From Limerick to Alexandra - The Global Vision of Desmond O’Grady
From Limerick to Alexandra The Global Vision of Desmond O’Grady By Kieran Beville Limerick has produced its share of poets, but few have carried the city’s spirit as far across the world as Desmond O’Grady (1935–2014). Born in Limerick, he grew up near the Shannon in a city that was, in the 1930s and ’40s, still shadowed by poverty but alive with stories, song, and faith. From those modest beginnings, O’Grady became one of Ireland’s most widely travelled and cosmopolitan poets — a man whose work bridged continents and civilisations. Though he is less celebrated than contemporaries such as Seamus Heaney or Derek Mahon, O’Grady’s poetry remains among the most intellectually adventurous of the modern Irish canon. A teacher, translator, and scholar fluent in multiple languages, he wrote from Cairo to Rome, Istanbul to Boston — yet his imagination was never far from Limerick. As he once put it, “I plant my words in borrowed soil, and watch them rise like native grain.” That li...