At seventy-five, John Montague, the doyen of Ulster poetry, is as vigorous and
creative as ever. Drunken Sailor opens at the mouth of Cork Harbour, then journeys
across the county to West Cork before embracing matters of his Northern past.
Mortality and the power of myth are among his subjects, and there is an underlying dialogue with Yeats,
from the ruined towers at Roche's Point, to the glimpse of Ben Bulben in the ambitious longer
poem, 'The Plain of Blood' with which the book culminates. But Montague's vision is both more
pagan and more Catholic.
In his second volume of lyrics since Collected Poems (1995)
John Montague combines the energy and ardour of a young poet with the wisdom and rue of a sage.