Sunday, November 8, 2009

November's Free Choice

We were a smaller group than usual this month, but still did not manage to get round to discussing everyone's poems! Those we did discuss ranged widely from the mildly bawdy eighteenth-century broadside ballad 'An Amorous Dialogue between John and his Mistress' . This under-represented form of ephemera drew plenty of approving comments. It was followed by John Masefield's 'Cargoes' - always a favourite for its marvellous imagery and mimetic rhythm. I took along John Keats 'On First Looking into Chapman's Homer', after which U.A.Fanthorpe's 'Atlas' brought us right up into modern form and content. Its transition into metaphor created some debate. The next, and last poem, that we had time for was Michael Ondaatje's 'House on a Red Cliff', which puzzled and delighted in roughly equal measure.

As our next meeting is 5th December the topic will be Christmas, but it doesn't have to be the trite approach to tinsel and fairy lights, so it will be interesting to see if anything subversive turns up!

Sunday, October 11, 2009

October 3rd, October 8th

At our October meeting we were fortunate enough to have a visit from the local poet Joan McGavin. She brought along some of her poems and read them to us, analysing each one as she did so. It was an enlightening and fascinating experience to listen to a poet explaining the thinking behind her technique and inspiration. Joan's poems were 'Birthday Sleepover 3', 'Dining with the Dead', 'At a Distance', 'One Use of a Painting', 'Salt' (a most enigmatic poem), 'Soft', and my own favourite 'The Tremulous Hand Speaks'. Everyone in the group found the afternoon engrossing, and indeed the break for refreshment prompted so much small-group discussion it took a while for us all to refocus because we all had so much we wanted to discuss.

Members of the Poetry Reading Group have also had an open invitation to visit Sunrise of Bassett, the sheltered faciltiy for elderly residents. With the help of the Activities Co-ordinator and a young volunteer, some of the resident ladies and gentlemen have formed their own literary group which includes poetry reading and they have invited us to join them and contribute to their discussions. I have already done so, taking along Shakespeare's Sonnet 18, and Carol Ann Duffy's sonnet 'Prayer' for discussion. It was a delight to meet more people with an interest in poetry.

I hope everyone enjoyed and participated in National Poetry Day on 8th October. A lady next to me on the bus was reading the Faber Book of Blake's Verse. I read my Princeton Encyclopaedia of Poetry and Poetics. Two of the members of the PRG were fortunate enough to get tickets for Carol Ann Duffy's appearance in Winchester.

Saturday, September 26, 2009

September Meeting

Among the poems read were the short but atmospheric 'Night and the House' by Sophia de Mello Breyer, 'In My Craft or Sullen Art' by Dylan Thomas, a poem that caused some debate over the significance of adjectives, and one that seems heavily influenced by Shakespeare's Prospero. Of particular interest was Carol Ann Duffy's poem 'Prayer', not simply because it is the work of our first female Poet Laureate, but because it came with a printout of an analysis of the work. How much faith should be placed in http://www.squidoo.com/ is a matter of personal judgement, but the analysis is sufficient to help readers new to poetry and to Duffy's work, although it skims the surface rather too often, and simply observing that 'Duffy has included plenty of metaphor and imagery...to evoke a plethora of contrasting emotion' is really avoiding saying anything!

In October the group is looking forward to the visit of local poet Joan McGavin, who will be talking to us about her work, including the poingant 'Salt', and 'One use of a Painting'.

Saturday, August 15, 2009

August Meeting

This month our topic was Beginnings. As usual we enjoyed a wide and varied selection of poems. They were William's Blake's deceptively simple 'Lamb', 'New Every Morning' by Susan Coleman, an untitled poem by Simon Armitage that caused a good deal of debate; Walt Whitman's enormously long 'I Sing the Body Electric' - we only had time for the first and last sections. Amy Clampitt's meditative 'Beach Glass', Edwin Muir's post-apocalyptic 'The Horses'; the very appropriate 'Rainy Summer' by Alice Meynell, and taking the topic literally - Caedmon's Hymn, said to be the very first English poem.
September will be Free Choice

Sunday, July 12, 2009

June, July, and August

It has taken us 2 meetings to complete our latest 'Favourites' topic because 15 of us attended the meeting in June so we only managed to get half way through our poems. With such a full house, Sandy and I decided it might be wise to see about a bigger room, and guess what, for our July meeting only 9 of us enjoyed the facilities in the much larger seminar room! However, it was a lively and interesting meeting as always. Among the poems read was an extract from John Betjeman's verse autobiography Summoned by Bells which prompted a good deal of debate.

For our August meeting we will be bringing poems on 'Beginings'

Monday, April 20, 2009

March Poems

Some of our poems in March were carried over to April as we spent some time in each meeting on technical aspects of poetry. The topic was Favourite Poems again and includes:
My Best Friend-Jeremy Lloyd; The Weeds of Warwickshire-Felix Dennis; The Crack-Denise Levertov; The Windhover-Gerald Manley Hopkins; The Snow Man-Wallace Stevens; Toast-Sheenagh Pugh; From A Shropshire Lad-A.E. Housman; Digging-Seamus Heaney; Harlem Night Song-Langston Hughes. They all gave us plenty to talk about. We also had Gray's Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard as an example of accentual-syllabic iambic pentameter verse and considered the complex use of stress and meaning in the poem.

Thursday, February 19, 2009

February 7th

Winter
This turned out to be a very pertinent topic given the snow, ice and frost that had been gripping the country. However, in spite of this most of the usual members managed to make it in and we had a lively meeting. Poems by John Clare (February-a Thaw), T.S.Eliot (Song for Simeon), Sylvia Plath (Winter Trees), Ambrose Philips (A Winter Piece), and Louis McNiece (Snow), gave us plenty of food for thought, while
Ogden Nash (Winter Complaint) made us all smile. Our next meeting on 7th March will be a free choice and I have offered to give the short talk on Iambic Pentameter that had to be postponed last autumn.

Friday, January 9, 2009

Saturday 3rd January 2009

We started the new year with more of our favourite poems. The session was almost oversubscribed and we had to ask for 2 more chairs to accomodate the 14 of us! Our Topic for February will be Winter.