Seamus Heaney’s work showed us the wonder to be found in the ordinary, in everyday objects and in the quiet beauty of rural Ireland. But his poems spoke to the whole world, earning him millions of devoted fans. He traveled a long way, from his childhood on a small farm in Northern Ireland to acclaim as one of the world’s greatest poets.
By the time he won the Nobel prize for literature in 1995, he was one of the most beloved names in poetry, praised by the judges for his "works of lyrical beauty and ethical depth, which exalt everyday miracles and the living past". And in his hometown, Bellaghy, County Londonderry, an exciting interactive visitor center, Seamus Heaney HomePlace, celebrates this wonderful wordsmith’s life and legacy.
I rhyme to see myself, to set the darkness echoing.
Seamus Heaney
Seamus Heaney HomePlace, County Londonderry
Seamus Heaney HomePlace
From the moment you step into Seamus Heaney HomePlace, housed in a former police station, you’ll be immersed in the poet's world. The multi-award winning exhibition houses personal artifacts, including his leather school satchel and handwritten transcripts, all donated by the Heaney family.
Photographs, memorabilia and video bring to life this warm, witty man, and at the interactive video wall, you can listen to recordings from leading figures, family and friends, and of course, the dulcet voice of the poet himself.
HomePlace exhibits
A poet's refuge
Piled high with books, folders, photos and an incongruous fax machine, you can tour Heaney’s attic refuge, and see where he created some of his beloved works.
Remembering Heaney
Use the interactive video wall to see and hear how the poet is remembered by family and friends. And discover the everyday items he celebrated in his work.
Seamus Heaney HomePlace Events
There's always something to look forward to! Enjoy theater, music, song, poetry readings and talks inspired by Heaney's life in the Helicon performance space.
Moyola River, County Londonderry
Home is where the heart is
The land around the village of Bellaghy fuelled Heaney’s imagination, no matter how far away he travelled. This little corner of Northern Ireland, east of the Sperrin Mountains and north west of Lough Neagh, with its bogs, rivers and fields, nurtured a genius. Heaney might have lived and worked far away as the years rolled on, but his heart remained in Bellaghy and the surrounding area, and he is buried there, in St Mary’s Church under a simple gravestone of Kilkenny limestone.
Between my finger and my thumb The squat pen rests. I'll dig with it.
Seamus Heaney
These gentle lanes and rolling fields inspired poems such as Digging, Blackberry-Picking, and Follower. His work is steeped in the love of people and of the countryside, and around Bellaghy you can visit the places that meant so much to him and featured in his work.
Discover Heaney Country
Derry~Londonderry
Head west from Heaney's homeplace and you'll find an ancient walled city where the Wild Atlantic Way meets the Causeway Coastal Route. With its vibrant cultural scene and fascinating history Derry~Londonderry always inspires.
Take a Seamus Heaney Tour
Led by the owners of Laurel Villa, a charming Victorian boutique B&B in the town of Magherafelt, this unique tour of the places associated with Heaney's life and work offers unrivalled insights to lovers of poetry and nature alike.
Discover Belfast
An hour's drive from Bellaghy is Belfast, with its own fascinating literary heritage. Author CS Lewis was born here and in the city's CS Lewis Square, you'll find statues of characters from the Chronicles of Narnia, celebrating his much-loved work.
Sandymount Strand, Dublin
Teaching and finding fame
Seamus Heaney moved to Dublin to teach in the 1970s. He lived in Sandymount for decades (“near a famous strand”, as he put it, referencing James Joyce’s Ulysses) and traveled to America and Britain to lecture, until his death in 2013.
In honour of this beloved poet, an exhibition Seamus Heaney: Listen Now Again is hosted in the Bank of Ireland Cultural and Heritage Centre on Dublin’s College Green. The National Library’s collection of Heaney’s original manuscripts, along with letters, diaries, photographs and unpublished works will also be on display. College Green, in the heart of literary and social Dublin, is the perfect setting for a very Irish writer who loved company, family and the land of Ireland – and somehow turned those into words of universal beauty.
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