The Spirit of the Maigue Poets Lives On
The Spirit of the Maigue Poets Lives On By Kieran Beville Desmond Castle, Adare In the heart of County Limerick, where the River Maigue meanders past fertile meadows and quiet limestone villages, poetry once spoke as fluently as water. The Maigue Poets — or Filí na Máighe — were not figures of distant myth but living, breathing men of the eighteenth century (c.1730-1790): farmers, teachers, tavern keepers, and local scholars who made the Irish language their banner in an age when its survival seemed uncertain. Their stage was not a grand hall or a university lecture room but the parlours and inns of Croom, Bruree, and Kilmallock — small Limerick towns that have since earned a special place in Ireland’s literary geography. Long before Yeats made Sligo shimmer in verse, or Heaney dug meaning from Derry clay, the Maigue Poets turned their patch of Limerick soil into a republic of rhyme. A River and a Community To understand the Maigue Poets, one must begin with the land itself...