Door into the Dark explained
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
- Night-Piece
- Gone
- Dream
- The Outlaw
- The Salmon Fisher to the Salmon
- The Forge
- Thatcher
- The Peninsula
- In Gallarus Oratory
- Girls Bathing, Galway, 1965
- Requiem for the Croppies
- Rite of Spring
- Undine
- The Wife's Tale
- Mother
- Cana Revisited
- Elegy for a Still-born Child
- Victorian Guitar
- Night Drive
- At Ardboe Point
- Relic of Memory
- A Lough Neagh Sequence 1. Up the Shore
- A Lough Neagh Sequence 2. Beyond Sargasso
- A Lough Neagh Sequence 3. Bait
- A Lough Neagh Sequence 4. Setting
- A Lough Neagh Sequence 5. Lifting
- A Lough Neagh Sequence 6. The Return
- A Lough Neagh Sequence 7. Vision
- The Given Note
- Whinlands
- The Plantation
- Shoreline
- Bann Clay
- Bogland
Notes and References
- Web site: The Nobel Prize in Literature 1995 . 2022-06-29 . NobelPrize.org . en-US.