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Life [ top ]
Works [ top ]
Notes Dictionary of National Biography has an encomium derived from the memoir by George F. Savage Armstrong, brother of Edmund John Armstrong, to the effect that Edmund was a sensitive and religious young Protestant at TCD who suffered from ill-health and wrote nature poems, e.g., "Glandalough" and "Prisoner of Mont St. Michel" based on journey to France. President of Hist at TCD and good speaker; all promise. John Cooke, Book of Irish Verse 1728-1909 (Dublin: Hodges, Figgis 1909) selectes "Among the Mountains"; "Sunset in the Devil’s Glen" [‘Dark and long the shadows growing, / Purpling o’er the Devil’s Glen’]; "A Dedication" [‘My land, my Erin, can we sing of thee / Save in that music ringing through thy vales’]; "A New Birth" [‘O let me bow / Submissive to Thy will!’]. British Library holds [1] Essays and Sketches of Edmund J. Armstrong. Edited by George Francis Armstrong.. pp. vii. 306. Longmans & Co.: London, 1877. 8o. [2] Poems by the late Edmund J. Armstrong. [With a preface signed: G. A. C.]. pp. lv. 335. E. Moxon & Co.: London, 1865. 8o. [3] The Life and Letters of Edmund J. Armstrong. Edited by George Francis Armstrong.. pp. xviii. 565. Longmans & Co.: London, 1877. 8o. [4] The Poetical Works of Edmund J. Armstrong. Edited by George Francis Armstrong. A new edition. [With a portrait.]. pp. xiv. 466. Longmans & Co.: London, 1877. 8o. Belfast Central Library holds Poetical Works (1877) ["Prisoner" and "Mary of Clorah" excerpted in]; Ballads of Down (1901); Stories of Wicklow, poems (1892). [ top ] Princess Grace Irish Library (Monaco) |