Poem
An Mhurúch agus an Sagart Paróiste
Title | An Mhurúch agus an Sagart Paróiste |
---|---|
Author | Nuala Ní Dhomhnaill |
Instances of Publication
A published appearance of this poem.
Collection/Anthology | Year of Publication | Medium | View Details |
---|---|---|---|
Cead Aighnis | 1998 | Print Collection | View Details |
Feis agus Cead Aighnis | 2015 | Print Collection | View Details |
The Fifty Minute Mermaid | 2007 | Print Collection | View Details |
Translations
Connected translations of this poem.
Title | Author | Collection/Anthology | Year | View Details |
---|---|---|---|---|
Our Mermaid Goes Under Again | Paul Muldoon | The Fifty Minute Mermaid | 2007 | View Details |
Publication Instance Details #750
Collection/Anthology Details
Collection/Anthology | Cead Aighnis |
---|---|
Date of Publication | 1998 |
Publisher | An Sagart (Ireland) |
Page Number(s) | 136-137 |
Publication Overview
Translation | Is Multilingual | Explicit Irish Context? | Ekphrasis | Has Paratext? | Reference to News, Media or Technology |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
No |
No |
Yes |
No |
No |
No |
Details
Human Rights Issues | |
---|---|
Irish Context | |
Languages | |
Genre | Part Of Lyric Sequence |
Medium | Print Collection |
Notes | This sequence of poems, 'Na Murúcha a Thriomnaigh', makes use of the international folk tale of the mermaid to construct an allegorical world in which the merpeople have left the water and now live uneasily among humankind on earth. The speaker of this poem describes an event in which the mermaid, a clever child in school, is invited over to the priest's house, where he proceeds to sexually abuse her. This occurs for a period, before the mermaid refuses to return. Her trauma at the abuse appears to continue through her life, with her mother dismissing the abuse. The mermaid turns her back on everything that reminds her of the time: the bible, the Irish language, and going to mass. This poem brings up serious issues of clerical power which are reminiscent of sex abuse scandals in the Irish Catholic Church. The Great Famine and Irish cultural loss is understood to be implicit in this sequence of poems. |
Is bunachar beo é seo. Entries continue to be updated.