In death, Seamus Heaney lives on

September 02, 2013 13:59
In death, Seamus Heaney lives on

Seamus Heaney, a Nobel prize winner has breated this last, but his work lives on. The creativity of a poetic genuis is never dead.

"The soul exceeds its circumstances..." Little did the poet who wrote the lines thought how he would continue to live even after his death through these very poignant lines.

One of Ireland's greatest poet and Nobel Laureate Seamus Heaney breathed his last on Friday in a Dublin hospital. The poet was 74. He is survived by his wife, Marie, and children Christopher, Michael and Catherine.

Considered Ireland's greatest poet after W.B. Yeats, the poet has left behind a “half-century's body of work” that reflected his experience: the tart smells and effete beauty of Irish landscapes, the loss of loved ones and the nostalgia, and the heckled soul of his native Northern Ireland.

Seamus-Heaney-Dead

Also, one of the world's premier classicists, Seamus Heaney transliterated and elucidated ancient works of Athens and Rome for today's generation.

"A bear of a man with a signature mop of untamed silvery hair, he gave other writers and fans time, attention, advice - and left a legacy of one-on-one, life-changing moments encouraged by his self-deprecating, common-man touch", wrote The Huffington Post in an obituary to the dead poet.

Winner in his right, Seamus Heaney's death is a reminder that one must choose to excel in what they are gifted with.

Image Source: The Telegraph, BBC News

(AW: Suchorita Dutta)

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