Background
He was born at Mooncoin, County Kilkenny, Ireland, August 30, 1872, to Michael and Anastasia (Quinn) Dollard, the youngest son in a large family.
He was born at Mooncoin, County Kilkenny, Ireland, August 30, 1872, to Michael and Anastasia (Quinn) Dollard, the youngest son in a large family.
He graduated from the Grand Seminary of Montreal and received from Laval University the degrees of Bachelor of Theology and Bachelor of Canon Law.
After taking the course in Classics at Kilkenny College, he sailed in 1890 for New Brunswick, Canada. The same university conferred on him in 1916, the honorary degree of Doctor of Letters He was ordained to the priesthood in December 1896. He served as a curate in Saint Helen"s Church, and Saint Mary"s Church, Toronto, and for nine years, parish priest of Uptergrove, Ontario before he became the parish priest of Saint Monica"s Church, North Toronto.
He published two volumes of poems Irish Mist and Sunshine (1902) and Poems (1910), and a volume of short stories entitled The Gaels of Moondharrig.
He sometimes wrote under the pseudonym of Sliav-na-mon. In a lecture on "The War and the Poets," delivered in Toronto, 1916, Mr.
Joyce Kilmer, poetry editor of the Literary Digest, declared that Father Dollard"s sonnet was the best poem that had appeared on the death of Rupert Brooke. He died in 1946.