The Book of Fifty Irish Writers
They were rogues, adventurers, idealists, romantics, shrinking violets, ego maniacs and all the other wonders and failures of human nature besides. The men and women of established Irish Literature were once living, breathing people 鈥 鈥楾he Book of Irish Writers' releases them from their dust jackets and brings them to life!
Through this chronological series of easily digestible short programmes, the listener will be led in a clear and entertaining way through what might be considered by some as a stuffy and academic subject 鈥 Irish Literature!
By illuminating the lives of our famous and forgotten writers 鈥 with all their foibles, weaknesses, triumphs and tragedies unveiled 鈥 the series will be a gripping listen for all those who enjoy social history, great characters and a good story!
The 大象传媒 is not responsible for the content of external sites.
In order to see this content you need to have both enabled and installed. Visit for full instructions
Chapter 16 - Charlotte Brooke, circa 1740 - 1793
The Anglo-Irish Charlotte Brooke claimed Gaelic culture as her own 鈥 hoping that it could be shared by everyone in Ireland .
Charlotte is best remembered for her anthology, the 鈥 Reliques of Irish Poetry'. Published in 1789 this was a pioneering work in many ways - not least in Charlotte 's claims about the quality and antiquity of poetry in Irish, especially as compared to English poetry!
In order to see this content you need to have both enabled and installed. Visit for full instructions
Chapter 17 - Eibhlin Dhubh Ni Chonaill, circa 1743 to 1800
Eibhl铆n was born in Derrynane in co. Kerry. She was the aunt of the great nineteenth-century politician, Daniel O'Connell, the 鈥楲iberator'.
Eibhl铆n's family had a tradition of producing women poets and she created one of the great works of loss and lamentation in Irish literature: 鈥楥aoineadh Airt U脥 Laoghaire' or 鈥楾he Lament for Art O'Leary'.
In order to see this content you need to have both enabled and installed. Visit for full instructions
Chapter 18 - Brian Merriman, 1749 - 1805
Brian Merriman was one of the most extraordinary writers of his time. This Maths Teacher from Co. Clare wrote the comic masterpiece 鈥 C煤irt an Mh茅on O铆che' or 鈥楾he Midnight Court'. The poem unsettles many of the assumptions we might make about Irish life at the end of the eighteenth century - dealing as it does with marriage and sex in a manner that is direct, bawdy and irreverent.
In order to see this content you need to have both enabled and installed. Visit for full instructions
Chapter 19 - Richard Brinsley Sheridan, 1751 - 1816
Immensely popular and fashionable in his day, the Dublin-born Sheridan invented the comic figure of Mrs Malaprop (that inventive language mangler), forged a successful career as a politician and was the owner of the ill-fated Drury Lane theatre in London.
In order to see this content you need to have both enabled and installed. Visit for full instructions
Chapter 20 - Maria Edgeworth, 1768 - 1849
The Anglo-Irish writer Maria Edgeworth wrote the first 鈥楤ig House' novel - 鈥楥astle Rackrent'. Maria was very much influenced by her father, Richard Lovell Edgeworth. On the family's Longford estate Richard was a liberal, reforming landlord who campaigned for Catholic emancipation. He also had a passion for education and began to educate Maria almost as an experiment. The father and daughter became a writing partnership 鈥 but it was the daughter who emerged as the more accomplished.