Mangan, James Clarence

Mangan, James Clarence

▪ Irish writer
born May 1, 1803, Dublin
died June 20, 1849, Dublin

      a prolific and uneven writer of almost every kind of verse whose best work, inspired by love of Ireland, ranks high in Irish poetry.

      The son of an unsuccessful grocer, at the age of 15 Mangan became a copying clerk in a scrivener's office and remained one for 10 years. He then lived as best he could, contributing to the prestigious Dublin University Magazine and to the major nationalist newspaper, The Nation, though posts were found for him for brief periods in the library of Trinity College, Dublin, and the Ordnance Survey Office. His natural melancholy was aggravated by years of ill-paid drudgery and an acute disappointment in love. He became an opium addict and a chronic drunkard, and the last years of his life were spent in extreme neglect and wretchedness. When he died of cholera, only two persons attended his funeral.

      Many of his poems are “translations” from the Irish, from German, and from various Eastern languages (which Mangan probably did not know), often so free that Mangan is in effect using the original as a vehicle for his own emotions. He often also described as translations poems that were, in fact, altogether his own. Much of his work has Irish history and legend for its theme, and his poems "The Nameless One," "Dark Rosaleen," and "Siberia," which achieve an extraordinary modern note of personal realism and a tragic sincerity of tone, are often anthologized.

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Universalium. 2010.

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  • Mangan, James Clarence — • Irish poet, b. in Dublin, 1 May, 1803; d. there, 20 June, 1849. He was the son of James Mangan, a grocer, and of Catherine Smith Catholic Encyclopedia. Kevin Knight. 2006 …   Catholic encyclopedia

  • Mangan, James Clarence — (1803 1849)    Poet, b. at Dublin, s. of a small grocer, was brought up in poverty, and received most of his education from a priest who instructed him in several modern languages. He then became a lawyer s clerk, and was later an assistant in… …   Short biographical dictionary of English literature

  • Mangan, James Clarence — (1803 1849)    Born in Dublin, the son of a grocer, at school he learned Latin, Spanish, French, and Italian. His work and personal life suffered from the effects of opium and alcoholism and finally reduced him to poverty and malnutrition. In… …   British and Irish poets

  • James Clarence Mangan — James Clarence Mangan, born James Mangan (1 May 1803, Dublin 20 June 1849) was an Irish poet. Memorial bust of Mangan in St. Stephen s Green, sculpted by Oliver Sheppard. Contents …   Wikipedia

  • James Clarence Mangan —     James Clarence Mangan     † Catholic Encyclopedia ► James Clarence Mangan     Irish poet, b. in Dublin, 1 May, 1803; d. there, 20 June, 1849. He was the son of James Mangan, a grocer, and of Catherine Smith. He attended a school in Saul s… …   Catholic encyclopedia

  • James Clarence Mangan — Oliver Sheppard: Mangan. Büste im Dubliner Park St. Stephen s Green …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Mangan (surname) — Mangan is an Irish surname anglicised from the Gaelic Ó Mangáin ‘descendant of Mangán’, originally a byname for someone with a luxuriant head of hair (from mong ‘hair’, ‘mane’), borne by families from Connacht, County Limerick, and Tyrone. It is… …   Wikipedia

  • Mangan — This name, with variant spelling Mongan, is an Anglicized form of the Old Gaelic O Mongain. The Gaelic prefix O indicates male descendant of , plus the personal byname Mongan referring to one with a luxurious growth of hair (from mong , long… …   Surnames reference

  • David James O'Donoghue — (D.J. O Donoghue) (1866, Chelsea, London June 27, 1917[1]) was an Irish biographer and editor. He attended a Catholic school and furthered his own education at the British Museum. He began his journalistic work by writing for the Dublin papers… …   Wikipedia

  • Irische Autor — A Cecelia Ahern (* 1981) William Allingham (1824–1889) B John Banville (* 1945) Sebastian Barry (* 1955) Samuel Beckett (1906–1989) Brendan Behan (1923–1964) Dominic Behan (1928–1989) Ronan Bennett (* 1956) Paul Bew (* 1950) Maeve Binchy (* 1940) …   Deutsch Wikipedia

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