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Thread: Today's poet

  1. #12741
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    Re: Today's poet

    Nice choice Alf. It was his bird poems in an anthology edited by Simon Armitage that first made me aware of him. I was given his collected works (probably the same book you have?) and its brilliant. Have you read 'At the Loch of the Green Corrie'? Its written by Andrew Greig and is about his friendship with Norman and the times he visited the place that inspired so much of his poetry. Interesting.

    Quote Originally Posted by Alf View Post
    Can't put down my book of Norman MacCaig poems at the moment. He has been described as the opposite of Ted Hughes in the ways he describes animals and birds but I like both their approaches to the subject.

    Greenshank

    His single note - one can't help calling it
    piping, one can't help
    calling it plaintive - slides droopingly down
    no more than a semitone, but is filled
    with an octave of loneliness, with the whole sad scale
    of desolation.

    He won't leave us. He keeps flying
    fifty yards and perching
    on a rock or a small hummock,
    drawing attention to himself.
    Then he calls and calls
    and flies on again
    in a flight
    roundshouldered but dashing,
    skulking yet bold.

    Cuckoo, phoenix, nightingale,
    you are no truer emblems
    than this bird is.
    He is the melancholy that flies
    in the weathers of my mind,
    He is the loneliness that calls to me there
    in a semitone
    of desolate octaves.

    Norman MacCaig

  2. #12742
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    Re: Today's poet

    Quote Originally Posted by Hes View Post
    Nice choice Alf. It was his bird poems in an anthology edited by Simon Armitage that first made me aware of him. I was given his collected works (probably the same book you have?) and its brilliant. Have you read 'At the Loch of the Green Corrie'? Its written by Andrew Greig and is about his friendship with Norman and the times he visited the place that inspired so much of his poetry. Interesting.
    The collection I have is edited by Norman MacCaig's son Ewen. I just read the review on Amazon of the Andrew Greig book, sounds very good Hes

  3. #12743
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    Re: Today's poet

    April 18

    the slime of all my yesterdays
    rots in the hollow of my skull

    and if my stomach would contract
    because of some explicable phenomenon
    such as pregnancy or constipation

    I would not remember you

    or that because of sleep
    infrequent as a moon of greencheese
    that because of food
    nourishing as violet leaves
    that because of these

    and in a few fatal yards of grass
    in a few spaces of sky and treetops

    a future was lost yesterday
    as easily and irretrievably
    as a tennis ball at twilight


    Sylvia Plath

    Been awhile since SP's made an appearance on this thread. Shocking! I've missed her jolly verse and uplifting tones.
    Am Yisrael Chai

  4. #12744
    Moderator Mossdog's Avatar
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    Re: Today's poet

    The Armada

    Long, long ago
    when everything I was told was believable
    and the little I knew was less limited than now,
    I stretched belly down on the grass beside a pond
    and to the far bank launched a child’s armada.
    A broken fortress of twigs,
    the paper-tissue sails of galleons,
    the waterlogged branches of submarines -
    all came to ruin and were on flame
    in that dusk-red pond.
    And you, mother, stood behind me,
    impatient to be going,
    old at twenty-three, alone,
    thin overcoat flapping.
    How closely the past shadows us.
    In a hospital a mile or so from that pond
    I kneel beside your bed and, closing my eyes,
    reach out across forty years to touch once more
    that pond’s cool surface,
    and it is your cool skin I’m touching;
    for as on a pond a child’s paper boat
    was blown out of reach
    by the smallest gust of wind,
    so too have you been blown out of reach
    by the smallest whisper of death,
    and a childhood memory is sharpened,
    and the heart burns as that armada burnt,
    long, long ago.

    Brian Patten
    Am Yisrael Chai

  5. #12745
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    Re: Today's poet

    Anyone catch Countryfile on sunday night? Simon Armitage was on, it may be on BBC iPlayer.

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  7. #12747
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    Re: Today's poet

    Thanks for the heads up Steve! I've just read on the web that his book, 'Walking Home', will be out on the 5th July and he is walking a section of the Pennine Way from Thwaite to Hawes and inviting people to join him some time in July.

    Quote Originally Posted by stevefoster View Post

  8. #12748
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    Re: Today's poet

    That's the book that I have too Alf, great isn't it?
    Quote Originally Posted by Alf View Post
    The collection I have is edited by Norman MacCaig's son Ewen. I just read the review on Amazon of the Andrew Greig book, sounds very good Hes

  9. #12749
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    Re: Today's poet

    Nothing like the cheeriness of Sylvia...thanks Mossy (I think ). I did like the Patten, that's a particularly moving choice.

  10. #12750
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    Re: Today's poet

    Quote Originally Posted by Hes View Post
    Nothing like the cheeriness of Sylvia...thanks Mossy (I think ). I did like the Patten, that's a particularly moving choice.
    Thanks Hes

    I've been a bit busy recently and haven't had time to visit the thread as much as usual but was shocked to see we had been 'relegated' to the 2nd page :w00t: Despite your's and Alf plus Merrylegs...ooophs I mean Steve's stalwart contributions. I'll make amends I hope.
    Am Yisrael Chai

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