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    Originally posted by johncorrigan View Post
    It was a glorious sunny morning and I was taking a bus from Perth to Blairgowrie. The first bus to arrive takes a roundabout route but I thought I'd take it anyway - across the Tay, past Scone Palace where the only other passengers disembarked and then through small villages that claim links to Macbeth and on over the River Isla, past the magnificent Meikleour Beech Hedge and on into Blair...and all on my bus pass. I felt blessed and I kept thinking of the Leonard Cohen poem that I first read at school.
    Just to remind you:




    Here is Blair Castle

    HS

    Comment


      Originally posted by johncorrigan View Post
      To mark the 30th anniversary of Betjeman, a programme with AN Wilson on Monday evening at 9pm followed by 'Metroland', the programme JB made in '73.
      http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b04gb6nl
      Many thanks for this John. I'll certainly "tune -in" at some point next week

      Best Wishes,

      Tevot

      Comment


        I've recently bought the Uncollected Poems of RS Thomas - a fascinating collection of poems written for individual magazine publication and semi-discarded work that he neither destroyed nor offered for publication. These latter give remarkable insights to the workings of the poet's mind - all of them containing powerful passages together with "sticky" moments that hamper the poem's effectiveness. This one has some of Thomas' characteristics, but some of the imagery isn't quite "there", and the words don't flow as in his best work - but what I would give to be able to produce something of this standard!

        Luminary

        My luminary,
        My morning and evening
        star. My light at noon
        when there is no sun
        and the sky lowers. My balance
        of joy in a a world
        that has gone off joy's
        standard. Yours the face
        that young I recognised
        as though I had known you
        of old. Come, my eyes
        said, out into the morning
        of a world whose dew
        waits for your footprint.
        Before a green altar
        with the thrush for a priest
        I took those gossamer
        vows that neither the Church
        could stale nor the Machine
        tarnish, that with the years
        have grown hard as flint
        lighter than platinum
        on our ringless fingers.


        Thomas had already perceived the central flaw in such poems, in another poem that also displays them:

        Birthday

        Come to me a moment, stand
        Ageing yet lovely still,
        At my side. Let me tell you that,
        With the clouds massing for attack
        And the wind worrying the leaves
        From the branches and the blood seeping
        Thin and slow through the ventricles
        Of the heart, I regret less,
        Looking back on the poem's
        Weakness, the failure of the mind
        To be clever than of the heart
        To deserve you as you showed how.
        [FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]

        Comment


          A gentlemanly enough response, Hs. I doubt if this fellow would have been so diplomatic:

          Just My Luck I'm Not Pig-Ignorant

          Just my luck I'm not pig-ignorant
          Though it's hard to be a boor
          Now that I have to go out among
          This miserable shower.

          A pity I'm not a stutterer,
          Good people, among you,
          For that would suit you better,
          You thick, ignorant crew.

          If I found a man to swap, I'd trade
          Him verse that would cheer -
          As good a cloak as would come, he'd find,
          Between him and despair.

          Since a man is less respected
          For his talent than his suit,
          I regret that what I've spent on art
          I haven't now in cloth.

          Since happy the words and deeds that show no hint,
          On boorish tongues, of music, metre, clarity,
          I regret the time I've wasted grappling with hard print
          Since my prime, that i didn't spend it on vulgarity.

          Dáibhí Ó Bruadair c 1625 - 1698
          Poems from the Irish Collected Translations Gabriel Fitzmaurice 2004

          Comment


            Originally posted by Hornspieler
            It disappoints me that this particular forum does not carry any contributions from other forumites who have used their own abilities to express themselves in verse – or even simply to publish something of their own to share with others, as the artists and photographers among us have done on other of the Arts threads.
            There was once a Thread precisely for this, wasn't there, HS? (In fact, didn't you start it? I remember sals and others contributing.) I started this Thread to complement that - I seem to remember you preferred more traditional rhyme, scansion etc, so I started this to complement that with professional poetry that Forumistas wished to share with others. Not, I hasten to add, that that need necessarily be a rule, if there anyone else wishes to use this Thread to share their own creative work.

            My main disappointment is that the Thread seems to attract fewer contributions than the footie threads.
            [FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]

            Comment


              Originally posted by Hornspieler
              Come on then. What about it?

              HS

              (Joke)Where do all the police constables live?

              Letsby Avenue!
              More specifically Evening Hall, Letsby Avenue

              Comment


                The Late Wasp

                You, that through all the dying summer
                Came every morning to our breakfast table,
                A lonely bachelor mummer,
                And fed on the marmalade
                So deeply all your strength was scarcely able
                To prise you from the sweet bed you had made -
                You and the earth have now grown older,
                And your blue thoroughfares have felt a change;
                They have grown colder;
                And it is strange
                How the familiar avenues of the air
                Crumble now, crumble; the good air will not hold.
                All cracked and perished with the cold;
                And down you dive through nothing and despair.

                Edwin MUIR (1887-1959)
                [FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]

                Comment


                  I seem to have brought the previous thread to an end. Oh well, some rather odd sonnets here

                  Comment


                    More to share? There's probably too much on my site.

                    I'm currently trying a form of seven line stanzas rhymed abcbabc with freeish line length and stress.

                    Comment


                      I've posted a Dafydd ap Gwilym (1320-1370) before but was reminded of this one by the recent misty mornings we've had. Poor Dafydd, he continuously got himself into a state of feverish anticipation but always something intervened to prevent him getting the girl, this time it's mist. The translation is again by Swansea University.
                      (I don't apologise for the length, it's easy to scroll over what you don't wish to read!)

                      The Mist

                      Yesterday, Thursday (a day for drinking,
                      it was good for me to have, I got a favour,
                      a dependable sign, I am thin for her sake,
                      complete love) I got
                      a course amongst lovely branches under the greenwood
                      with a girl, she agreed to meet me.
                      There was no one under dear God the Father
                      (bless her) who knew,
                      when break of day came on Thursday,
                      how full of joy I was
                      as I went, [to] see the beauty,
                      to the land where the tall slender maid was,
                      when there came indeed on a long moor
                      a mist just like night.

                      A great parchment roll which was a cover to the rain,
                      pallid rows to stop me,
                      a rusting tin-coloured sieve,
                      bird-net of the black earth,
                      a dark hedge on a narrow path,
                      an endless blanket in the sky,
                      a grey cowl making the ground one colour,
                      a lid on every gaping valley,
                      roof lattice seen up above,
                      a great weal over woods, haze of the land,
                      thick grey fleece, pale grey, flaccid and loose,
                      the colour of smoke, field's cowl,
                      hedge of rain to hinder welfare,
                      coat of armour of an oppressive shower,
                      it would deceive men, dark appearance,
                      shaggy cloak of the lands,
                      towers of Gwyn's tribe
                      travelling on high, headdress of the wind,
                      its grim cheeks hide the land,
                      a blanket covering three signs of the Zodiac,
                      darkness, a thick unlovely one,
                      blindness of the world to deceive a poet,
                      broad web of thick deceptive cambric,
                      it was spread out like a rope,
                      a spider's web, like wares of a French shop,
                      flaccid headland of Gwyn and his tribe,
                      speckled smoke which gets everywhere,
                      steam around small trees,
                      bear's breath where dogs bark,
                      ointment of the witches of Annwfn,
                      it wets stealthily like dew,
                      damp opaque habergeon of the land.

                      It's easier to go on a journey by night
                      over moors than in mist by day.
                      The stars come from the sky
                      like flames of wax candles,
                      but neither moonlight nor the Lord's stars,
                      painful promise, will come in mist.
                      He did ill when He made the mist
                      forever black and confining, it was lightless.
                      It blocked my path beneath the sky,
                      the dark grey curtain hinders a love messenger,
                      and prevented me (swift getting)
                      from going to my slender-browed girl.

                      Comment


                        No apology required, Anna.
                        Do I hear, or sense, a prophetic echo of another better known Welsh bard?
                        What a glittering shower of metaphors, and the odd mysterious simile

                        it was spread out like a rope,
                        a spider's web, like wares of a French shop.


                        And I learned a new word - habergeon - which I can apply to that jumper that's too small.
                        It's probably a cliche, but here's another example of finding much to identify with in the thoughts of someone from so long ago.

                        I enjoyed this poem a lot, thank you.

                        Comment


                          Originally posted by Padraig View Post
                          I enjoyed this poem a lot, thank you.
                          So did I!

                          Did everyone watch Cerys Matthews' programme on the Mabinogion last night? (A wee bit "gushing" - probably from trying to fit so much information into such a short programme - but so wonderful to hear those words in Mid-Welsh.) Isn't Dafydd in the same situation as Rwyll's men trying to catch up with Rhiannon's horse? The more effort he puts into chasing Love, the further away from him it saunters.
                          [FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]

                          Comment


                            Another poem about lack of success (with one of the darkestly comic final lines I know!)

                            nobody loses all the time

                            i had an uncle named
                            Sol who was a born failure and
                            nearly everybody said he should have gone
                            into vaudeville perhaps because my Uncle Sol could
                            sing McCann He Was A Diver on Xmas Eve like Hell Itself which
                            may or may not account for the fact that my Uncle

                            Sol indulged in that possibly most inexcusable
                            of all to use a highfalootin phrase
                            luxuries that is or to
                            wit farming and be
                            it needlessly
                            added

                            my Uncle Sol’s farm
                            failed because the chickens
                            ate the vegetables so
                            my Uncle Sol had a
                            chicken farm till the
                            skunks ate the chickens when

                            my Uncle Sol
                            had a skunk farm but
                            the skunks caught cold and
                            died and so
                            my Uncle Sol imitated the
                            skunks in a subtle manner

                            or by drowning himself in the watertank
                            but somebody who’d given my Uncle Sol a Victor
                            Victrola and records while he lived presented to
                            him upon the auspicious occasion of his decease a
                            scrumptious not to mention splendiferous funeral with
                            tall boys in black gloves and flowers and everything and
                            i remember we all cried like the Missouri
                            when my Uncle Sol’s coffin lurched because
                            somebody pressed a button
                            (and down went
                            my Uncle
                            Sol

                            and started a worm farm)


                            cummings ist der dichter.
                            [FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]

                            Comment


                              And, yes; it is a word!
                              [FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]

                              Comment


                                Thanks for the poem fhg, I like it very much.

                                I have a lot of time for Sean Bonney - he's uncompromising and stark, but he has such a good command of language, rhythm and combinations of imagery that I am compelled to keep reading and accept the (at times) discomfort.

                                A link to his Blog for the latest penning: http://abandonedbuildings.blogspot.c...tation_24.html

                                Comment

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