Poet Seamus Heaney wins 40,000-pound literature prize



LONDON, (AFP) - Irish poet Seamus Heaney was awarded the 40,000-pound David Cohen Prize for Literature on Wednesday for a lifetime of work that the judges said had "crystallised the story of our times".
The 69-year-old Nobel laureate was presented with the 40,000-euro, 60,000-dollar prize, whose previous winners include VS Naipaul, Harold Pinter and Doris Lessing, at a ceremony in London.



Poet Seamus Heaney wins 40,000-pound literature prize
"For the last 40-odd years, Heaney's poems have crystallised the story of our times, in language which has bravely and memorably continued to extend its imaginative reach," said Andrew Motion, Britain's poet laureate and the chairman of the judges.
"At the same time, his critical writing, his translations and his lecturing have invigorated the whole wider world of poetry. Setting his name alongside previous winners does honour to the Cohen Prize, even as it honours him."
Northern Ireland-born Heaney published his first collection of poems, "Death Of A Naturalist", in 1966 and has since become one of the English language's leading poets. He won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1995.
Accepting the award, Heaney said: "Much about the David Cohen Prize makes it highly honorific: first of all there's the list of the previous winners -- a roll call of the best.
"There's the fact that you don't enter for it but are chosen from the wide field of your contemporaries, and then there's the verification of that reference to 'lifetime achievement' -- a lovely reward when offered by a panel of such distinguished writers and readers."
By winning the biennial award, Heaney also won the right to grant the 12,500-pound Clarissa Luard Award, given to a literature organisation which supports young writers or an individual writer under the age of 35.
Heaney chose to present the award, funded by the Arts Council England (Ace), to Poetry Aloud, an annual poetry speaking competition for students in Ireland.
The David Cohen prize is funded by the John S Cohen Foundation and administered by the arts council.
It is awarded to a living writer who has written in English and has contributed a "significant amount to British literature".
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Image from http://famouspoetsandpoems.com.

Wednesday, March 18th 2009
AFP
           


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