarf, who is rescued from an abusive situation by Tor, an Arthurian knight on his way to Camelot. Twixt becomes a keen observer of court gossip, while Damosel protects Arthur with her powers of enchantment and ability to envision happenings from afar. Together, Damosel and Twixt tell a Camelot saga with all its political intrigue, battles, and romance. The magic is exciting and palpable: I had caused Excaliber to rise out of the water . . . A woman’s pearly white hand held the sword aloft so that it shone in the morning sun. Spinner’s elegant language, strong characterizations, energetic dialogue, and lively plot combine in a memorable, accessible novel.

WATER SPIRIT DAMOSEL, the Lady of the Lake, glides through Arthurian legend like a glamorous wraith, shimmering and shifting between the worlds of fairies and humans. Her knowledge is vast (magic, metal, men’s hearts) and leads to her greatest honor—and worst mistake. Damosel makes a promise to the wizard Merlin to protect young King Arthur, and then dares to break it—with devastating results. All the while, 17-year-old Twixt—a dwarf in a world where difference can be deadly—finds himself freed from his cruel masters and moving closer to the one place he never expected to see: King Arthur’s court at Camelot.

Stephanie Spinner intertwines the two narratives of Damosel and Twixt to draw us straight into the rich Arthurian land of enchantment.  [Amazon]

Speed Reader, from the My Favorite Author blog, reports that:

I was really excited to read this book. I love re-tellings and I love stories about King Arthur and the people connected to Camelot. And I didn’t know anything about the Lady of the Lake so I was looking forward to learning more.

Unfortunately, it was the last thing that I really loved. I don’t know why, but I just never really connected with the story and finally gave up reading half-way through. I think maybe because so much of the story really didn’t involve the Lady of the Lake?

What a shame! Maybe if someone else out there has read this book, they can give us another view?

Find the book on Amazon

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Apr 27 2009

Ireland’s Inch Island reveals Mesolithic Axe

Example gabbro stone axe

Example gabbro stone axe

An 8000 year-old axe head has been found on Inch Island by the Derry and Donegal Archaeological Society reports the Derry Journal. The discovery was made in the Baylet area of Inch Island and is believed to date from the Mesolithic or Middle Stone Age, which in Ireland commenced about 7000 BC and continued until 4000 BC.

Eddie Harkin from the society said the highly polished axe head measuring approximately five inches by two inches and fashioned from a type of stone known as gabbro, was found in a ploughed field close to the southern shore of Lough Swilly.

According to Eddie, the axe head is the latest in a series of stone and flint artefacts dating from the Mesolithic, Neolithic and Bronze Age periods discovered by the group at this location over the past number of years.

Tommy Gallagher, another group member, says that given the vast amount and diversity of the artefacts collected from this particular site, it must have been a favoured place for settlement by our prehistoric ancestors for thousands of years. 

As all archaeological artefacts found in the Republic of Ireland belong to the state, the find will now be reported to the National Museum in Dublin.

See the original at the Derry Journal.

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Apr 26 2009

Golwg to provide new Welsh Language News website

golwg
Pic: golwg
Bosses behind a proposed Welsh language online news service say that an announcement over its name and launch date will be made in the next few days reports the North Wales Daily Post. The Welsh publishing group Golwg Ltd emerged as the successful bidder on May 29 last year for a grant of £200k-a-year for three years under an Assembly Government initiative to stimulate the Welsh language press.

The company said that development work on its website is now in its final stages after more than 10 months of preparation.

Publisher Dylan Iorwerth said:

We hope to make an announcement within the next few days.

The funding package was unanimously agreed by the Welsh Books Council after a tendering process.

Former heritage minister Rhodri Glyn Thomas welcomed the award of the funding to Golwg.

He said:

This development will create daily news service through the medium of Welsh in addition to strengthening the printed version of Golwg.

Golwg already receives a £75,000 subsidy to run its print magazine.

Proposals for a Welsh language daily newspaper Y Byd foundered when its backers said that the proposed Assembly funding package would be insufficient to support it.

Read the original article at the Daily Post site, or the Wales Online version for more details.

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Apr 25 2009

Kirins: The Spell of No’an – New Podiobook launches today

kirinsthespellofnoan A race of tiny, magical beings lives on Earth today. They dwell in elaborate tree homes and mysterious underground sanctuaries. Because of an ancient dispute, however, humans are unaware of their hidden civilization. So says the author, James Priest, on the Podiobooks page for this stimulating audiobook. Does that sound like the Fey to you? It does to me which is why I thought you guys might be interested in this book. Let’s find out more.

They are kirins.

For thousands of years they lived in peace. But a deadly menace now threatens their existence. A party of daring explorers, led by the wise magician Speckarin, is sent on trained ravens to destroy an evil lurking a continent and an ocean away. Failure of this mission would mean death to the voyagers and the entire kirin race. But their success will depend on aid from a truly unexpected source, human beings.

Fly with these adventurers and witness today’s world as it has never before been seen. You’ll find yourself looking to the skies for this mystical race of beings, because maybe, just maybe . . .

The Spell of No’an is the first book of the KIRINS trilogy. Mary Logue, author of DANCING WITH AN ALIEN, SNATCHED, and numerous other books, says this about the work:

Having read all three books of James Priest’s wonderful trilogy, I have nothing but praise. The scope of this work, which takes us from the middle of North America across the Atlantic on the backs of birds to Stonehenge, is extraordinary. I enjoyed every moment I spent with the kirins. Priest’s work resembles LORD OF THE RINGS, but is more rooted in nature and gentler in tone.

Sounds good, doesn’t it? Now all I have to do is find time to listen to this as well as the other wonderful podcasts in my queue!

 

[Source]

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Apr 24 2009

Yeats is still Ireland’s foremost avant-garde playwright

On Baile's Strand
 Peter Cormican and Kevin Collins in William Bulter Yeat’s
“On Baile’s Strand” produced by the Irish Repertory Theatre.
Pic: Epoch Times
Noted Irish theater critic Fintan O’Toole has written:

More than a half century after his death, William Butler Yeats is still Ireland’s foremost avant-garde playwright.

Apparently the powers-that-be at the Irish Repertory Theatre are in complete agreement. Charlotte Moore, artistic director, and Ciarán O’Reilly, producing director, have concocted a stunning series entitled “The Yeats Project,” currently presenting in repertory all 26 plays written by Yeats.

Two series consist of a total of eight fully staged one-act plays on the main stage, with the remainder of Yeats’ beautiful poetic one-acts receiving concert readings in the Rep’s downstairs Studio Theatre. Continue Reading »

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Apr 23 2009

Visit Tir Na Nog on your PSP or PS2

Pic: gary PSP World report that in Irish mythology, the Tir Na Nog is an mysterious realm that lies off of the Western edge of the map, occupied by the forever young and visited by heroes of Irish lore. It is a fantastic setting for an RPG, and Japanese games maker System Soft seem to agree.

The company has announced that it will be bringing a Tir Na Nog RPG to both the PSP and PS2 systems early next year. The console title is based on an earlier PC game. True to its PC gaming roots, Tir Na Nog features a crisper and more realistic graphical style. Landscapes and enemies took more realistic and more western than the usual anime-inspired JRPG fare.

The series has developed a small but loyal following in Japan, but is virtually unknown outside of that country. Hopefully System Soft will see fit to produce a Western localization of the game, since we can never have too many RPGs on the PSP.

[Source]

Originally posted 2008-10-20 09:10:58. Republished by Blog Post Promoter

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Apr 23 2009

Scotland’s first occupied 3,000 years before previously thought

Flint tools
Pic: Discovery Channel
Archaeologists have just identified the oldest evidence for humans in Scotland, a fairly sophisticated 14,000-year-old toolkit that may have been used to hunt and prepare big game from the region, reports the Discovery Channel. The image is of a prehistoric flint tool uncovered in a field at Howburn Farm, Elsrickle, South Lanarkshire, in the southern part of Scotland.

 

According to a report in the latest British Archaeology, the flint artifacts constitute the most northern evidence for the earliest people in Britain.

Alan Saville, senior curator of Earliest Prehistory at National Museums Scotland, worked on the project. He told Discovery News that the toolkit find is “exciting” for two main reasons. Continue Reading »

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Apr 22 2009

Cuchulainn & the Ulster Cycle in Graphic Novel

crc1shop
Pic: Paddy Brown
Paddy Brown is an accomplished comic artist and Irish scholar – you may be familiar with him from the contribution he has made to show in providing the translation used in one of our stories. He is possibly better known for his online comic strip, The Cattle-Raid of Cooley, which he has now released in Graphic Novel format. His style is unique and even more fascinating considering he is a Celtic Scholar. He says:
“In the middle of the Ulster Cycle, a group of about 80 mostly short stories, is one called Táin Bó Cúailnge, the Cattle Raid of Cooley, which is anything but short. It’s often called an epic. I’ve wanted to adapt it to comics for a long time, and have made a couple of false starts at it, but with The Ulster Cycle: Ness under my belt as a sort of practice run, I think I’m now ready to do it justice. Start reading here, and check back every Wednesday for each new installment.If you’re on Facebook, join the Cattle Raid of Cooley Facebook Group. You’ll be able to keep up with news of the comic, and I’ll be able to get to know my readers.   

“Now in print - The Cattle Raid of Cooley issue 1, collecting the first 24 pages, with pronunciation guide and notes, now available to buy from the Bookshop.”

paddy

As a  Celtic Scholar, Paddy has translated many works from the Ulster Cycle that are not available elsewhere on the web (check his site for details) and we’re all in his debt for this work. He says that he is building a website with the collected translations and we’re with him all the way! Good luck Paddy – and keep up the good work!

Visit the Paddy Brown site

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Apr 21 2009

The light of the Equinox at Loughcrew


Pic: knowthyt
 

The illumination of the passage and chamber at the Winter solstice sunrise in Newgrange is world famous. Less well known is the Equinox illumination at sunrise in Cairn T at Loughcrew. The backstone of the chamber is illuminated by a beam of light at sunrise on the Spring and Autumnal Equinoxes. Continue Reading »

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