• The first four lines of "Mise Raifteirí an File" appeared on the reverse of the
Series C Irish five pound note. •
Douglas Hyde wrote a play called
The Marriage (
An Pósadh) where a poor newlywed couple is visited by Raftery on their wedding day. The bard attracts a lot of people with his music, and leaves after giving the couple all the numerous gifts given to him for it. Soon after, it is discovered that Raftery had actually been dead for a while. • The author
James Stephens published English translations of poems attributed to Ó Raifteirí in his book
Reincarnations. The American composer
Samuel Barber wrote a composition for mixed chorus – also entitled
Reincarnations – based on three of the poems translated by Stephens. • Irish-American writer
Donn Byrne published
Blind Raftery and His Wife Hilaria (1924), a fictionalised biography. • Irish composer
Joan Trimble wrote a television opera,
Blind Raftery, first broadcast by the BBC in May 1957. The story is an adaptation by Cedric Cliffe of Donn Byrne's 1924 novel (see above). • An annual festival, Féile Raifteirí, is held in Loughrea, County Galway each year on the last weekend in March. Ó Raifteirí spent most of his later years in townlands close to the town. The festival features a contemporary Irish language poet and promotes the native arts of Ireland. The festival ends with a visit to Raifteirí grave in neighbouring Craughwell. • Kiltimagh town square features a granite memorial in honour of Antoine Ó Raifteirí erected in 1985, in that same year Kiltimagh twinned with Craughwell, the final resting place of the blind Gaelic poet. • Scoil Raifteirí, an All-Irish Primary School in Castlebar, County Mayo is named in honour of the poet. • The Raftery Room Restaurant is located in Kiltimagh Main Street* • Ó Raifteirí is mentioned in passing by IRA member
Liam Devlin in
Jack Higgins's 1975 novel
The Eagle Has Landed. • In 2011
Seán Ó Cualáin directed a feature film
Mise Raiftearaí an Fíodóir Focal/I am Raifteirí, The Weaver of Words documenting the life of Ó Raifteirí, which was produced by Sonta Teo for TG4, and featured Irish actor Aindrias de Staic in the lead role as Ó Raifteirí. • A street on the Ballymagroarty estate in Derry, Raftery Close, is named after Antoine Ó Raifteirí. All the streets in the estate are named after Irish writers. • Sketch of Raifteirí http://www.irishpage.com/graf/raftery.gif • In
Radclyffe Hall's novel
The Well of Loneliness, Stephen Gordon's horse is named Raftery after the Irish poet. •
Bob Dylan's 2020 song "
I Contain Multitudes" contains the line "Follow me close, I'm going to
Bally-na-Lee", presumed by
Richard F. Thomas,
Paul Muldoon, Brian Hiatt, and others to be a reference to Raifteiri's "The Lass From Bally-na-lee" ("Agus gluais go lá liom go Baile Uí Laí" / "So walk with me to Bally-na-Lee"). •
Liam Clancy speaks Raifteiri's poem "Mary Hynes" over music in a song which appears on the compilation CD
Favourites (2005) ==References==