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Introduction: Out of the Marvellous, or, Scholarship and the Magic Arts

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 September 2012

Alex Danchev
Affiliation:
University of Nottingham
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Summary

The annals say: when the monks of Clonmacnoise Were all at prayers inside the oratory A ship appeared above them in the air.

The anchor dragged along behind so deep It hooked itself into the altar rails And then, as the big hull rocked to a standstill,

A crewman shinned and grappled down the rope And struggled to release it. But in vain. ‘This man can't bear our life here and will drown,’

The abbot said, ‘unless we help him.’ So They did, the freed ship sailed, and the man climbed back Out of the marvellous as he had known it.

Seamus Heaney

‘The imaginative transformation of human life is the means by which we can most truly grasp and comprehend it.’ That will do, I think, as credo and manifesto for this book. The words are Seamus Heaney's. ‘Whatever is given,’ he writes in his own idiom, ‘can always be reimagined, however four-square, / Plank-thick, hull-stupid and out of its time / It happens to be.’ The words come from ruminations on what he calls the redress of poetry: the notion that poetry – art – can function as a kind of moral spirit level, an agent of equilibration, ‘an upright, resistant, and self-bracing entity within the general flux and flex’.

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Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Print publication year: 2009

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