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Life [ top ] Works [ top ] Criticism Mannix Joyce, The Joyce Brothers of Glenosheen, in Capuchin Annual (1969), [q.pp.]. David James ODonoghue, The Literature of 67, in Shamrock, 30 (1893). D. J. ODonoghue has a memoir of him in Irish Book Lover [q.d.] [ top ]
Stephen Brown, Ireland in Fiction: A Guide to Irish Novels, Tales, Romances and Folklore [Pt. I] (Dublin: Maunsel 1919), gives bio-data: br. of Patrick Weston; Legends of the Wars in Ireland (1868); Irish Fireside Tales (1871); lived in US as a doctor, works publ. in Boston; b. Limerick 1830, d. Dublin 1883. See also FDA3, 625. Desmond Clarke, Ireland in Fiction: A Guide to Irish Novels, Tales, Romances and Folklore [Pt. 2] (Cork: Royal Carbery 1985), Joyce, Robert Dwyer, Galloping OHogan, or the Rapparee Captains (Dublin, Gill, n.d.), apparently a reprinted of the four Joyce stories in the Glasgow collection. John Cooke, ed., Dublin Book of Irish Verse 1728-1909 (Dublin: Hodges, Figgis 1909), gives bio-dates 1830-1883; selects Finneen ODriscoll the Rover; The Drynán Dhun; Margréad Bán; Song of the Forest. Justin McCarthy, gen. ed., Irish Literature (Washington: University of America 1904), gives six pieces, incl. extracts from Deirdre, and Blanid; biog. notice: b. Glenosheen [village], Co. Limerick; entered service of Commissioners of national Education, then became student at Queens College, Cork; grad. Sci., Hons; MD, 1865; emig. US 1866, settled in Boston, practised medicine; freq. contrib to The Nation, also articles on Irish literature in other periodicals; Ballads, Romances, and Songs (Dublin 1861); Legends of the Wars in Ireland (1868), prose stories founded on traditions of peasantry in northern counties; Irish Fireside Tales (1871), same sort; Ballads of Irish Chivalry (1872); Deirdre (1876), free poetical version in rhyming heroic verse [of Longes mac nUislenn]; Blanid (1879), also tragedy of real life in ancient days, period of Red Branch Knights, 1st century of the Christian era, and death of the champion Curoi, King of S. Munster, and his captive, the bloom-bright Blanid; notes resemblance to Tennysons Princess; d. Oct. 1883 [sic]; selects The Blacksmith of Limerick, Crossing the Blackwater, AD 1603, The Wind that Shakes the Barley, Naisi Receives his Sword, from Deirdre; The Exploits of Curoi, from Blanid, in terza rima [all as supra]. Ulster Libraries: Belfast Public Library holds Ballads of Irish Chivalry (1908); Blanid (1879. University of Ulster Library, Morris Collection, holds Ballads of Irish Chivalry (1908); Blanid (1879). Fr. Charles Meehan administered religious consolation to Robert Dwyer Joyce on his deathbed in the house of his brother P. W. Joyce, who speaks of his intense love for of Ireland and Irelands lore / [...] as well as the vigorous nationality [and] simple and transparent style of his poems. W. B. Yeats: John Frayne (ed., Uncollected Prose of W. B. Yeats, 1970, Vol. 1), writes: In spite of writing on him at considerable length, Yeats did not rate Joyce highly, holding him to be a bard, he was like a great orator, who only when he feels all hearts beat in unison with his, rises to his best, and becomes alone with the universe and his own voice. Therefore the bardic work ever human and living [...] the poet of all external things [...] in no way a singer (p.114). Yeats did not include Joyce in his lists of Irish books.
Princess Grace Irish Library (Monaco) |