Abstract

Irishry

Colum, Padraic | September 21, 1918 issue

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Ireland, as a witty Dublin man said once, has no East. Perhaps it is because it is on the eastern side that Dublin has hardly figured on the literary map. But Dublin has been discovered. Novelist James Joyce's "Dubliners" and "A Portrait of the Artist As a Young Man" have given the city a scandalous publicity. And before Joyce's books had been published James Stephens had written a charming idyll the scene of which was Dublin, "Mary, Mary." Of course, Dublin is the place of George Moore's "Hail and Farewell," but it is the Dublin of the coteries.

See Also:

LITERATURE; BOOKS; DUBLINERS (Book); PORTRAIT of the Artist As a Young Man, A (Book); JOYCE, James, 1882-1941; IRELAND
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