I
pity the man who must witness the fate of himself . . .
The themes and tones of Michael Hartnett's A Farewell to English (1975)
harmonised so precisely with the anger and desperation of Daibhí
O Bruadair (c.1623-1698) that they conferred on Hartnett the 'right'
to translate his selected poems.
In this collection, Michael Hartnett relays the complete scope of
O Bruadair's attitudes and subject matter. Sometimes lyrical,
sometimes charged with spleen, the poems range from the epigrammatic
to the prolix. They include laments, both personal and communal.
'Death's the theme of all my writing' -- the death of specific
patrons and learned men and, above all, of an entire national
culture.