Seamus Heaney’s Ecopoetry and Environmental Causes: From Conservation to Climate Change

ABSTRACT Seamus Heaney is viewed as a pre-eminent poet of nature, and is often read through the lens of ecopoetic and ecocritical theories. Yet no earlier scholarship has mentioned his support for conservation. Through research on archives, limited editions and conservation documents, this article shows that Heaney supported high-profile environmental organisations and campaigns, including the Irish Peatland Conservation Council, World Wildlife Fund, the Ulster Trust for Nature Conservation, the RSPB, and a campaign against a new road that threatened a bogland. This article challenges readings of Heaney that proposed that he merely explored a ‘connection’ to nature, and shows that he used writing to protect environments he cared about. Heaney’s modest environmental activities are not without complications. Yet when Heaney uses an early bog-poem to support a later conservation project, or when a campaign aims to save the ecology of ‘Heaney Country’, culture clearly plays a role in environmental engagement.

information about Heaney's use of poems to raise funds for conservation, and shows the development of ecological ideas in his poems at draft level.Evidence from limited editions that Heaney sold to support conservation causes, campaign materials and environmental management documents, correspondence with the Seamus Heaney Estate, and information from environmental organisations, provide further details.Previous ecocritical readings of Heaney's work have not mentioned his support for conservation causes.Shedding light on Heaney's environmental activities enriches and deepens scholarly understanding of the ecopoetic dimensions of his work.Heaney's forthcoming Letters, edited by Christopher Reid, his Collected Poems edited by Bernard O'Donoghue and Rosie Lavan, and Fintan O'Toole's forthcoming biography, will afford further valuable information about the poet's life and work.
From the 1980s onwards, Heaney's reputation in literary circles enabled him to lend powerful support to charities and organisations close to his heart.He opened exhibitions, judged poetry competitions, championed libraries, and gave poems to anthologies sold in aid of UNICEF, Amnesty International, and many other highprofile organisations. 1 From the 1980s, several conservation causes benefited from using Heaney's poems and prose for fundraising and consciousness-raising.These include the Irish Peatland Conservation Council, the World Wide Fund for Nature, the Ulster Trust for Nature Conservation, and the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB). 2 Towards the end of his career, the literary community recognised Heaney as a major environmental writer: his poetry featured in ecopoetry anthologies edited by Oswald (2005) and Astley (2007).His writing appeared alongside that of contemporaries who were deeply engaged in public discussions of climate change.In 2008, Granta magazine heralded the arrival of the 'new nature writing', featuring Heaney's essay 'The whisper of love' (Heaney 2008); the second article in the issue includes dire warnings about climate change (Holt 2008, 16-21).That same year, Heaney told fellow poet Dennis O'Driscoll that 'environmental issues have to a large extent changed the mind of poetry ' (2008, 407).
Ecology was not Heaney's most central concern as a writer and public intellectual.Yet his daughter Catherine has pointed out the rich references to the earth and environment in Heaney's poetry, and she has contributed insights about his support for the RSPB for this article. 3The modest, quiet nature of Heaney's support for conservation organisations might explain the longstanding critical tendency to interpret him as a nature-poet, and most recently as an ecopoet, without any scholarly commentary on his work with environmental organisations.
Heaney's Death of a Naturalist (1966 saw him heralded as a poet of locality and nature. 4following Heaney's exposure to more overtly political poetry at Berkeley, Wintering Out has been viewed as more 'politicised' (Neil Corcoran 1987, 121). After North (1975), critical debates turned to Heaney's presentation of issues of historical memory and sectarian violence.Certain critics -notably Edna Longley -find Heaney's North (1975 to be too redolent of Irish nationalism (Longley 1982, 78).Blake Morrison saw North as speaking the 'language of the tribe' in order to give 'sectarian killing in Northern Ireland a historical respectability ' (1982, 68), while Neil Corcoran viewed Heaney as celebrating the 'exhilaration, as well as the horror, of physical violence' (1987,123).Ciarán Carson branded Heaney the 'laureate of violence ' (1983, 183).
However, poems such as 'Funeral Rites' from North could instead be viewed as expressing grief for a repeated history of territorial violence, and a longing for the 'feud' to be 'placated' (Heaney 1975, 8).It is important to note that Heaney would later give poems from this very collection to causes that protected boglands in both Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland. 5  More recently, Heaney's work has been an important focus for ecocritics.Books, articles and book chapters by ecocritics such as Gifford (2011), Garrard (1998), Bate (2000), Lidström (2015), Farrier (2014Farrier ( , 2019)), Auge (2021) and Corcoran (2021) develop important ecocritical and ecopoetic readings of his work.Part of Heaney's archive was purchased by Emory University in 2003, and the poet donated many of his manuscripts to the National Library of Ireland in 2011, providing later ecocritics with an opportunity to research Heaney's support for environmental causes.Brandes and Durkan's 2008 Heaney bibliography lists poems that appeared in an environmental anthology in 1989, and a limited edition sold in aid of a conservation cause. 6 This presented opportunities for scholars to examine documents relating to conservation, before the opening of the National Library of Ireland's archives.Gifford views Heaney's poetry as evidencing 'connectedness with nature' (95), while Lidström finds that Heaney's work develops from 'a sense-based understanding of a local environment to an understanding of a transformed relation between human, local and global natures ' (2015, 139).However, Heaney's early poetry evidences an environmental awareness that runs deeper than 'connectedness', and which is more sophisticated than a 'sense-based understanding'; he later became highly aware of issues such as climate change.Andrew Auge claims that 'Heaney's poetry does not focus on the ecological significance of the bog ' (2021, 43).Heaney was hardly so naïve about environmental issues, as he used his bog-poems of the 1960s and 1970s to support bog conservation in the 1980s and 1990s.Brendan Corcoran's ecocritical reading of Heaney's poetry is perceptive: he analyses the bog-poems of the 1970s in the context of the nascent environmental movement (2021,122), and comments on a growing awareness of climate change that is manifest in District and Circle, yet there is no mention of Heaney's support for conservation.
Nature poetry, ecopoetry, ecopoetics: these terms continue to generate a wide array of definitions and critical opinions.Debates about the role of poetry in ecological activism, versus its aesthetic function, are ongoing.If Bate once argued that 'Ecopoetry is not synonymous with writing that is pragmatically green' (2000, 42), Gifford's view is that 'while "poetry makes nothing happen" in Auden's famous words, it can contribute to a shift in sensibility rather than life-style ' (2011, 8). 7Yet Heaney was able to use poems both to shift sensibilities and to make modest interventions in conservation issues.Many critics also distinguish between poetry that celebrates an individual's connection to nature, versus poetry that engages with environmental issues that affect society; Lidström and Garrard certainly find Heaney's work to exemplify the latter (2014,37).Poet Juliana Spahr makes a similar distinction between 'nature poetry' and more explicitly environmental work: 'I was more suspicious of nature poetry because even when it got the birds and the plants and the animals right it tended to show the beautiful bird but not so often the bulldozer off to the side that was destroying the bird's habitat' (Spahr 2011, 69).For some, ecopoetry and ecopoetics are distinct practices, with ecopoetics being more focused on experimental, avant-garde or Modernist work that explores the materiality of text and language (e.g.Skinner 2001, Keller 2017;Griffiths 2017;Milne 2018).Heaney's poetry is certainly more traditional in form than much of the work to which these ecopoetics scholars have devoted their attention.However, 'ecopoetics' and 'ecopoetry' continue to generate a proliferation of theoretical ideas, and other definitions of the term have proved to be more wide-ranging.Hume and Osborne's Ecopoetics: Essays in the Field (Hume et al 2018) is deliberately broad-ranging, recognising 'the range of writing types to which the term "ecopoetics" might be applied' and invoking 'a diversity of field-writing practices' (2018,5).It is undeniable that poetry often joins other art-forms in voicing dissent and accompanying activism (Milne 2018, 239), and indeed, Heaney deployed the power of poetry for conservationist ends.

Heaney and the environmental movement
The environmental movement gained increasing momentum during the 1960s and early 1970s.Rachel Carson's Silent Spring became a bestseller in 1963, outlining the impacts of pesticides on living organisms from birds to human beings, and this seminal work had widespread impacts on the public, on policymakers, and on poets such as Heaney. 8 Heaney's evocation of the impact of 'combines and chemicals' on the corncrake in his 1969 poem 'Serenades' suggests that he shared Carson's concerns about the impacts of pesticides on birds. 9The term 'environmentalist' to mean a person concerned about human-caused damage to the environment appeared in 1966 (OED), and environmental publications were flourishing.Heaney's friend Hughes, and his colleagues Daniel Weissbort and David Ross, published the first issue of Your Environment in 1969 (Reddick 2017, 175).Heaney's poem 'Augury' appeared in print the year after the first Earth Day in 1970, and after Heaney's time in California had made him aware of the resonance between the 'Gaia factor' in his own work and the environmental themes of Gary Snyder and Robert Bly (O'Driscoll 2008, 141).Appearing in Criterion in 1971 (Brandes and Durkan 2008, 305) and collected in Wintering Out the following year, the poem's references to broader geographies evokes Heaney's time in the United States, as a visiting professor at Berkeley for the academic year of 1970-1971.The drafts of 'Augury' illuminate the issues that Heaney was considering as he wrote it.The poem presents a fish with its face opened like a 'valve ' (1972, 42), a metaphorical evocation of human interference in environmental processes.In an interview with Heaney, O'Driscoll points out that 'Augury' suggests an 'early' awareness of environmental concerns, which developed during Heaney's boyhood (2008, 336).Heaney's poem also suggests sources of pollution that were more contemporary.Hughes, Weissbort and Ross published an article about the hazards of detergents to fish (Jones 1970, 55-59), and Heaney's close friend Ted Hughes was aware that the resulting disease had originated in Ireland in the late 1960s (Gifford 2011, 148-9).In its published form, 'Augury' consists of four pared-down quatrains.However, as he was developing the poem in manuscript and typescript, Heaney focused more closely on the individual fish and the processes that had damaged its health 10 .
Heaney revises his title from 'As We Roved Out' to 'A Pollution,' changing the tone of the poem, and evoking threats to environmental futures.In the typescript, Heaney's close focus on the suffering fish does heighten pathos, but the poem becomes broader in scope in its published version.Heaney's editorial decisions are astute, and the poem increases in literary refinement as it develops.Yet what Heaney's typescript reveals is that the poem responds to a very specific place: the 'wheels and belts' suggest the Nestlé factory at Castledawson, where he observed effluent flowing into the River Moyola during his childhood (O'Driscoll 2008, 336)

Bog-poems and bog conservation
A man hard at work, cutting 'turf' by hand; a warm peat fire with its fragrant blue smoke: such images are so culturally important in Ireland that peatlands continue to be viewed as 'a cultural reservoir of "authentic" Irish identity' (O' Connor and Gearey 2020, 382).In Heaney's poems, peat-cutting reveals remarkably well-preserved traces of the past, including a prehistoric Irish Elk skeleton, the remains of former forests, and most famously, the extraordinary 'bog bodies' that feature in North (1975). 11But the use of boglands raises questions about whether we can reconcile traditional turf-cutting with preserving the habitats of the snipe, sundew and sphagnum.Exhuming the landscapes of the past risks disturbing the carbon sinks of the present.Peatlands are important for biodiversity, and as carbon sinks and stores.The peatlands have, what Renou-Wilson and her colleagues term, an 'archive value' for scientists and archaeologists alike (2011, xii).However, not everyone agrees about how they should be managed.This section looks at Heaney's poetic preoccupation with peat, and then turns to the complexities of his later bog-conservation activities.
Heaney's fascination with the bogland developed from his early life.The bog provided a rich vein of peaty material; the resulting poetic project spans the entirety of his career.Indeed, when Heaney began supporting conservation causes from the late 1980s onwards, most of the campaigns he backed focused on protecting boglands.Peat-cutting as tradition and peat as fuel; the bog as historical archive and cultural stratum, home turf and disputed territory; the Northern Irish bog as a preplantation and pre-colonial space -all of these themes are undeniably crucial for Heaney.Michael Parker writes that for Heaney, 'from childhood, bogland had been 'a genuine obsession', since it covered 'such a large area of his home territory' (Parker 1993, 7).The poet revisited the bogland with his friend, the painter T. P. Flanagan, in the late 1960s (Parker 1993, 87), and this visit inspired his poem 'Bogland' from Heaney (1969).
The poem begins:

Bogland For T. P. Flanagan
We have no prairies To slice a big sun at evening -Everywhere the eye concedes to Encroaching horizon Is wooed into the cyclops' eye Of a tarn.Our unfenced country Is bog that keeps crusting Between the sights of the sun (1969,41) These opening stanzas evoke a strong sense of place, of a mythical landscape whose 'unfenced' expanses suggest wildness and an unconquered, undivided symbol of Irish identity. 12And yet, in the image of the bog as 'kind, black butter/Melting and opening underfoot' (41) later in the poem, the peatland appears as yielding and feminised.The image of men digging peat from a bog perceived as ripe for exploitation, suggests 'a specifically gendered version of Irishness' (O' Connor and Gearey 2020, 384).Understandably, some feminist critics are troubled by Heaney's evocation of the bog as a feminine landscape, 'mastered' by turf-cutting men (Coughlan 2017).From an ecological perspective, one could view this poem as celebrating the bogland for largely humancentred reasons.However, over twenty years after he first placed them in a collection, Heaney would use these stanzas from 'Bogland' to support the Ulster Trust for Nature Conservation.
By 1991, Heaney had been living in the Republic of Ireland for nearly two decades and had acquired an Irish passport.Yet the boglands of Northern Ireland were the location of his first encounter with bogs, and he was happy to use his poems to support a conservation cause focused on the landscapes of 'Ulster' -a term appropriated by unionists. 13Sections of Heaney's poem 'The Peninsula', from Heaney (1969), feature on the 'Wetlands' poster, an excerpt from 'Exposure' (1975) on 'Woodlands', and an extract from 'Fieldwork' on the 'Meadowlands'.The posters were sponsored by a brewing company, and were intended for educational and fundraising purposes.The resonant opening stanzas of 'Bogland' accompany Flanagan's painting 'Where Sheep Have Passed'.(Curiously, the image selected is not Flanagan's 'Boglands', which Flanagan dedicated to Heaney, and which would have provided a far more intuitive pairing of painting and poem.)The poster contains the following information: Peatlands are under serious threat because of cutting, drainage, afforestation and erosion.Irish peatlands have their own unique characteristics and are therefore very important in a European and world context.We have a responsibility to conserve and restore what remains (Ulster Trust for Nature Conservation, 'Peatlands' poster, 1991). 14  Here, the process of 'cutting' is named as a threat to peatlands, and one could read Heaney's use of this early poem to support an ecological cause, as a sign of a shift in thinking.His family was undoubtedly dependent on his father and grandfather's peat-cutting for fuel, as we read in 'Digging' from Death of a Naturalist (1966).And yet, by 1991, the Ulster Trust for Nature Conservation was clearly looking to raise public awareness that even such domestic peat-cutting could be damaging.Heaney's donation of the poem suggests that his own awareness of such issues was gaining further nuances and complexities as his career progressed.
Heaney returns to the bogland over the years, and it constitutes a theme that he revises and revisits in later books.An entire archival folder of research materials at the Emory Rose Library is entitled 'Bogs', and it shows that Heaney researched peaty landscapes in extensive detail in the 1970s.From bog formation and bog archaeology, to combustion and peat-fired power stations, Heaney immersed himself in all things peaty. 15Industrial peat extraction in Ireland increased after the establishment of Bord na Móna (the Peat Board) in 1946 (O 'Connor and Gearey 2020, 383), and indeed Heaney's research materials in the 'Bogs' folder include a Bord na Móna document that focuses on economics and extraction, drainage and energy. 16Bogland history fascinated Heaney far more than the bald economic value of peat, and he delved into the rich archaeological treasure-trove of Danish boglands via Glob's The Bog People (1965, translated into English in 1969).He continued digging into this rich layer of material in Bog Poems, printed by Olwyn Hughes with peaty watercolours by Barrie Cooke (1975).His celebrated 1975 collection North features both Danish and Irish boglands.Heaney also used his bog-poems to support peatland conservation in the Republic of Ireland.
Heaney's poem 'Belderg' details the discovery of Neolithic quernstones in a bog in County Mayo.In 1972, Heaney met both the archaeologist who worked on this important archaeological site, and the archaeologist's father, who first understood the significance of the quernstones (O'Driscoll 2008 loc 3276; Mayo 2019 np.)Many years after he wrote it, Heaney selected this poem to help support another bogrelated cause.In May 1989, Heaney contributed a manuscript draft of 'Belderg' to an auction for the Irish Peatland Conservation Council. 17Formed in 1982, the Irish Peatland Conservation Council launched its ongoing 'Save the Bogs' campaigns, purchasing boglands for conservation purposes, and developing educational initiatives (Irish Peatland Conservation Council 2022).A draft in the National Library of Ireland details Heaney's use of the poem to support this cause.Here is the beginning of Heaney's manuscript draft 18 : The manuscript gives valuable information about the development of the poem.In his collection North, the published version of 'Belderg' begins: They just kept turning up And were thought of as foreign' -One-eyed and benign They lie about his house, Quernstones out of a bog (1975,4) In the published version, Heaney creates a vivid opening by quoting the speech of the discoverer or archaeologist, rather than beginning with the more ecologically-focused word 'moss' (both place and species) that appears at the top of the manuscript.The draft above evokes 'disputed ground', a more direct engagement with disputed territory than the intricate layers of identity that are more fully evoked in the published draft.Heaney's use of 'Belderg' to support a conservation cause would suggest that it is not always easy to distinguish between nature poetry and ecopoetry, ecopoetry and ecological ideas, art and ideology.While Heaney's earlier poetry celebrates the domestic cutting of peat for fuel, his later use of the poem to support bogland conservation suggests that the 'cutting' mentioned by the Ulster Trust for Nature Conservation poster came to be viewed as with greater ambivalence in environmental circles.Drainage and disturbance are required to uncover the archaeological remains that Heaney's poem celebrates: 'the processes of exposure and hence discovery (drainage and peat cutting) are also ultimately the agents of destruction' (O' Connor and Gearey 2020, 383).
The bogland takes on different connotations at different points in Heaney's career, and his use of it reflects a changing political situation and deepening environmental awareness.In a B.B.C film about bogs from 1988, Heaney said, 'People may be awful, but the land they live on gives them a possibility of coming together' (Heaney 1988) -a reflection on a sense of place that is the motivation behind his later environmental activities.He was becoming increasingly aware of the fragility of bogland environments, and this is reflected in his writing.In 1996, in his essay 'The man and the bog' for the museum at Silkeborg that houses famous bog bodies, Heaney wrote that bog bodies 'erase the boundary-line between culture and nature (Heaney 1996, 2), anticipating the challenge to anthropocentrism in Bruno Latour's Beyond Nature and Culture (2005).'The man and the bog' appeared in a 'Wetlands Archaeology Research Project' conference proceedings in 1998; the conference explored the tensions between industrial peat extraction, and preserving bog environments and the archaeological remains in them. 19Heaney lent further support to bog conservation in 1999, when his poem 'The Child That's Due' from 'Bann Valley Eclogue' was printed in a limited-edition broadside by the Bank of Ireland Group Treasury, with some signed copies for the Irish Peatland Conservation Council.The Bank of Ireland Group made a donation to the Irish Peatland Conservation Council's 'Save the Bogs' campaign in recognition of Heaney's contribution (Brandes and Durkan 2008, 158).Heaney's 'Bann Valley Eclogue' is an appropriate choice, given that the poemsequence focuses on a new, peaceful chapter of history, new human life, and new life for wetlands and watercourses: 'The valley will be washed like the new baby' (Heaney 2001, 11).Yet it is in District and Circle (2006) that Heaney creates his most explicitly environmental bog-poem, 'The Tollund Man in Springtime', which he groups with climate change poems such as 'Höfn' and 'On the Spot'.Heaney's final poetic portrait of the Tollund Man is his attempt to reconcile different views of peatlands: the domestic peatextraction that he witnessed in rural County Derry, the ability that bogs have to preserve prehistoric remains, and their importance for biodiversity and carbon dioxide storage.
In 'The Tollund Man in Springtime', Heaney resurrects a famous prehistoric Danish bogman at a time of imperilled environments, in air polluted by 'exhaust fumes, silage reek' and 'thickened traffic ' (2006, 56).There are also threats to biodiversity and water quality: a sixth-sensed threat: Panicked snipe offshooting into twilight, Then going awry, larks quietened in the sun, Clear alteration in the bog-pooled rain (2006,55) The 'Panicked snipe' no longer symbolise the displaced Irish language, as they did in Heaney's earlier poem 'A Backward Look', but go 'awry' in response to ecological threats.The line 'Clear alteration in the bog-pooled rain', with the richly significative word-play on 'clear', suggests multiple environmental interpretations.Acid rain causes watercourses to become lifeless -abnormally 'clear' -and of course this alteration is 'clear' to an observer.Altered rain also speaks of the shifting weather-patterns of climate change.The Tollund Man is described using multiple metaphors and similes that aspire to vigorous growth: his wrists are like 'silver birches' and his hands are like 'young sward ' (2006, 56), suggesting a flourishing bogland environment that might act to offset those 'exhaust fumes'.The end of the poem sees the Tollund Man attempting to transplant a bunch of 'Tollund rushes' that are in danger of withering to 'dust ' (2006, 57).He spits on his hands like a peat-cutter, but instead of picking up his spade and digging, he enters a contemporary, urban setting where his regenerative powers are needed: As a man would, cutting turf, I straightened, spat on my hands, felt benefit And spirited myself into the street (2006,57) When asked if the poem was 'environmental protest or lament', Heaney commented that the Tollund Man 'senses that all is not well in the earth and air', but he is also 'a principle of regeneration' (O'Driscoll 2008, 411).While both the peat-cutting that the Tollund Man's contemporaries would have done, and the later cutting that revealed him, disturb the bog, the poem suggests that the Tollund Man, with his tree-like wrists and sward-like hands, might be able to repair this.

Saving the bog and saving the lough
When Lady Moyola wrote to Heaney about the new road through the bog near Lough Neagh, the poet was 'horrified'.Heaney replied to her: Those undisturbed acres are as much a common spiritual resource as they are an ecological treasure.All over the world it is being realised that the outback, as we might call it, of the 'developed' areas, is the last vital ditch in need of protection, and this work of protection has to be done vigorously at local level (ctd in Woodworth 2019, np.)The area that Heaney mobilised to protect was crucial to his poetry.The landscape under threat included Anahorish, 'My "place of clear water", ' (1972, 6), and the River Moyola, 'In those days she flowed/black-lick and quick ' (2006, 58).When Heaney mentions the 'outback' in his letter to Lady Moyola, he looks back at his poem 'Kinship' in North (1975, 35).Heaney's evocation of the bog as both a 'spiritual' resource and an 'ecological treasure' references the complex accretion of history, human and nonhuman life, ritual and memory with which he associates the bog in North.Heaney even said later in an interview that an alternative route for the motorway would be less of a 'wound on the ecology' (Bailie 2016, np.).The campaign to oppose the motorway would continue for many years to come, and Heaney's lasting legacy is detailed shortly.The A6 motorway in Northern Ireland was not the only one that Heaney opposed; in a B.B.C broadcast from 2008, Heaney spoke out against a motorway that would pass near the historical sites at Tara in the Republic of Ireland (McDonald 2008, np.) Lough Beg is one of the areas that Heaney mentions in the 2005 letter quoted at the beginning of this article.This landscape is highly significant for Heaney: 'The Strand at Lough Beg' (Heaney 1996), with its 'lowland clays and waters ' (1979, 17), is the setting of his elegy for his murdered cousin, Colum McCartney.In 2010, the RSPB's Northern Ireland branch asked Heaney to support a new management plan for Lough Beg.Heaney responded to the RSPB's request by penning a lyrical foreword to their pragmaticallytitled 'Lough Beg Management Plan': New Ferry, Church Island, The Mullach, Aughrim . . .In the following pages, those names are to be found on a map showing the local wild life habitats, but for me and for anyone of my generation brought up in the Lough Beg area, they belong first and foremost in memory and imagination.They evoke a dream land that was once the real land, a shore at evening, quiet water, wind in the grass, the calls of birds, maybe a man or woman out in a back field just standing looking, counting cattle, listening.
The Lough Beg Management Plan intends to make that country of the mind a reality once again.It wants to bring back a landscape where the peewit and the curlew and the whirring snipe are as common as they used to be on those 1940s evenings when I'd go with my father to check on our cattle on the strand.In the meantime, as a result of different threatspollution and development and drainage and undergrazing among them -the wet and the weeds and the wilderness have suffered, and the bird life and flora and fauna that gave our part of the world its secret beauty have been sadly diminished.
But now there is a realization by the people who own and live by these wetlands that they can reverse this trend.What is most hopeful and heartening is the news that local farmers are prepared to co-operate with the sponsors of this Management Plan.These families have a precious corner of our planet in their keeping and deserve high praise for taking thought and taking care of it for future generations.In doing so, they make themselves examples at local level of what has to happen globally -they are helping the earth's immunity system to contend with the dangers it now faces everywhere.(Heaney 2010, 2) Yet Heaney did not merely contribute this foreword: he read and commented on the entire booklet before it was published.According to Seamus Burns, who worked with Heaney on the Management Plan, 'he certainly played his part in the co-ordinated management of the Lough Beg wet grassland management, the legacy of which continues to this day and will do for many years to come in the area'. 20When one examines Heaney's foreword, one sees how he draws on the work of earlier environmental poets and prose writers.His turn of phrase 'the wet and the weeds and the wilderness' is of course a reference to Gerard Manley Hopkins's 'Inversnaid' -'Long live the weeds and the wilderness' (Hughes and Heaney 1982., 215).This was clearly an important poem to Heaney and his friend Hughes, as it also appears in their anthology The Rattle Bag; Hopkins is read as an ecological poet by critics such as John Parham (2017).Rachel Carson's idyllic opening paragraph of Silent Spring is also a touchstone for Heaney: There was once a town in the heart of America where all life seemed to live in harmony with its surroundings.The town lay in the midst of a checkerboard of prosperous farms [. ..]The countryside was, in fact, famous for the abundance and variety of its bird life.(Carson 1963, 21) Heaney's foreword for the RSPB is also redolent of his own literary preoccupations.The first line calls up the etymologies of place-names in Irish poetry (Heaney 1980, 131), a regional Northern Irish version of the poetic countries of the mind in his essay 'Englands of the Mind' (150-169).The recitation of place-names recalls his earlier evocation of the shipping forecast in Field Work: 'Dogger, Rockall, Malin, Irish Sea' (1979, 39); the mention of the snipe is a backward glance at Heaney's poem 'The Backward Look', itself preoccupied with dwindling bird populations (1972,(19)(20).Heaney presents the home ground of his poetry as of great literary, cultural, historical and environmental significance; these issues are intertwined.Here, he uses writing to lend small-scale -but practical and effective -support to preserve wetlands and waterfowl.

Conclusion
Few poets can hope to create major or immediate changes to environmental policy.Heaney's support for small-scale, often local, conservation activities did not have the global impacts of movements such as climate change strikes.However, authors can, and do, collaborate with others to lobby for reform.Heaney was no environmental radical; high-profile contemporary poets who give their poems to Extinction Rebellion might see his support for conservation as moderate. 21Moreover, the environmental strains in his work are not uncomplicated.Later conservation activities to restore boglands and wetlands might have aimed to preserve them because Heaney knew that turf cutting had degraded them; in 'The Tollund Man in Springtime', flourishing vegetation only just gains the upper hand over environmental destruction.However, Heaney's passionate defence of the landscapes he loved has lasted beyond his lifetime.After Heaney's death in 2013, his legacy was used for further campaigns against the proposed motorway in Northern Ireland.A petition to 'Stop Ecocide in Heaney Country' aimed to continue the resistance. 22The turn of phrase 'Heaney Country' gives his poetry the same importance to a sense of place as 'Yeats Country' and 'Wordsworth Country'.Indeed, Heaney's biographer Fintan O'Toole has written of the way Heaney's poetry is not merely shaped by these places, but shapes people's cultural concept of them (O'Toole 2016).Friends of the Earth quote extensively from Heaney's letters opposing the new motorway, in a (Friends of the Earth, 2017) campaign document.The poet's legacy provides much of the impetus behind the campaign to preserve the bogland: 'As the place that nourished the poetry of Séamus [sic] Heaney it is a global treasure' Friends of the Earth Northern Ireland (Friends of the Earth, 2017, 3). 23 Let us return to Juliana Spahr's view of the nature-poem that celebrates the bird while ignoring the bulldozer (Spahr 2001, 69).Heaney's work shows how a poem that celebrates the snipe in the bog can attempt to halt the bulldozer that threatens it.His letter to Peter Hain opposing the road helped to hold back the diggers, if only temporarily; the road was eventually built.Heaney supported many causes, but the ecological organisations he lent support to lead one to re-interpret landscape-poems . However, in the published version, Heaney removes this local focus, creating a finished piece that is more applicable to global environmental dilemmas:Heaney's turn of phrase 'great lakes' might well apply to Northern Ireland's Lough Neagh, but it cannot fail to evoke North America's Great Lakes.The scalar ambit of 'Augury' widens beyond Ireland, suggesting widespread environmental contamination.