George Cusack notes: "The structure of
Field Work divides the collection into three thematic units, the first beginning with "Oysters," the first poem in the collection and continuing through "Elegy," the second beginning and ending with "The Glanmore Sonnets," which fall directly in the center of the collection, and the third beginning with "September Song" and continuing through to the end of the collection." •
"Oysters" recalls a dinner between the poet and his friends. Like Heaney's earlier poem, "Digging," it examines "the function of the poet in society, and both end with a declaration of confidence in the socially redemptive power of poetry." "Casualty" also refers to the thirteen people were shot dead and seventeen injured by British soldiers of the Parachute Regiment on 30 January 1972. This happened within a span of thirty minutes in the Bogside area of
Derry.”
Daniel Tobin argues, this poem "recognizes that the individual's freedom and compassion originate in an inner demand more powerful than the tribal call" and Blake Morrison writes that by the end of the poem, "the poet is seen as someone whose pursuit of art places him above and beyond the demands of the tribe." •
"The Badgers" refers to "some violent shattered boy / nosing out what got mislaid / between the cradle and the explosion" and asks "How perilous is it to choose / not to love the life we're shown?" The last two lines of the poem read: "The unquestionable houseboy's shoulders / that could have been my own". •
"The Singer’s House" is about "the poet's and the poem's right to a tune in spite of the tunelessness of the world around them." •
"The Guttural Muse" •
"In Memoriam Seán Ó Riada" One of three "poetic obsequies" in the collection about the Irish composer. •
"Elegy" •
"Glanmore Sonnets" There are ten individual, untitled sonnets that make up the "Glanmore Sonnets". The first of which has an epigraph that reads: "for Ann Saddlemyer, 'our heartiest welcomer' " and it is from this first sonnet that the Heaney collection
Opened Ground: Selected Poems 1966-1996 takes its title. Weiner calls these sonnets the "heart" of
Field Work. •
"September Song" •
"An Afterwards" •
"High Summer" •
"The Otter" •
"The Skunk" One of Heaney's best known poems, "The Skunk" is about his wife to whom he refers, by using an extended metaphor. Heaney has been recorded reading this collection on the
Seamus Heaney Collected Poems album. •
"Homecomings" •
"A Dream of Jealousy" stems from a conversation between the speaker, the "you" he addresses, and "another lady / In wooded parkland." •
"Polder" •
"Field Work" •
"Song" •
"Leavings" •
"The Harvest Bow" •
"In Memoriam Francis Ledwidge" One of three "poetic obsequies" in the collection about the Irish War Poet. The epigraph reads: "killed in France 31 July 1917" •
"Ugolino" refers to Cantos 32 and 33 of
Dante's Inferno. ==References==