Drunken Sailor
$11.95 – $21.95
In Drunken Sailor, Montague explores the political divide in his native County Tyrone, his own rural Catholic upbringing, the changing face of modern Ireland, the landscape of Ireland as historical palimpsest, and his own fascination with the sea. Many of these themes are familiar to readers of Montague, but here they are handled with the amplitude and unhurried artistry of one deeply practiced in his craft. In this volume the poet grapples with mortality, his own and others’, creating images that haunt the imagination.
Note: The clothbound edition has a signature embossed cover and a plain vellum jacket.
Praise for Drunken Sailor
“Less strict than British verse, more formal than American, Montague poems take a great variety of forms—imagistic description, dramatic monologues, elegies, litanies, quest romance all appear in the Drunken Sailor. . . . There are many measured and measuring allusions to the late great Yeats in Drunken Sailor, but this best thing [“Last Court”] is simply great late Montague.”
– Adrian Frazier, The Irish Times
Description
In Drunken Sailor, Montague explores the political divide in his native County Tyrone, his own rural Catholic upbringing, the changing face of modern Ireland, the landscape of Ireland as historical palimpsest, and his own fascination with the sea. Many of these themes are familiar to readers of Montague, but here they are handled with the amplitude and unhurried artistry of one deeply practiced in his craft. In this volume the poet grapples with mortality, his own and others’, creating images that haunt the imagination.
Note: The clothbound edition has a signature embossed cover and a plain vellum jacket.
Praise for Drunken Sailor
“Less strict than British verse, more formal than American, Montague poems take a great variety of forms—imagistic description, dramatic monologues, elegies, litanies, quest romance all appear in the Drunken Sailor. . . . There are many measured and measuring allusions to the late great Yeats in Drunken Sailor, but this best thing [“Last Court”] is simply great late Montague.”
– Adrian Frazier, The Irish Times
Additional information
Publication date: | 2005 |
---|---|
Pages: | 80 |
Binding: |