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Leslie Daiken
   
Life
1912-1964 [Leslie H. Yodaiken; fam. the Yod]; b. Dublin; ed.
TCD MA, republican socialist; moved to London; poetry and propaganda;
wrote much on childrens games; edited Irish Front with Charles
Donnelly in London; edited Goodbye, Twilight (1936), an Irish anthology. DIW OCIL
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Works
Poetry, Good-bye Twilight, Songs
of ... Struggle in Ireland (London 1936), ill. Harry Kernoff; The
Signature of All Things (1944), and The Lullaby Book (1957);
They Go, The Irish (1944), anthology, with pref. by Sean OCasey.
COMM, incl. glancing reference in Becketts Recent Irish Poetry
(Bookman).
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Criticism
Edna Longley, Progress Bookmen, politics and Northern Protestant
writers since the 1930, in The Irish Review, No. 1 (1986),
p.51.
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Notes
Lennox Robinson & Donagh MacDonagh,
eds., Oxford Book of Irish Poetry (1958), selects Lines to
My Father [p.321].
Kathleen Hoagland, ed.,
1,000 Years of Irish Poetry: The Gaelic and Anglo-Irish Poets from
Pagan Times to the Present (NY: Devin Adair 1947), gives poems of
Daiken.
Ulster Libraries: Belfast
Public Library holds They Go, The Irish (1944). University of Ulster
Library holds They Go, The Irish, A Miscellany of War-Time
Writing, compiled by Leslie Daiken (London: [Ivor] Nicholson &
Watson 1944), 123pp.
Archives: Harry Ransom
Humanities Research Centre (Univ. of Texas at Austin) holds 4 boxes of
papers of Leslie Daiken incl. MSS material relating to his children's
stories and correspondence with Samuel Beckett, Austin Clarke, Cyril Cusack,
Sean O'Casey, Seumas O'Sullivan, Thomas B. Rudmose-Brown, Blanaid Salkeld,
Caitlin Thomas, Arland Ussher, et al. (incl. William Carlos Williams).
They Go, The Irish, A Miscellany of War-Time Writing, compiled
by Leslie Daiken (London: [Ivor] Nicholson & Watson 1944), 123pp.;
contains foreword [airgraph from Denis Johnston at 8th Army HQ blames
the post for being too late to catch this anthology ... blessing from
Walter Starkie]; Sean OCasey, There they go the Irish,
[Ireland is a kaleidoscope of amazing contrasts. she is the oldest
civilisation in Europe, though she is still in her teens ... A nation
of Roman Catholics who abominate prosleytism, but whose army and clans
carried to the greave, with dirge of squealing pipe and beat of muffled
drum, the body of the most proselytising English bishop ever usurped a
See in Ireland, chiefs weeping over his grave, and hoping that they would
as fair a chance of heaven as the English bishop had ... &c. (p.7)
... even a more scattered race than the Jews (p.17); castigates Irish
politicians North and South from a socialist standpoint]; contrib. Bernard
Arbarnel [?pseud]; Margaret Berington [sic for Barrington]; Flann Campbell,
Jottings from a Campsite, 47-54 [Welcome to the Kingdom
Hotel, says the hut orderly, with a sarcastic flourish ... ending
... Five hundre men eat dry bread for breakfast this morning]; Four
Poems, George Brady; An Irish child Meets Nazism, Seamus Boy Phelan; Journal
of Fear, H. L. Morrow; Dr OCassidys Neutrality Mixture,
Charles Duff [to whom the signed copy in University of Ulster Library
is dedicated]; The Departure, Violet McGuire; Four Poems,
Ewart Milne; Letter to Another Emigrant, Donal MacNeachtain; Mild and
Bitter, Jim Phelan; Anglo-Irish, Finlay Thompson; From Inside the Railings
(Three Poems), Leslie Daiken [one set in Stephens Green with local
references incl. Mangan and Countesss bust (Markievicz); through
archipelagos of anguish hatched and heated ... Doped of an Indian summer
... Bray was my Balbec; the third Nightfall in Galway,
In Eyre Square the stillness of epilepsy ... about the stone ears
of Ó Connaire (sic) on his plinth,/a leprachaun listening/falls
the husky song of drunkards like the call of a muezzin ... A Church bell
rings and a Spring morning unfolds/her hair of Andalusian jet, and combs
it out, smiling.]
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Princess Grace Irish Library (Monaco)
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