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John Montague (poet)

 

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John Montague (poet)



 
 
John Montague (born February 28, 1929) is an Irish poet. He was born in New York
New York

The State of New York is a U.S. state in the Mid-Atlantic States and Northeastern United States regions of the United States and is the nation's List of U.S....
 and brought up in Tyrone. He has published a number of volumes of poetry, two collections of short stories and a two volumes of memoir. He is one of the best known Irish contemporary poets. In 1998 he became the first occupant of the Ireland Chair of Poetry.

Montague was born in Brooklyn
Brooklyn

Brooklyn is one of the five Borough of New York City, located at the western end of Long Island. An independent city until its consolidation with New York in 1898, Brooklyn is New York City's most populous borough, with 2.5 million residents, and second largest in area....
, New York
New York

The State of New York is a U.S. state in the Mid-Atlantic States and Northeastern United States regions of the United States and is the nation's List of U.S....
, on February 28, 1929.






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John Montague (born February 28, 1929) is an Irish poet. He was born in New York
New York

The State of New York is a U.S. state in the Mid-Atlantic States and Northeastern United States regions of the United States and is the nation's List of U.S....
 and brought up in Tyrone. He has published a number of volumes of poetry, two collections of short stories and a two volumes of memoir. He is one of the best known Irish contemporary poets. In 1998 he became the first occupant of the Ireland Chair of Poetry.

Early life

John Montague was born in Brooklyn
Brooklyn

Brooklyn is one of the five Borough of New York City, located at the western end of Long Island. An independent city until its consolidation with New York in 1898, Brooklyn is New York City's most populous borough, with 2.5 million residents, and second largest in area....
, New York
New York

The State of New York is a U.S. state in the Mid-Atlantic States and Northeastern United States regions of the United States and is the nation's List of U.S....
, on February 28, 1929. His father, James Montague, an Ulster Catholic, from County Tyrone, had gone to America in 1925 to join his brother John. Both were sons of John Montague, who had been made a Justice of the Peace
Justice of the Peace

A Justice of the Peace is a puisne judicial officer appointed by means of a letters patent to keep the peace. Depending on the jurisdiction, they might dispense summary justice and deal with local administrative applications in common law jurisdictions....
 by England's Queen Victoria, combining his legal duties with being a schoolmaster, farmer, postmaster and director of several firms. John continued as postmaster but James became involved in the turbulent Irish Republican scene in the years after 1916, particularly complicated in areas like Fermanagh and Tyrone, on the borders of the newly divided island
Partition of Ireland

The partition of Ireland between the north-eastern Northern Ireland and the rest of Ireland took place on 3 May 1921 under the Government of Ireland Act 1920....
. Mary (Carney) Montague joined her husband James in America in 1928, with their two elder sons. John was born on Bushwisk Avenue, St. Catherine’s Hospital, and spent his earliest years playing with his brothers in the streets of Brooklyn, putting nickels on the trolley lines, playing on a tenement roof, seeing early Mickey Mouse movies.

Return to Garvaghey
Garvaghey

Garvaghey The Rough Field) is a hamlet situated in County Tyrone about 5 miles from Ballygawley, County Tyrone and 11 miles from Omagh. It consists of a small number of houses with a number of new developments in progress, there is a local primary school St....
 

Although Uncle John ran a speakeasy
Speakeasy

A speakeasy was an establishment which illegally sold alcoholic beverages during the period of History of the United States known as Prohibition in the United States ....
, where he employed his brother, James Montague did not find life in New York easy during the Depression years. So the three boys were shipped back to Ireland in 1933, the two eldest to their maternal grandmother’s house in Fintona, Co. Tyrone, where they had been born, but John was sent to his father’s ancestral home at Garvaghey
Garvaghey

Garvaghey The Rough Field) is a hamlet situated in County Tyrone about 5 miles from Ballygawley, County Tyrone and 11 miles from Omagh. It consists of a small number of houses with a number of new developments in progress, there is a local primary school St....
, then maintained by two spinster aunts, Brigid and Freda, who welcomed the boy of four.

From New York to a farm on the edge of the Clogher Valley in County Tyrone was a significant step backwards in time. John did all the usual farming chores. He became a normal Ulster farm child, though haunted by the disparity between what the house in Garvaghey had been, in the days of his grandfather and namesake, and the reduced present.

John went first to Garvaghey School and then to Glencull, three miles away, where he was coached by a young and ardent master. Scholarships brought him to St. Patrick's College, Armagh, the junior Diocesan Seminary and the place where his Jesuit uncle, Thomas Montague, had gone. While he knows the present cardinal and most of the priests of the diocese of Armagh, John did not discover a religious vocation in himself.

Education

The teacher he remembers most from Armagh was Sean O Boyle, one of the leading experts on Ulster folksong and Irish poetry. From him John imbibed, almost against his will, a strong sense of the long tradition of Irish poetry. John studied at University College Dublin in 1946. He found an extraordinary contrast between the Ulster of the War Years and post-war Dublin, where the atmosphere was introverted and melancholy. Stirred by the example of other student poets (including Thomas Kinsella
Thomas Kinsella

Thomas Kinsella is an Irish poetry, translator, editor, and publisher....
) he began to publish his first poems in The Dublin Magazine, Envoy, and The Bell, edited by Peadar O’Donnell. But the atmosphere in Dublin was still constrained and Montague left for Yale
YALE

RapidMiner is an environment for machine learning and data mining experiments. It allows experiments to be made up of a large number of arbitrarily nestable operators, described in XML files which can easily be created with RapidMiner's graphical user interface....
 on a Fullbright Fellowship in 1953.

John had already met Saul Bellow
Saul Bellow

Saul Bellow , was an acclaimed Canada-United States writer born in Canada of Russian-Jewish origin. He won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1976 and the National Medal of Arts in 1988....
 at the Sazburg Seminar in American Studies and now he worked with Robert Penn Warren
Robert Penn Warren

Robert Penn Warren was an American poet, novelist, and literary critic, and one of the founders of New Criticism. He was also a charter member of the Fellowship of Southern Writers....
 as well as auditing the classes of several Yale critics, like Rene Wellek and W. K. Wimsatt. He extended his sense of contemporary American literature, attending Indiana Summer School of Letters where he heard Richard Wilbur, Leslie Fiedler, and John Crowe Ransom, who like the Irish poet Austin Clarke
Austin Clarke

Austin Ardinel Chesterfield Clarke, Order of Canada, Order of Ontario is a Canada novelist, essayist and short story writer who lives in Toronto, Ontario....
, encouraged Montague, finding him a job at the Iowa Writers Workshop in 1954-55.

Life during the 50s and 60s

From Iowa to Berkeley
University of California, Berkeley

The University of California, Berkeley is a public university research university located in Berkeley, California, California, United States. The oldest of the ten major campuses affiliated with the University of California, Berkeley offers some 300 undergraduate and graduate degree programs in a wide range of disciplines....
, a year of graduate school convinced Montague that he should return to Ireland. He sailed back to France that summer, to marry his first wife, Madeleine, whom he had met in Iowa, where she was also on a Fullbright; they settled in Herbert Street, Dublin, a few doors down from Brendan Behan
Brendan Behan

Brendan Francis Behan was an Irish literature poet, short story writer, novelist, and playwright who wrote in both Irish and English. He was also a committed Irish Republican and a volunteer in the Irish Republican Army ....
. Working by day at the Irish Tourist Office, Montague at last gathered his first book of poems, Poisoned Lands (1961).

That year he also moved to Paris
Paris

Paris is the Capital of France and the country's largest city. It is situated on the river Seine, in northern France, at the heart of the ?le-de-France Regions of France ....
, to a small studio a block away from Samuel Beckett
Samuel Beckett

Samuel Barclay Beckett was an Irish people writer, dramatist and poet. Beckett's work offers a bleak outlook on human culture and both formally and philosophically became increasingly minimalism....
, with whom he slowly became on good drinking terms. There, he also met another neighbour, the French poet Claude Esteban
Claude Esteban

Claude Esteban was a France poet.Author of a major poetic work of this last half-century, Claude Esteban wrote numerous essays on art and poetry and was the French translator, inter alia, of Jorge Guill?n, Octavio Paz, Jorge Luis Borges, Federico Garc?a Lorca, or Francisco de Quevedo....
, with whom he became friends — Montague recently translated into English and published some of his poems. A regular rhythm of publication saw his first book of stories, Death of a Chieftain (1964) after which the musical group The Chieftains
The Chieftains

The Chieftains are a Grammy-winning Ireland musical group founded in 1962, best known for being one of the first bands to make Folk music of Ireland popular around the world....
 were named, his second book of poems, A Chosen Light (1967), Tides (1970), the latter both also published by Swallow in the U.S.

All during the sixties, Montague continued to work on his long poem, The Rough Field, a task that coincided with the outbreak of the Civil Rights
Civil rights

Civil and political rights are a class of rights ensuring things such as the protection of peoples' physical integrity; procedural fairness in law; protection from discrimination based on sexism, religious intolerance, Racism, Homophobia, etc; individual freedom of freedom of belief, freedom of speech, freedom of association, and freedom...
 Movement in Northern Ireland. A Patriotic Suite appeared in 1966, Hymn to the New Omagh Road and The Bread God in 1968, and A New Siege, dedicated to Bernadette Devlin
Bernadette Devlin McAliskey

Josephine Bernadette Devlin McAliskey , also known as Bernadette Devlin and Bernadette McAliskey, is a Socialist Irish republicanism political activist....
 which he read outside Armagh Jail in 1970. In 1972, the long poem was finally published by Dolmen/Oxford and Montague returned to Ireland, to live and teach in University College Cork, at the request of his friend, the composer Seán Ó Riada
Seán Ó Riada

Se?n ? Riada , was a composer and bandleader, and perhaps the single most influential figure in the renaissance of Music of Ireland from the 1960s, through his participation in Ceolt?ir? Chualann, his compositions, his writings and his broadcasts on the topic....
, where he inspired an impressive field of young writers including Gregory O'Donoghue,Sean Dunne
Seán Dunne (poet)

Se?n Dunne was a poet born in Waterford, Ireland....
, Thomas McCarthy
Thomas McCarthy

Thomas McCarthy may refer to:*Thomas McCarthy , Irish poet*Thomas McCarthy , Quebec businessman and political figure*Thomas McCarthy , American actor, director and screenwriter...
, William Wall
William Wall

William Wall is an Ireland novelist, poet and short story writer. He was born in Cork City in 1955, but grew up in the coastal village of Whitegate....
, Maurice Riordan
Maurice Riordan

Maurice Riordan was born in Lisgoold, County Cork, in 1953, and is a poet, translator, editor and tutor. He has published three collections of poetry: A Word from the Loki , a largely London-based collection which was a Poetry Book Society Choice and shortlisted for the T....
, Gerry Murphy
Gerry Murphy

Gerry Murphy was the Director of Football Development at Huddersfield Town F.C. between 1988 and 2009. He was the Academy Director between 1988 and 17 April 2007, and was caretaker manager of Huddersfield Town from 6 March to 11 April 2007 and again from 1 April to 3 May 2008 and for a third time between 4 November to 15 December 2008....
, Greg Delanty
Greg Delanty

Greg Delanty is a noted contemporary Republic of Ireland poet.Delanty won the National Poetry Competition in 1999 and was awarded the Austin Clarke Centenary Poetry prize in 1996....
 and Theo Dorgan. The Rough Field (1972) was slowly recognized as a major achievement.

Since 1974

Settled in Cork
Cork (city)

Cork is the second largest city in the Republic of Ireland and the Ireland third most populous city after Dublin and Belfast. It is the principal city and administrative centre of County Cork and the largest city in the Provinces of Ireland of Munster....
 with his second wife, Evelyn Robson, Montague published an anthology, The Faber Book of Irish Verse
Faber Book of Irish Verse

The Faber Book of Irish Verse was a poetry anthology edited by John Montague and first published in 1974 in poetry by Faber and Faber. Recognised as an important collection, it has been described as 'the only general anthology of Irish verse in the past 30 years that has a claim to be a work of art in itself ......
 (1974) with a book of lyrics, A Slow Dance (1975). Recognition was now beginning to come, with the Award of the Irish American Cultural Institute in 1976, the first Marten Toonder Award in 1977, and in 1978, the Alice Hunt Bartlett Award for The Great Cloak, “the best book of poetry in two years” according to the Poetry Society of Great Britain. A Guggenheim in 1979-80 enabled Montague to complete his Selected Poems (1982) and his second long poem, The Dead Kingdom (1984) both co-published by Dolmen (Ireland), Oxford (England), Wake Forest University Press (U.S.) and Exile Editions (Canada).

In 1987, Montague was awarded an honorary doctor of letters by the State University of New York at Buffalo. Governor Mario M. Cuomo presented Montague a citation in 1987 “for his outstanding literary achievements and his contributions to the people of New York.” Montague serves as Distinguished Writer-in-Residence for the New York State Writers Institute during each spring semester, teaching workshops in fiction and poetry and a class in the English Department, University at Albany.

In 1995, Montague and his second wife, Evelyn, separated, and he formed a partnership with American student Elizabeth Wassell (later to be author of The Honey Plain (1996)).

In 2000, Montague was awarded The Vincent Buckley Poetry Prize
The Vincent Buckley Poetry Prize

The Vincent Buckley Poetry Prize is a biennial award that is offered alternately to enable an Australian poet to visit Ireland and to facilitate the visit of an Irish poet to Melbourne....
.

Style

Montague's poems chart boyhood, schooldays, love and relationships. Family and personal history and Ireland's history are also prominent themes in his poetry.

Montague is noted for his vowel harmonies, his use of assonance and echo, and his handling of the line and line break. Montague believes that a poem appears with its own rhythm and that rhythm and line lengths should be based on living speech.

Bibliography Since 1986

  • The Pear Is Ripe (Memoir) Liberties Press, 2007 ISBN-13: 978-1905483259
  • The Lost Notebook (a novella). Mercier Press, Cork, 1987.
  • Mount Eagle (poems). Wake Forest University Press, Winston Salem, 1989.
  • Bitter Harvest (an anthology of recent Irish poetry). Scribners, New York, 1989.
  • The Figure in the Cave (essays). Syracuse University Press, Syracuse, 1989.
  • Born in Brooklyn (selected American writings). White Pine Press, Buffalo, 1991.
  • An Occasion of Sin (short stories ). Exile Editions, Toronto; White Pine Press, Buffalo, 1992.
  • The Love Poems. Exile Editions, Toronto, 1992; Sheep Meadow Press, New York, 1993.
  • Time in Armagh (a sequence of poems). Gallery Press, Dublin, 1993.
  • The Collected Poems Wake Forest University Press, Winston Salem, 1995.
  • Smashing the Piano Wake Forest University Press, Winston Salem, 2001.
  • Drunken Sailor Wake Forest University Press, Winston Salem, 2005.
  • The Rough Field, 6th ed. Wake Forest University Press, Winston Salem, 2005.


Collections

  • Poisoned Lands ISBN 0-85105-319-X
  • Rough Field ISBN 1-930630-21-2 ISBN 1-85235-045-8 ISBN 1-85235-044-X
  • Time in Armagh ISBN 1-85235-112-8
  • Tides ISBN 0-85105-177-4


Further reading

  • Val Nolan, ‘John Montague: Learning to be Humble’, Southword, Issue 14, pp. 127-132 (Cork: June 2008); Interview with the poet about his life and career.


External links

  • North American publisher of Montague