- Edward Walsh
:"This article deals with Edward Walsh, poet. For other meanings, see
Edward Walsh (disambiguation) ."Edward Walsh was an Irish poet, born atDerry in 1805; died at Cork,6 August ,1850 .When little more than a boy he showed great intellectual gifts, and in 1830 was private tutor in
County Cork . He was for a time teacher of a school atMillstreet , whence, in 1837, he removed toTourin ,County Waterford , having been appointed to a school under the Commissioners of Education.Many of his songs and poems appeared between the years 1832-39, and he contributed to the "Nation". In an uncongenial occupation, and pestered by officials, he went to reside in
Dublin in 1843, and was befriended byCharles Gavan Duffy , who got him appointed sub-editor of the "Monitor". His "Irish Jacobite Poetry" (1844) and his "Irish Popular Songs" (1847) gave unmistakable evidence of a genuine poet. Yet he was forced to fight against poverty, and, in 1848, he accepted the post of schoolmaster to the junior convicts of Spike Island.There he was visited by
John Mitchel , on his way topenal servitude , who vividly describes in his "Jail Journal" his meeting with Walsh. Not long afterwards, he secured the schoolmastership of Corkwork-house , but died within twelve months. A fine monument, with an epitaph in Irish and English, was erected to his memory in the Father Mathew Cemetery at Cork. Among his lyrics "Mo Chragibhin Cno", "Brighidin ban mo stor", and "O'Donovan's Daughters" are in most Irishanthologies , while his translations from the Irish are both faithful and musical.Selected poem
* " [http://www.bartleby.com/250/13.html Have You Been at Carrick?] " In Cite book | author =
Padraic Colum | title = Anthology of Irish Verse | year = 1922 | publisher =Boni and Liveright
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