“Canal Walk Home” by Gillian Hamill |
“The Welcome” by Freda Laughton “The Welcome” is © Freda Laughton |
Freda Laughton was born in Bristol in 1907 and moved to Co. Down after her marriage. She published one collection of poetry, A Transitory House (1945) but little else is known about her life and work. She may have lived in Dublin for sometime, as her poem The Welcome details the textures of Dublin City and its suburbs, and suggests she knows the city by heart. Her date of death is unknown. Freda Laughton’s poems were submitted by Emma Penney, a graduate of the Oscar Wilde Centre, Trinity College Dublin. Her thesis, Now I am a Tower of Darkness: A Critical History of Poetry by Women in Ireland, challenges the critical reception of Eavan Boland and the restrictive criteria, developed in the 1970’s, under which poetry by women in Ireland has been assessed. She considers the subversive nature of women’s poetry written between 1921 and 1950, and calls into question the critical assumption that Eavan Boland represents “the first serious attempt in Ireland to make a body of poems that arise out of the contemporary female consciousness”. In Object Lessons, Boland concluded that there were no women poets before her who communicated “an expressed poetic life” in their work. Emma’s thesis reveals how this view has permeated the critical landscape of women’s poetry, facilitating an absurd privation of the history of poetry by women in Ireland and simplifying it in the process.
Interview with Emma Penney |
“Nurture” by Liz Quirke “Nurture” is © Liz Quirke |
Originally from Tralee, Co. Kerry, Liz Quirke lives in Spiddal, Co Galway with her wife and daughters. Her poetry has appeared in various publications, including New Irish Writing in the The Irish Times, Southword, Crannóg, The Stony Thursday Book and Eyewear Publishing’s The Best New British and Irish Poets 2016. She was the winner of the 2015 Poems for Patience competition and in the last few years has been shortlisted for the Cúirt New Writing Prize and a Hennessy Literary Award. Her debut collection Biology of Mothering will be published by Salmon Poetry in Spring 2018.https://bogmanscannon.com/2016/04/02/fall-at-33-weeks-by-liz-quirke/ |
“Detail” by Rachel Coventry “Detail” is © Rachel Coventry |
“Going Dutch” by Seanín Hughes “Going Dutch” is © Seanín Hughes |
“Hypothesis” by Clodagh Beresford Dunne “Hypothesis” is © Clodagh Beresford Dunne |
“Alice and her Stilettoes” by Lorraine Carey “Alice and her stilettoes” is © Lorraine Carey |






