英文摘要 |
Seamus Heaney (1939- ) once said that a poet 'needs a way of saying and there is a first language he can learn from the voices of other poets, dead and alive' (qtd. in Buttel 19). In Heaney's poetry, we hear not only his own dominant voice but echoes of many other poets, such .as Dante, Wordsworth, Keats, Yeats, Joyce, Frost, Kavanagh, Robert Graves, Osip Mandelstam, Robert Lowell, Ted Hughes, and Gerard Manley Hopkins. Among them, Hopkins's is perhaps the strongest. |