Derek Walcott\u27s Omeros: The Isle is Full of Voices

  • Lernout, Geert
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Publication date
June 2019
Publisher
Sociological Research Online
Language
English

Abstract

Richard Rowan, the hero of James Joyce\u27s Exiles, explains at the beginning of the third act that while he was walking the length of the beach of Dublin Bay, demons could be heard giving him advice. \u27The isle is full of voices\u27, Rowan says, adapting a phrase from The Tempest, and this sentence aptly describes Joyce\u27s aesthetics. In his poem Omeros Derek Walcott may well have succeeded in doing for St. Lucia what Joyce did for Ireland and Dublin.1 And he has done so, not in the naturalistic or psychological mode of Exiles, A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Mtm or Dubliners, but in the grand manner of the later Joyce\u27s Ulysses. The ambition of Walcotrs poem is clear: the poet measures himself against Homer, Dante, Shakespeare ...

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