logo
#

Latest news with #Bloodaxe

Bodily takeover: New poetry from Gwyneth Lewis, Jennifer Horgan, Dedalus Introductions and Peter McDonald
Bodily takeover: New poetry from Gwyneth Lewis, Jennifer Horgan, Dedalus Introductions and Peter McDonald

Irish Times

time03-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Irish Times

Bodily takeover: New poetry from Gwyneth Lewis, Jennifer Horgan, Dedalus Introductions and Peter McDonald

From a Welsh poet well used to crossing borders comes a sixth collection of ardour and courage. Gwyneth Lewis's First Rain in Paradise (Bloodaxe, £12) confronts past trauma and debility through the language of invasion and bodily takeover. In the first sequence of eight poems, a spider lays eggs in the speaker's brain: as the sequence develops, the subject of maternal child abuse comes sharp and clear. These are poems of darkness and danger – probing, unsettling, appalling. Snare, for example, seems to ask how one is to live in a mind damaged by abuse: 'It's easy to leave, what stops you?', others ask, baffled. It's the snare in the brain, spring-loaded for suicide ... 'Don't you love a good fact, how it saves you / from feeling', asks Relic, but this collection is spared nothing, not the trauma of abuse, rendered in imagery as powerful as it is fearsome; not the descent into aftermath (… and I'm coming / undone/ at the / seams – Any Eight Legs Will Do); and, ultimately, not the process of recovery, that climb back up towards a capacity to endure ('don't ask me how, I'm still feeling, pulling' – Spidering) or to resist, as at the conclusion of Expulsion: 'An owl / descends – clutching stars and dismay / in her talons. Stubborn as ever, I choose to stay.' That survival impulse is facilitated by an insistence on hard-won joy. Three Ways into Water describes: READ MORE I've thrust my head through sky's skin, can see how my brain is dazzled by stars' wheels and zigzags, spelling delight, which is the opposite of pain. Difficult material rendered in unflinchingly challenging imagery, but these poems are also delightful, finding humour and pleasure where they can, as in Late Blackberries, where the final sugar-rush is relished, even if the crop's first sweetness has been sacrificed. Gwyneth Lewis: Difficult material rendered in unflinchingly challenging imagery In the tradition of Faber's Poetry Introduction or Carcanet's New Poetries series, Beginnings Over and Over (Dedalus, €12.50), edited by Leeanne Quinn, features a selection of emerging Irish poets whose work has been published in poetry journals or performed in other ways, but who have yet to publish a first collection. In this case, four poets – Mai Ishikawa, Róisín Leggett Bohan, Emer Lyons and Cal O'Reilly – are represented by a generous selection of about a dozen poems each, enough for a taster but not so many as to compromise any collections likely to follow. Such introductory anthologies are usually a good way to sample the poetry zeitgeist (if there is one), and this volume indicates that perennial themes of grief, bodies, dreams and cats still abide, while room is made for more contemporary concerns of gender transition, Kintsugi and films such as Top Gun and God's Own Country. A capacious volume with a range of sparky, beguiling poem titles (And I had bought new underwear from Penneys; The Migration of Theta Waves; I Photocopy Vaginas), the four highlighted poets demonstrate energy and engagement, although the 'stylistic innovation' promised by the brief introduction seems an overclaim. Standout moments include Leggett Bohan's The Cryptographer, which opens: 'We carried the summer / in our mouths'); Ishikawa's wonderful Faceless, and Lyons's Mouse/Mice. Perhaps the most assured poet is O'Reilly, whose poems declare a formal maturity and confidence in strikingly bold but graceful imagery. A couple of list poems here nicely handle momentum and detail, and metaphor (that trickiest of poetic strategies) is managed elegantly, as in the final phrases of Naming: … the first time you say my name / a feeling / fills my chest / like a room I can stand in /so bright / I don't need to look past it The first lines of the opening poem of Jennifer Horgan's Care (Doire Press, €16), declare its uncompromising approach. It's Just a Dream I Had begins: 'She's slumped in a bath. I'm drawn to the grey hair inside / her thighs, the dough-layered stomach, belonging to mothers'. The theme of Women's Bodies, often constrained and compromised by social context, though always observed with care and fidelity, is to the forefront. From the small boxes to which people (especially women and the marginalised) are confined, these poems declare their resistance, rebuke and avowal. 'Don't see the faces of those / who suffered hope' may refer specifically to a lorry of dead, trafficked migrants in the poem For the 39, but this is work that does see, and sees hard. Poems of urgent intention, driven by moral imperative, sometimes brush a little too closely against Keats's warning about readers hating poems with 'palpable designs' on them. If, in this collection, poems for the Tuam Babies and the Magdalene Laundries might seem somewhat familiar (if no less sincere) in their response to contemporary Ireland, other poems probing more personal experience are vivid and arresting. There seems little need for the somewhat workshop-ish poems that lean into the authority of established figures – those poems written 'after' Heaney, Plath, Atwood and Joyce. The book's strongest poems amply declare their own credentials: a curious eye, a kind heart and an eye-catching turn of phrase, as in the lovely Sound of Cars Beyond Our Garden, or Your House Fell to Pieces, a poem written in middle age about a childhood home, which finishes: Knowing all the effort you made, makes life majestic and terrifying. Like the Cliffs of Moher are outside my front door, waiting for it to open. Peter McDonald, whose latest collection is One Little Room With both the title and the Gwen John cover painting seeming to promise a kind of gauzy, dusky domesticity, the language of Peter McDonald's One Litte Room (Carcanet, £11.99) comes as a surprise. This collection's various backward glances are elegiac but also deceptively down-to-earth. In the end of Travels, for example, the heartbreaking pathos of dementia is rendered with gentle restraint, as a son visits his mother: … Did I ever have a house? Her questions were scared and delirious: Was I good? And did I have a husband? I looked at her with his face, and I said Yes. A theme of containment runs throughout, with matchboxes, storage boxes, coffins and even Harry Houdini featuring. Seventeen four-line poems punctuate the collection, the best of which are small boxes of concision and elusiveness, as what's described opens and closes on the past, as in The Pillow: I turn and talk to you before I sleep, talk to you in my head, for you're not here; but you listen, and you smile, until you slip from the pillow into all that came before. A poem is also a kind of intricately carved box, and the poems here seem to relish the play of confinement and release. McDonald is a loyal formalist: in Incident, the poem's exploded sonnet form, with disrupted rhyme scheme and disguised 14 lines, is scarcely noticeable but is there nonetheless, subtly supporting and amplifying subject matter. If this, McDonald's eighth collection, shows a vulnerability in mining the past and registering losses, his familiar, public-facing side is also in evidence. Centenary 1921-2021 draws one man's life against a backdrop of political and social change in Northern Ireland, ('you and the new country are of an age'), climbing out of strident partisan allegiance to observe: ' ... everything comes and goes / where people live; and that is history'.

Book of a lifetime: Collected Poems 1937-1966 by Martin Bell
Book of a lifetime: Collected Poems 1937-1966 by Martin Bell

The Independent

time15-03-2025

  • Entertainment
  • The Independent

Book of a lifetime: Collected Poems 1937-1966 by Martin Bell

The only book Martin Bell published in his lifetime was his Collected Poems, a hardback between mustard-coloured paper covers with a wood engraving showing a contemplative puritan poet. There was nothing else until 10 years after his death when, in 1988, Bloodaxe published the Complete Poems, edited by Peter Porter. It is unusual to publish nothing but your Collected Poems. Your productive life appears to be over the moment it begins: the rest is, by implication, a kind of coda. So it was in some ways, but not all. I met Bell in 1969, two years after his annus mirabilis, as a first-year art student at Leeds where he ran a weekly poetry group that I attended. He had been a Gregory Fellow at the university, awarded in 1967. He would have left London just as his book was appearing to vanish into his hated North. 'A shilling life will give you all the facts,' wrote WH Auden in his poem 'Who's Who'. Bell has never had a shilling life but the poems remain original and full of energy. Al Alvarez said he wrote 'a rather bitter, tensely colloquial verse based, it seems, on a radical dislike for both himself and pretty much everything else', but that does him no justice at all. The poems glitter with laughter and desire. His 'Ode to Groucho' begins with an invocation whose first two lines are, 'Pindarick, a great gorblimey Ode/ Soaring on buzzard wings, ornate' and continues in the same high spirits, through 'a back-cloth rattled by oom-pah' into a celebration of the anarchic. There is, it is true, self-hatred and self-mockery but they are part of a comedy that comprises terrors left over from the war and mischief aimed at the controllers of life: headmasters, mayors, all the snobbishly high-minded. Italian opera was his love. The great tragic aria combined with the buffoonery of below stairs was his natural métier. That strange unwritten shilling life should tell how he is represented in Philip Larkin's The Oxford Book of Twentieth Century English Verse by a single poem, a translation, the only translation in the book. It is 'Winter Coming On', subtitled 'A caricature from Laforgue'. It is a magnificent poem in which Bell turns Jules Laforgue into a heartbreakingly yearning opera buffa. Together with Larkin's own 'The Whitsun Weddings' it is one of the two great poems of post-war England, not written from Larkin's train but by a demob from the platform, the B&B and the park bench. I always return to him. To him and Eliot. There hasn't been anyone like Bell since.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store