Heaney - Seamus Heaney Collection - 1963-1976

The Seamus Heaney Collection comprises typescript and manuscript poems, many of which were later pulished in Death of a Naturalist and Door into the Dark. There is also a short story titled The Blackberry Gatherers and 8 letters to Philip Hobsbaum, including discussion of Heaney's work and The Group...

Full description

Main Creator: Heaney, Seamus
Other Creators: Hobsbaum, Philip
Archive level description: Fonds
Physical Description:5 folders
Alternative Format:Many of the poems were published, sometimes with changes, in Death of a Naturalist(Faber, 1966) and Door into the Dark(Faber, 1969).
Languages:English
Subjects:
Summary:The Seamus Heaney Collection comprises typescript and manuscript poems, many of which were later pulished in Death of a Naturalist and Door into the Dark. There is also a short story titled The Blackberry Gatherers and 8 letters to Philip Hobsbaum, including discussion of Heaney's work and The Group meetings in Belfast.
Date:1963-1976
Reference Number:Heaney
Accruals:There are no anticipated accruals.
Access Conditions:Access is open to bona fide researchers; an appointment must be made in advance of any visit.
Arrangement:

The collection has been divided into three sections

  • Poems
  • Correspondence
  • Short Story
Finding Aids:A finding aid is available in the reading room in the Literary Manuscripts folder.
Related Material:Special Collections and Archives at the University of Liverpool also holds a collection of printed material about and by the poet, including a cassette recording of Seamus Heaney reading his own work. This published material is recorded in the main library catalogue.other modern literary manuscripts, such as the Ted Hughes Collection, Sylvia Plath Papers and a D.H.Lawrence Letter Collection.Emory University Library: Special Collections and Archives holds Seamus Heaney correspondence and papers.
Access Restrictions:Reproduction and licensing rules available on request.
Bibliography:[Book] Heaney, Seamus (b.1939), Death of a Naturalist(Faber, London 1966).
Alternative Format:Many of the poems were published, sometimes with changes, in Death of a Naturalist(Faber, 1966) and Door into the Dark(Faber, 1969).
Biographical/Administrative Information:

Seamus John Heaney was born on 13 April 1939, the eldest of nine children, and grew up on his father's cattle-farm. In 1957 Heaney earnt a scholarship to study English Language and Literature at Queen's University of Belfast, graduating with a First in 1961. He then attended St Joseph's Teacher Training College, beginning to publish poetry for the first time in 1962. He taught for one year, before returning to St Josephs as a lecturer. It was at this time, in the spring of 1963, that he came to the attention of Philip Hobsbaum, who was then an English lecturer at Queen's. Hobsbaum would set up a Belfast Group of young poets to mirror his success in London, bringing Heaney into contact with other Belfast poets such as Derek Mahon and Michael Longley.

In 1966 Faber and Faber published Heaney's first volume of poems, Death of a Naturalist, which made him famous as "the Irish poet". He had married Marie Devlin, a school teacher in 1965 and the folllowing year their first son was born. Also in 1966, Heaney left St Joseph's to become Lecturer in Modern English Literature at Queen's University, a post he would hold for six years. During this time Door into the Dark, another volume of poems, was published and he also had a spell as a guest lecturer at the University of California, Berkeley.

In 1972 he left the lecturership in Belfast and moved to the Republic of Ireland in order to concentrate on his writing. He would later take on posts such as Professor of Poetry at Oxford (1989-94, not requiring residence) and Poet in Residence at Harvard (1982-, requiring one semester of teaching). Throughout this period Heaney divided his time between Ireland and the U.S. and continued to give very popular public readings. In 1995 he received the Nobel Prize in Literature for "works of lyrical beauty and ethical depth, which exalt everyday miracles and the living past", as stated by the Nobel Committee. He remains one of the most celebrated modern poets.