His poems are distinguished by a noble sense of
harmony and an exquisite sympathy with natural beauty.
One of the most graceful of Irish lyrists, he is entirely
free from the morbidity and fantastic sentiment so
much affected by modern poets. Such poems as "The
Bridal of the Year", "Summer Longings"
[alias Waiting for the May], and his
long narrative poem, "The Voyage of St. Brendan",
seem with the years but to increase in general esteem.
The last-mentioned, in which a beautiful paraphrase
of the "Ave Maria Stella" is inserted as the evening
song of the sailors, is not more clearly characterized
by its fine poetic insight than by that earnest religious
feeling which marked its author throughout life. But
it is by his incomparable version of Calderon that he
has most surely won a permanent place in English
letters. For this task--always beset with extreme
difficulties--of transferring the poetry of one language
into the poetry of another without mutilating the
spirit or form of the original, he was qualified by the
sympathy of his countrymen with the Catholic spirit
of the Latin races, and especially with Spain as the
mythical cradle of the Irish race. His success is sufficiently
testified by Ticknor, who declared in his "History
of Spanish Literature" that our author "has
succeeded in giving a faithful idea of what is grandest
and most effective in his [sc. Calderon's] genius...to
a degree which I had previously thought impossible.
Nothing, I think, in the English language will give us
so true an impression of what is most characteristic of
the Spanish drama, and of Spanish poetry generally".
Freeman's Journal (Dublin, 10 April, 1882);
Nation (Dublin, 15 April, 1882);
READ, Cabinet of Irish Literature, IV, 154;
O'DONOGHUE, Poets of Ireland (Dublin), 140;
CLERKE in Dublin Review, XL (1883), 260-93.
THOMAS KENNEDY
Copyright © 1913 [expired in USA] The Encyclopedia Press.
Source:
Transcribed by Dennis McCarthy
He was editor of the Book of Irish Ballads and the Poets
and Dramatists of Ireland (published by Duffy, Dublin). An
incomplete edition of his poems, by his son, John MacCarthy,
was published by Gill, Dublin in 1882. Denis Florence MacCarthy
died on the 7th of April, 1882, aged 65. His poetical
gifts were inherited by his daughter, who became a nun, and
wrote as Sister Mary Stanislaus.
Copyright © 1922 [expired] Samuel Trant McCarthy.
Source:
The above published sources are public domain under the terms of
Title 17, United States Code, Section 304(b) [Copyright Act of 1976].
The transcriber does not claim to know the copyright status of these
publication outside of the United States.
Published in 1997-2000 by Dennis McCarthy
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