Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Stations (poetry collection)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Language
  
English

Publication date
  
1975

Pages
  
24 pp

Originally published
  
1975

Country
  
United Kingdom

Publisher
  
Ulsterman Publications

Media type
  
Print

ISBN
  
0-903048-04-3

Author
  
Seamus Heaney

Seamus Heaney books
  
Station Island, Wintering Out, The Haw Lantern, Field Work, Door into the Dark

Stations is a poetry collection by Seamus Heaney, who received the 1995 Nobel Prize in Literature. It was published in 1975.

This particular collection presents a style of writing which was then new to Heaney, known as "verse paragraphs" or prose poems. He believed this style of poetry was his own invention, but halfway through writing the collection, while teaching in an American university in 1971, English poet, Geoffrey Hill published a collection of poetry called "Mercian Hymns", which were presented in this style of "prose poems".

In Heaney's own words "What I had regarded as stolen marches in a form new to me, had been headed off by a work of complete authority,"

However upon his return to Ireland, Heaney completed and published Stations in 1975. Among the collection are poems such as "Nesting Grounds", "England's Difficulty" and "Cloistered," which return to Heaney's childhood, although the difference between these and earlier poems being that while previously they were written with a child's eye view, now many of these poems where written from an adult's perspective of their childhood self, particularly "Nesting Ground," which shows a more cautious side to Heaney's childhood.

References

Stations (poetry collection) Wikipedia