Reference Number | 299 |
Title | Armageddon. A fragment [of a poem.] |
Author | Ross, Neil |
Editor | MacLeod, Donald James |
Date Of Edition | 1950 |
Date Of Language | mid 20c |
Date Of Language Ed | 1900-1949 |
DateMacro | Mid 20th c. |
Date Of Language Notes | |
Publisher | The Albyn Press |
Place Published | Edinburgh |
Volume | N/A |
Location | National, academic, and local libraries |
Geographical Origins | Skye |
Geographical Origins Ed | Skye |
GeoMacro | Skye, Raasay and Small Isles |
GeoX | -6.7784 |
GeoY | 57.3617 |
Geographical Origins Notes | |
Register | Literature, Verse |
Register Ed | Literature, Verse |
Genre | Literature |
Medium | Verse |
Rating | B (TBC) |
Alternative Author Name | Niall Ros |
Manuscript Or Edition | Ed. |
Size And Condition | 21.2cm x 14cm |
Short Title | Armageddon |
Reference Details | NLS: X.165.f |
Number Of Pages | iii, 147 |
Gaelic Text By | N/A |
Illustrator | N/A |
Social Context | The text is an uncompleted epic about the Second World War. For more biographical information about the author and also the editor, see Text 291. |
Contents | After the bi-lingual title page and the publication details, there follows a short foreword by Donald James MacLeod that explains that the text was written in Gaelic along with an English translation by the late Rev. Dr Neil Ross: the poem, as explained in the title, is a fragment of an intended far longer work, never completed due to the author’s ill health. The main text then follows, consisting of the original Gaelic on the left-hand side of the page and a face-to-face English translation on the right-hand side of the page. The poem consists of four-line verses. |
Sources | |
Language | The language reflects the Gaelic dialect of the Isle of Skye. |
Orthography | The spelling conforms generally to the orthography of mid nineteenth century. Acute and grave accents are both retained. Accents appear on capital letters. |
Edition | First edition. |
Other Sources | |
Further Reading | Anon., ‘Tributes: Dr. D. J. Macleod’, An Gaidheal, leabh. L, àir 5 (An Ceitein, 1955), 42.
Watson, Moray, An Introduction to Gaelic Fiction (Edinburgh, 2011: Edinburgh University Press). |
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Download File | |
NumWords | 12095 |