James Stephens, the Leprechaun Poet
Abstract
WHEN The Crock of Gold was first published in London in 1912, this extraordinary prose‐fantasy, described by a reviewer in The Times as ‘an inspired medley of topsy‐turvydom’, was hailed as a veritable masterpiece from the hands of a new poet of the same school with Yeats and Synge. That poet was, of course, James Stephens, the poet whom Sean O'Casey would later refer to as ‘the jesting poet with a radiant star in's coxcomb’, and to whom he dedicated, in 1949, his favourite play, Cock‐a‐Doodle Dandy. The reviewer in Punch at the time likened The Crock of Gold to ‘a fairy fantasy, elvish, grotesque, realistic, allegorical, humorous, satirical, idealistic, and poetical by turns … and very beautiful’.
Citation
O'Riordan, J. (1974), "James Stephens, the Leprechaun Poet", Library Review, Vol. 24 No. 8, pp. 343-346. https://doi.org/10.1108/eb012612
Publisher
:MCB UP Ltd
Copyright © 1974, MCB UP Limited