The Bard of the Dales.

By John Castillo

Printed: 1858

Publisher: W F Pratt. Stokesley

Dimensions 11 × 17 × 3 cm
Language

Language: English

Size (cminches): 11 x 17 x 3

£49.00
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Item information

Description

Brown cloth binding with gilt title on the spine.

We provide an in-depth photographic presentation of this item to stimulate your feeling and touch. More traditional book descriptions are immediately available.

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A rare and one of the most complete editions of Castillos printed works. In original binding with a little age wear as per photographs. Irish born poet & singer songwriter, Castillo spent most of his life in the North Yorkshire village of Lealholm and died in nearby Pickering. This collection contains his best known poems “Auld Isaac” and “The Steeplechase” and ” A life of the author written by himself”. His work is often credited as having rescued the ancient language of the Dales.

John Castillo (1792 – 16 April 1845), often referred to as the “Bard of the Dales”, from his first published book – “The Bard of the Dales – Poems by John Castillo” was a poet who lived for much of his life in the village of Lealholm. Castillo’s work is treasured as having rescued the ancient language of the dales from oblivion. John’s father, a traveller, met his spouse in Eskdale and they both returned to Ireland where John was born in 1792 near the small village of Rathfarnham, close to Dublin, today a suburb of the city. At the age of two, the family decided to return to Lealholm and moved to the site that now bears the name Poets’ Cottage. At the age of 12 he moved to Lincolnshire and began work as a servant on a country estate and soon became noted for his talent as a poet, singer / songwriter.

Later returning to Eskdale, he began work as a farm hand, and soon turned his skills to stonemasonry. Methodism was popular across the Dales, and John converted from Catholicism in 1818. Following thoughts of suicide he became a lay preacher, but continued his stone work and poetry. He often wrote using local dialect and is most well known for the poems “Aud Isaac” and “The Steeplechase” although he also used standard English. Very few of his works have been published since the early 1900s. He died in the town of Pickering aged 53, and is buried at the Methodist Chapel in Hungate. His gravestone reads an epitaph of his own creation

Condition notes

Binding frail

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