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In this daring new work, the poet Alice Oswald strips away the
narrative of the Iliad the anger of Achilles, the story of Helen in
favor of attending to its atmospheres: the extended similes that
bring so much of the natural order into the poem and the
corresponding litany of the war-dead, most of whom are little more
than names but each of whom lives and dies unforgettably and
unforgotten in the copious retrospect of Homer s glance. The
resulting poem is a war memorial and a profoundly responsive work
that gives new voice to Homer s level-voiced version of the world.
Through a mix of narrative and musical repetition, the sequence
becomes a meditation on the loss of human life."
Matthew Arnold praised the Iliad for its 'nobility', as has
everyone ever since -- but ancient critics praised it for its
enargeia, its 'bright unbearable reality' (the word used when gods
come to earth not in disguise but as themselves). To retrieve the
poem's energy, Alice Oswald has stripped away its story, and her
account focuses by turns on Homer's extended similes and on the
brief 'biographies' of the minor war-dead, most of whom are little
more than names, but each of whom lives and dies unforgettably -
and unforgotten - in the copiousness of Homer's glance. 'The Iliad
is an oral poem. This translation presents it as an attempt - in
the aftermath of the Trojan War - to remember people's names and
lives without the use of writing. I hope it will have its own
coherence as a series of memories and similes laid side by side: an
antiphonal account of man in his world... compatible with the
spirit of oral poetry, which was never stable but always adapting
itself to a new audience, as if its language, unlike written
language, was still alive and kicking.' - Alice Oswald
Woods etc. is Alice Oswald's third collection of poems, and follows
the success of her widely acclaimed river-poem Dart, which was
awarded the T. S. Eliot Prize in 2002. Extending the concerns of
Dart and written over a period of several years, these poems
combine abrupt honesty with an exuberant rhetorical confidence, at
times recalling the oral and anonymous tradition with which they
share such affinity.
Weeds and Wild Flowers is a magical meeting of the poems of Alice
Oswald and the etchings of Jessica Greenman. Within its pages
everyday flora take on an extraordinary life, jostling tragically
at times, at times comically, for a foothold in a busying world.
Stunningly visualised and skilfully animated, this imaginative
collaboration beckons us toward a landscape of botanical
characters, and invites us to see ourselves among them.
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Dart (Paperback, Main)
Alice Oswald
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R318
R278
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Over the past three years Alice Oswald has been recording
conversations with people who live and work on the River Dart in
Devon. Using these records and voices as a sort of poetic census,
she creates a narrative of the river, tracking its life from source
to sea. The voices are wonderfully varied and idiomatic - they
include a poacher, a ferryman, a sewage worker and milk worker, a
forester, swimmers and canoeists - and are interlinked with
historic and mythic voices: drowned voices, dreaming voices and
marginal notes which act as markers along the way.
Over the past three years Alice Oswald has been recording
conversations with people who live and work on the River Dart in
Devon. Using these records and voices as a sort of poetic census,
she creates a narrative of the river, tracking its life from source
to sea. The voices are wonderfully varied and idiomatic - they
include a poacher, a ferryman, a sewage worker and milk worker, a
forester, swimmers and canoeists - and are interlinked with
historic and mythic voices: drowned voices, dreaming voices and
marginal notes which act as markers along the way.
Falling Awake, winner of the Costa Award for Poetry, "give[s] us
the sensation of living alongside the natural world, of being a
spectator to the changes that mark our mortality" (Dan Chiasson,
The New Yorker). Falling Awake expands on the imagery of fallen
soldiers from Homer's Iliad portrayed in her previous volume,
Memorial-defining life as a slowly falling weight, where beings
fight against their inevitable end. Oswald reimagines classical
figures such as Orpheus and Tithonus alive in an English landscape
together with shadows, flies, villagers, dew, crickets-all
characterized in tension between the weight of death and their own
willpower. FROM "VERTIGO" let me shuffle forward and tell you the
two minute life of rain starting right now lips open and lidless
cold all-seeing gaze
'The Forward Prizes have turned a spotlight on contemporary poetry
which is both searching and glamorous' Carol Ann Duffy 100 Prized
Poems brings together the best of the poems published over a
quarter century in twenty-five editions of the Forward books of
poetry, a series highlighting the works commended annually for the
prestigious Forward Prizes. The roll-call of poets included is a
Who's Who of poetry excellence and includes both familiar names -
Simon Armitage, Jackie Kay, Derek Walcott - and fresh voices - Kae
Tempest, Kei Miller and Emily Berry. This anthology of anthologies
is a great way of encountering the richness that new poetry has to
offer.
POETRY BOOK SOCIETY CHOICE The Thing in the Gap-Stone Stile, Alice
Oswald's first collection of poems, announced the arrival of a
distinctive new voice. Shortlisted for the T. S. Eliot Prize, the
book introduced readers to her meditative, intensely musical style,
and her breath-taking gift for visionary writing. 'The poetry of
Alice Oswald arrives like a zephyr . . . a fresh and exciting first
collection.' Kathleen Jamie, Times Literary Supplement 'an inspired
debut of lightly-worn wisdom and verbal panache.' John Fuller
'Alice Oswald throws the windows of the imagination open; she
places a fingertip on the pulse of tradition, and proves it is
still very much alive.' The Times
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Archipelago Anthology (Paperback)
Alice Oswald, Kathleen Jamie, Robert Macfarlane, Sinead Morrisey, Andrew McNeillie, …
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R699
R641
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Archipelago is one of the most important and influential literary
magazines of the last twenty years. Running to twelve editions, it
was edited by scholar-poet Andrew McNeillie, with the assistance
later of James McDonald Lockhart, and began as an attempt to
reimagine the relationships between the islands of Ireland and
Britain. Archipelago has brought together established and emerging
artists in creative conversations that have transformed the study
of islands, coasts and waterways. It journeys from the Shetlands to
Cornwall, from the Aran Islands to the coast of Yorkshire, tracing
the cultures of diverse zones through some of the best in
contemporary writing about place and people. This collection
gathers poetry, prose and visual art in clusters grouped around the
Irish and British archipelago, with contributions from an array of
significant artists. With fifty contributors, Archipelago: A Reader
includes: Moya Cannon is an Irish poet with seven published
collections, the most recent being Collected Poems (2021). Deirdre
Ni Chonghaile is a graduate of the University of Oxford and
University College Cork. She is associated with NUI, Galway, and
the University of Notre Dame, and is known for her work in music
studies. Tim Dee is a naturalist, BBC radio producer and author of
The Running Sky (2018). Seamus Heaney (1939-2013) was born in
Northern Ireland. His career included teaching at Harvard and
Oxford. He received many awards including the Nobel Prize in
Literature, 1995. Kathleen Jamie is a Scottish writer whose work
has appeared internationally. She has taught poetry at the
University of Stirling since 2010. Michael Longley is a Northern
Irish poet, and winner of the Whitbread Poetry Prize, the
Hawthornden Prize, and the PEN Pinter Prize in 2017. Robert
Macfarlane is a Writing Fellow of Emmanuel College, Cambridge. He
has won the EM Forster Award for Literature. Derek Mahon
(1941-2020) was a Northern Irish poet. He won the David Cohen Prize
for Literature and the Poetry Now Award. Andrew McNeillie is a
Welsh poet and current Literature Editor at Oxford University
Press. His memoir An Aran Keening was published by The Lilliput
Press, and he is founder of the Clutag Press and publisher of the
Archipelago series. Sinead Morrisey is a Northern Irish winner of
the T.S. Eliot Prize and the Forward Poetry Prize. She has taught
in Belfast and Newcastle. 'Archipelago met and extended my own
strong sense that there was a need to turn the compass-rose of some
storytelling and art in Britain and Ireland away from the south and
east and towards the north and west; away from the metropolis and
towards the margins.' -Robert Macfarlane
In this series, a contemporary poet selects and introduces a poet
of the past. By their choice of poems and by the personal and
critical reactions they express in their prefaces, the editors
offer insights into their own work as well as providing an
accessible and passionate introduction to some of the greatest
poets of our literature. Sir Thomas Wyatt was born in Kent in 1503
and educated at St John's College, Cambridge. He served Henry VIII
as a diplomat in Europe but was imprisoned and almost executed for
his close relationship with Anne Boleyn. On his release, Wyatt
became Sheriff of Kent and later Ambassador to Spain, and died 1542
from a fever caught on a diplomatic mission.
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River Poems (Hardcover)
Various; Edited by Henry Hughes; Contributions by William Shakespeare, Alice Oswald, Seamus Heaney, …
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R356
R289
Discovery Miles 2 890
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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Rivers were the arteries of our first civilizations - the Tigris
and Euphrates of Mesopotamia, India's Ganges, Egypt's Nile, the
Yellow River of China - and have nourished modern cities from
London to New York, so it is natural that poets have for centuries
drawn essential meanings and metaphors from their endless currents.
English poets from Shakespeare and Dryden, Wordsworth and Byron to
Ted Hughes, John Betjeman and Alice Oswald; Irish poets - Eavan
Boland, Seamus Heaney, Paul Muldoon, to name but a few; Scottish
and Welsh poets from Henry Vaughan and Robert Louis Stevenson to
Robin Robertson and Gillian Clarke. A whole raft of American poets
from Whitman, Emerson and Emily Dickinson to Langston Hughes, Mary
Oliver, Natasha Trethewey and Grace Paley. Folk songs.
African-American spirituals. Poems from ancient Egypt and Rome.
From medieval China and Japan. And a truly international selection
of modern poets from Europe (France, Italy, Russia, Serbia), India,
Africa, Australia and South and Central America, all combining in
celebration of the rivers of the world. From the Mississippi to the
Limpopo. From the Dart to the Danube. Plunge in.
'This is not a play. This is a poem in several registers, set at
night on the Severn Estuary. Its subject is moonrise, which happens
five times in five different forms: new moon, half moon, full moon,
no moon and moon reborn. Various characters, some living, some
dead, all based on real people from the Severn catchment, talk
towards the moment of moonrise and are changed by it. The poem,
which was written for the 2009 festival of the Severn, aims to
record what happens when the moon moves over us - its effect on
water and its effect on voices.' Alice Oswald A Sleepwalk on the
Severn is a poem for several voices, set at night on the Severn
Estuary. Its subject is moonrise, which happens five times in five
different forms: new moon, half moon, full moon, no moon and moon
reborn. Various characters, some living, some dead - all based on
real people from the Severn catchment - talk towards the moment of
moonrise and are changed by it. Commissioned for the 2009 festival
of the Severn, Alice Oswald's breathtakingly original new work aims
to record what happens when the moon moves over the sublunary
world: its effect on water and its effect on language.
Alice Oswald has chosen 101 poems, which map the border between the
personal and natural worlds. Including poems by William Barnes,
Robert Frost, John Clare, Gerard Manley Hopkins, W. H. Auden,
Stevie Smith, Ted Hughes, Hugh MacDiarmid, John Ashbery and many
others, "The Thunder Mutters: 101 Poems for the Planet" casts its
net worldwide, historically and geographically, engaging restlessly
with the many-centred energies of the natural world.
Winner of the 2017 Griffin Prize Winner of the 2016 Costa Poetry
Award Shortlisted for the 2016 T. S. Eliot Award Shortlisted for
the 2016 Forward Prize A Daily Telegraph / Guardian / Herald / New
Statesman / Sunday Times / Times Literary Supplement Book of the
Year Alice Oswald's poems are always vivid and distinct, alert and
deeply, physically, engaged in the natural world. Mutability - a
sense that all matter is unstable in the face of mortality - is at
the heart of this new collection and each poem is involved in that
drama: the held tension that is embodied life, and life's losing
struggle with the gravity of nature. Working as before with an ear
to the oral tradition, these poems attend to the organic shapes and
sounds and momentum of the language as it's spoken as well as how
it's thought: fresh, fluid and propulsive, but also fragmentary,
repetitive. These are poems that are written to be read aloud.
Orpheus and Tithonus appear at the beginning and end of this book,
alive in an English landscape, stuck in the clockwork of their own
speech, and the Hours - goddesses of the seasons and the natural
apportioning of Time - are the presiding figures. The persistent
conditions are flux and falling, and the lines are in constant
motion: approaching, from daring new angles, our experience of
being human, and coalescing into poems of simple, stunning beauty.
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Nobody (Paperback)
Alice Oswald
1
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R347
R279
Discovery Miles 2 790
Save R68 (20%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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This is a book-length poem – a collage of water-stories, taken mostly
from the Odyssey – about a minor character, abandoned on a stony
island. It is not a translation, though, but a close inspection of the
sea that surrounds him. There are several voices in the poem but no
proper names, although its presiding spirit is Proteus, the
shape-shifting sea-god. We recognise other mythical characters –
Helios, Icarus, Alcyone, Philoctetes, Calypso, Clytemnestra, Orpheus,
Poseidon, Hermes – who drift in and out of the poem, surfacing briefly
before disappearing.
Reading Nobody is like watching the ocean: a destabilising experience
that becomes mesmeric, almost hallucinatory, as we slip our earthly
moorings and follow the circling shoal of sea voices into a mesh of
sound and light and water – fluid, abstract, and moving with the wash
of waves. As with all of Alice Oswald’s work, this is poetry that is
made for the human voice, but this poem takes on the qualities of
another element: dense, muscular and liquid.
one person has the character of dust
another has an arrow for a soul
but their stories all end
somewhere
in the sea
'It is in very truth a sunny, misty, cloudy, dazzling, howling,
omniform Day...' - Samuel Taylor Coleridge to William Sotheby, 27
September 1802 This anthology of poems and prose ranges from
literary weather - Homer's winds, Ovid's flood - to scientific
reportage, whether Pliny on the eruption of Vesuvius or Victorian
theories of the death of the sun. It includes imaginary as well as
actual responses to what is transitory, and reactions both formal
and fleeting - weather rhymes, journals and jottings, diaries and
letters - to the drama unfolding above our heads. The entries
narrate the weather of a single capricious day, from dawn, through
rain, volcanic ash, nuclear dust, snow, light, fog, noon, eclipse,
hurricane, flood, dusk, night and back to dawn again. Rather than
drawing attention to authors and titles, entries appear bareheaded,
exposed to each other's elements, as a medley of voices. Rather
than adding to our image of nature as a suffering solid, the
anthology attends to patterns, events and forces: seasonal and
endless, invisible, ephemeral, sudden, catastrophic. And by
assembling a chorus of responses (ancient and modern, East and
West) to air's manifold appearances, Gigantic Cinema offers a new
perspective on what is the oldest conversation of all.
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