(Page numbers given refer to Collected Poems: Derek Mahon [CP]: The Gallery Press, 1999)
Poem Title |
Original Publication |
CP Page no |
De Quincey in Later Life |
Night-Crossing, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1968 |
20 |
Relationship to Classical text ‘mens sana/ In corpore sano’ is a quotation from Juvenal’s Satire X, 356. Mahon’s later poem ‘The Idiocracy of Human Aspiration’ (CP, p.243) is a reworking of this satire).
Classical/post-Classical intertexts Thomas de Quincey’s autobiographical account of his laudenum addiction in Confessions of an English Opium-Eater (first published in The London Magazine, October 1821).
Further Comment Vocabulary derived from Greek, such as ‘perihelion’ and ‘panacea’, recalls that used in de Quincey’s text.
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Poem Title |
Original Publication |
De Quincey in Later Life |
Night-Crossing, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1968 |
CP Page no |
20 |
Length / Form |
|
Relationship to Classical text |
‘mens sana/ In corpore sano’ is a quotation from Juvenal’s Satire X, 356. Mahon’s later poem ‘The Idiocracy of Human Aspiration’ (CP, p.243) is a reworking of this satire). |
Close translation of words/phrases/excerpts |
|
Classical/post-Classical intertexts |
Thomas de Quincey’s autobiographical account of his laudenum addiction in Confessions of an English Opium-Eater (first published in The London Magazine, October 1821). |
Further Comment |
Vocabulary derived from Greek, such as ‘perihelion’ and ‘panacea’, recalls that used in de Quincey’s text. |
Further Analysis |
|