The Mischievous Boy and other poems
by MAURICE HARMON


| Paperback | 127 x 203 mm | 80 pages | ISBN 978-1-903392-86-7 | September 2008

In this far-reaching collection Maurice Harmon extends the examination of modern Irish life that he began twenty years ago. the mischievous boy exposes the conditions of life in Ireland through various manifestations – in James Joyce, Thomas Kinsella, and William Carleton. The transformed nature of Irish society is projected in the satirical ‘A Vision of Ireland in the Twenty-first Century’In a style of luminous simplicity Maurice Harmon gives us elegies, love poems and humorous asides, delicate evocations of love and loss, considerations of misunderstanding between fathers and sons, a discussion of the attraction between men and women against the stark background of wife-murder, and portrait poems of greedy politicians. Childhood innocence and zest for living are celebrated in the title poem that serves as a foil for the discoveries of pain, deceit, and uncertainty in later experience. In the concluding section, he considers human experience in Egypt, the Middle East, America and Japan.

Maurice Harmon, Emeritus Professor of Anglo-Irish Literature at University College Dublin, is a distinguished critic, biographer, editor, literary historian, and poet. He has edited No Author Better Served. The Correspondence between Samuel Beckett and Alan Schneider (1998) and has translated the medieval Irish compendium of stories and poems The Colloquy of the Old Men (2001). He has written studies of several Irish writers, including Seán O’Faoláin, Austin Clarke, and Thomas Kinsella and edited the ground-breaking anthology Irish Poetry After Yeats. His Selected Essays (2006) contains articles on William Carleton, Mary Lavin, John Montague, and contemporary Irish poetry. A study of Thomas Kinsella as poet and translator, Thomas Kinsella. Designing for the Exact Needs, was published in March, 2008. His poetry collections include The Last Regatta (2000) and The Doll with Two Backs and other poems (2004) The title poem of The Mischievous Boy has been set to music by Derek Ball and is the subject of a stained glass window by Phyllis Burke.

Sample Poem

At Water's Edge

As they talked he reached down and slowly
extracted a piece of grass from a dense tuft
the soil yielding to pressure, reluctantly
and laid it on the pool where it drifted to one side.

As they continued he stretched down again
and gently withdrew another stem from soil
that seemed to respond more readily as though
beginning to go along with these translations.

This second extraction fitted onto the other
so that by degrees the grassy source gave up
its hoard and the sea’s gathering began
to assume a different order risen on water.

She perceived each stalk as it was drawn
flesh-pale below the green, flecks of clay
trailing roots bereft of cover and imagined
the silent pang of each fresh separation.

Yet felt no diminishment, neither weakened
nor ravished in this repositioning of things previously
knotted as though nothing were coming into being
beyond slight adjustments, neither here nor there.

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Other Salmon books by Maurice Harmon
The Last Regatta (Salmon Poetry, 2000)
The Doll with Two Backs (Salmon Poetry, 2004)