The Blackbird
Ciaran Carson, founding Director of the Seamus Heaney Centre
explains the background to Jeffrey Morgan's Blackbird, which is the emblem of the Seamus Heaney Centre at Queen's.
"In October 2003, on my first day as director of the Seamus Heaney Centre, I was walking up the little path to the School of English at 2 University Square when I spied a blackbird scuffling around in the shrubbery. I thought of the Early Irish poem known in English as ‘The Blackbird of Belfast Lough’. It looks like a typical piece of marginalia in its brevity and clarity, an example of how Irish scribes would sometimes so divert themselves from the copying of ecclesiastical texts. For all its apparent spontaneity, it is cunningly worked, written in the complex metre know as snám súad, literally ‘the swimming of the sages’, or ‘poetic floating’. I was familiar with Seamus Heaney’s translation, and I thought I might float my own attempt at it. And the poem suggested a fitting emblem for the Centre. Hence our logo, the elegantly spiky wood engraving of a blackbird singing from a ‘whin’, or gorse bush, by the artist Jeffrey Morgan.
‘The Blackbird of Belfast Lough’ has been much translated into English. The versions in the margin of this text are but two possibilities. There are, to paraphrase Wallace Stevens, at least thirteen ways of looking at a blackbird; and the blackbird can be heard in many ways. Poetry resides in that ambiguity, and that is why the blackbird has been chosen as the emblem of the Seamus Heaney Centre, and its beak, neb or nib, as the title of the Centre’s journal, The Yellow Nib."
Int én bec
ro léc feit
do rinn guip
glanbuidi
fo-ceird faíd
ós Loch Laíg
lon do chraíb
charnbuidi
9th century Irish
The small bird
chirp-chirruped:
yellow neb,
a note-spurt.
Blackbird over
Lagan water,
clumps of yellow
whin-burst!
Seamus Heaney
the little bird
that whistled shrill
from the nib of
its yellow bill
a note let go
o’er Belfast Lough—
a blackbird from
a yellow whin
Ciaran Carson
Ciaran Carson (1948-2019) was our founding Director, teaching colleague, and dear friend.
From the groundbreaking Belfast Confetti (Gallery, 1989) to his final collection Still Life (Gallery, 2019), Ciaran's work spanned prose fiction, memoir, translation, and poetry, winning numourous international awards and accolades, and covering subjects that reflect his astonishing range and depth of knowledge.
We will be forever grateful for his creative direction, intellectual rigour, and comradeship that we hope, still shapes life in the Seamus Heaney Centre. For more on Ciaran and his many achievements, here are some words from our colleague Gail McConnell.