
The range of literary links is exhaustive. The Chester Beatty Library contains an enormous collection of ancient manuscripts, predominantly from the Middle and Far East. Trinity College holds the magnificant Book of Kells (pictured). Jonathan Swift was Dean of the bizarre Gothic structure of St Patrick's Cathedral, while the 19th Century saw the births of Charles Maturin, Sheridan Le Fanu, Bram Stoker and Oscar Wilde, to name but a few.
Yet it was the early decades of the twentieth century which produced the two most famous Dublin figures: James Joyce and WB Yeats. Joyce's Ulysses is widely regarded as the greatest novel of the twentieth century, Yeats won a Nobel Prize, and along the way Ireland followed the United States of America in becoming the second ex-colonial nation, achieving independence in 1922. Both men were obviously influenced by these monumental events, but the difference between their responses highlights two very different ideas of literature.