Seamus Heaney Quotes

Powerful Seamus Heaney for Daily Growth

Dylan Thomas is now as much a case history as a chapter in the history of poetry.

- Seamus Heaney

Now, The History Of, Chapter

I think the first little jolt I got was reading Gerard Manley Hopkins - I liked other poems... but Hopkins was kind of electric for me - he changed the rules with speech, and the whole intensity of the language was there and so on.

- Seamus Heaney

Rules, Other, I Think, Hopkins

Yeats was 18th-century oratory, almost.

- Seamus Heaney

Almost, Yeats, Oratory

Nowadays, what an award gives is a sense of solidarity with the poetry guild, as it were: sustenance coming from the assent of your peers on the judging panel.

- Seamus Heaney

Sense, Nowadays, Sustenance, Peers

Loyalism, or Unionism, or Protestantism, or whatever you want to call it, in Northern Ireland - it operates not as a class system, but a caste system.

- Seamus Heaney

Want, Unionism, Northern, Caste

I suppose you could say my father's world was Thomas Hardy and my mother's D.H. Lawrence.

- Seamus Heaney

Father, Say, Could, Hardy

I suppose you inevitably fall into habits of expression.

- Seamus Heaney

Fall, Habits, Expression, Inevitably

Sonnet is about movement in a form.

- Seamus Heaney

Movement, About, Form, Sonnet

Anyone born and bred in Northern Ireland can't be too optimistic.

- Seamus Heaney

Optimistic, Bred, Too, Ireland

The Ireland I now inhabit is one that these Irish contemporaries have helped to imagine.

- Seamus Heaney

Now, Imagine, Inhabit, Ireland

My point is there's a hidden Scotland in anyone who speaks the Northern Ireland speech. It's a terrific complicating factor, not just in Northern Ireland, but Ireland generally.

- Seamus Heaney

Hidden, Point, Northern, Ireland

In Northern Ireland, helicopters are not usually used to promote poetry.

- Seamus Heaney

Used, Promote, Helicopters, Ireland

I would say that something important for me and for my generation in Northern Ireland was the 1947 Education Act, which allowed students who won scholarships to go on to secondary schools and thence to university.

- Seamus Heaney

Education, Students, Allowed, Ireland

My father was a creature of the archaic world, really. He would have been entirely at home in a Gaelic hill-fort. His side of the family, and the houses I associate with his side of the family, belonged to a traditional rural Ireland.

- Seamus Heaney

Father, Been, Side, Ireland

A person from Northern Ireland is naturally cautious.

- Seamus Heaney

Person, Naturally, Cautious, Ireland

I think of the bog as a feminine goddess-ridden ground, rather like the territory of Ireland itself.

- Seamus Heaney

Think, I Think, Itself, Ireland

In fact, in lyric poetry, truthfulness becomes recognizable as a ring of truth within the medium itself.

- Seamus Heaney

Recognizable, Truthfulness, Lyric

The Heaneys were aristocrats, in the sense that they took for granted a code of behavior that was given and unspoken. Argumentation, persuasion, speech itself, for God's sake, just seemed otiose and superfluous to them.

- Seamus Heaney

Code, Took, Given, Superfluous

Even if the hopes you started out with are dashed, hope has to be maintained.

- Seamus Heaney

Hope, Hopes, Even, Dashed

The day I entered St Columb's College, my parents bought me a Conway Stewart pen. It was a special afternoon, of course. We were going to be parting that evening; they were aware of it, I was aware of it, nothing much was said about it.

- Seamus Heaney

College, Aware, About, Conway

Without needing to be theoretically instructed, consciousness quickly realizes that it is the site of variously contending discourses.

- Seamus Heaney

Instructed, Site, Contending, Theoretically

In my early teens, I acquired a kind of representative status: went on behalf of the family to wakes and funerals and so on. And I would be counted on as an adult contributor when it came to farm work - the hay in the summertime, for example.

- Seamus Heaney

Example, Teens, Behalf, Counted

The experimental poetry thing is not my thing. It's a programme of the avant-garde: basically a refusal of the kind of poetry I write.

- Seamus Heaney

Kind, I Write, Refusal, Avant-Garde

I've been in the habit of helping people.

- Seamus Heaney

Habit, Been, Helping, Helping People

As a young poet, you need corroboration, and that's what publication does.

- Seamus Heaney

Young, Need, Does, Publication

I have always thought of poems as stepping stones in one's own sense of oneself. Every now and again, you write a poem that gives you self-respect and steadies your going a little bit farther out in the stream. At the same time, you have to conjure the next stepping stone because the stream, we hope, keeps flowing.

- Seamus Heaney

Thought, Self-Respect, Next, Stone

I believe we are put here to improve civilisation.

- Seamus Heaney

Believe, Improve, Here, Civilisation

I've said it before about the Nobel Prize: it's like being struck by a more or less benign avalanche. It was unexpected, unlooked for, and extraordinary.

- Seamus Heaney

More, Like, Before, Nobel Prize

The kinds of truth that art gives us many, many times are small truths. They don't have the resonance of an encyclical from the Pope stating an eternal truth, but they partake of the quality of eternity. There is a sort of timeless delight in them.

- Seamus Heaney

Small, Eternity, Pope, Delight

The problem as you get older... is that you become more self-aware. At the same time, you have to surprise yourself. There's no way of arranging the surprise, so it is tricky.

- Seamus Heaney

Surprise, More, Same Time, Arranging

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