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"I try to write something every day even though I am not writing
poetry, just to get myself in touch with language."-Edwin Morgan
Edwin Morgan (1920-2010) is one of the giants of modern literature.
Scotland's national poet from 2004 to his death, throughout his
long life he produced an astonishing variety of work, from the
playful to the profound. Edwin Morgan: In Touch With Language
presents previously uncollected prose - journalism, book and
theatre reviews, scholarly essays and lectures, drama and radio
scripts, forewords and afterwords - all carefully moulded to the
needs of differing audiences. Morgan's writing fizzes with clarity
and verve: the topics range from Gilgamesh to Ginsberg, from
cybernetics to sexualities, from international literatures to the
changing face of his home city of Glasgow. Everyone will find
surprises and delights in this new collection.
Introduced by Jackie Kay, this selection of poems include the
famous 'Strawberries' and 'One Cigarette' and four from Morgan's
autobiographical sequence, Love and a Life - love in all its
aspects.
In this volume Michael Rosen introduces Edwin Morgan's animal
poems. Morgan's empathy with animals is well represented, from the
still very topical 'The White Rhinoceros' to the prehistoric 'The
Bearsden Shark' and the famous 'The Loch Ness Monster's Song'.
Birds, beasts and fish, real and imaginary, are all here in this
selection.
Introduced by Ali Smith, the title of this group of poems about
people is taken from Morgan's poem 'Pelagius', the theologian who
is a kind of alter ego. Morgan has the ability to enter into so
many lives: the blind hunchback of 'In the Snack-bar', Jesus's
judge in 'Pilate at Fortingall', the Polish juggler and acrobat
'Cinquevalli' (another alter ego), even Rameses II in 'The Mummy'.
'Morgan, I said to myself, take note, / Take heart. In a time of
confusion / You must make a stand.'
A mixture of Morgan's science fiction poems and concrete poems.
There's the famous encounter between humans and aliens in 'The
First Men on Mercury', early digital tongue-twisting in 'The
Computer's First Christmas Card' and the effects of teleportation
in 'In Sobieski's Shield' - on earth or in outer space Morgan
explores what it is to be human.
This is the third Selected Poems by Edwin Morgan from Carcanet, but
the first since 2000 and the first to cover the full range of his
poetry from his first collection in 1952 to his last in 2010, the
year of his death at the age of ninety. All his different voices
speak here - animals, inanimate objects, dramatic monologues by
people, (famous people, unknown people and imaginary people) - in a
multitude of forms and styles - sonnets, science fiction, concrete,
sound, his own invented stanzas - together with his evocations of
place, especially his home city of Glasgow, and a wide selection of
his deservedly famous love poems. They all illustrate his incurable
curiosity and a kind of relentless optimism for humanity.
One of the central figures of twentieth-century Scottish
literature, Edwin Morgan was a prolific letter-writer. His
correspondence, like his poetry, is wide-ranging, full of
generosity and enthusiasm, and above all a testament to his
lifelong commitment to exploring the possibilities of poetry. This
selection of his letters, spanning Morgan's full career as a
teacher and writer, enables readers to track the development of his
ideas, his friendships and his creative collaborations. At the same
time it provides a superbly engaging portrait of a man with a
boundless interest in the fast-changing world around him.
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Three Scottish Poets (Paperback, Main)
Edwin Morgan, Norman MacCaig, Liz Lochhead; Introduction by Roderick Watson
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R345
R274
Discovery Miles 2 740
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MACCAIG * MORGAN * LOCHHEAD This book contains a selection of the
finest work from three of Scotland's best-known and best-loved
poets: Norman MacCaig, Edwin Morgan and Liz Lochhead. They have
fascinated and charmed thousands of readers and listeners across
Europe and America with the energy, humour and compassion of their
vision. MacCaig's memorable celebrations of the physical world and
the tragic-comic note of many of his short lyrics contrast
strikingly with Morgan's poems on the modern world and city life.
Liz Lochhead writes with an alert and sensitive eye on personal
relationships and women's experience of them. The book provides an
invaluable introduction to modern Scottish poetry and to the poets
who are arguably its greatest practitioners.
In this haunting poem from the latter part of the nineteenth
century, Scots-born writer James Thomson anticipated the modern
age's nightmare vision of the city as a place of loneliness,
alienation and spiritual despair. In contrast to the late Victorian
confidence all around him, Thomson dared to face the possibility
that the universe was utterly indifferent to human affairs. The
strange and dark images in The City of Dreadful Night have become a
landmark of modern literature, for the tomb-like streets and empty
squares in this memorable poem preceded T.S Eliot's The Waste Land,
and the darker visions of expressionism and surrealism by over
forty-five years. Published in instalments in 1874 and then in book
form in 1880, The City of Dreadful Night has long been unavailable
as a complete text. This exciting new edition is introduced and
annotated by Edwin Morgan, long an admirer of Thomson's work, and a
leading modern poet in his own right.
The Communicado Theatre's production of this verse rendering won
the Edinburgh Fringe First award at the 1992 Festival, and has gone
on to tour Scotland and England in 1992-3. Edwin Morgan provides an
introduction, which sets the play in its time and discusses the
style of his translation; it aims to provide insight and
stimulation to a new generation of readers and playgoers.
There is something profligate in the range and quality of Morgan's
work as a translator. He does the labour of ten writers, and with
blithe sprezzatura, partly at least because his own work nourishes
itself from the poetry of other lands and ages. It is part of the
necessary mechanism that Morgan, as a Scot, employs to define his
place as a European, to escape the tonal and cultural limitations
which England can imply.
"Collected Translations" includes six decades of work. Readers will
find here Morgan's celebrated Mayakovsky done into Scots, his
Voznesensky,
Pasternak and Vinokurov. There are the Italians and the
French--Leopardi,
Quasimodo, Montale, Guillevic, Provert and Michaux; and there is
Heine, and
Lorca, Cernuda and Brecht and Enzensberger and Braga. And much,
much more.
Introduced by Liz Lochhead, in this selection we journey round
Scotland in 'Canedolia', study its history in 'Picts', home in on
Morgan's own city of Glasgow in 'Glasgow Sonnet v', imagine the
country's future in 'The Coin'.
To catch "in full sight" is Edwin Morgan's ambition. That fullness
he achieves in lyric epiphanies, in the cumulative focuses and
refocuses of sequences, in the reification of words in concrete
poems, in the rhythms of sound poems. He hears and transcribes
voices. Even the sonnet form remains an experiment for the poet
questing for vision and unwilling to rest on rules. This volume
includes Edwin Morgan's "Poems of Thirty Years" (1982) and "Themes
on a Variation" (1988), together with some 50 uncollected poems
from 1939 to 1982.
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Cathures (Paperback)
Edwin Morgan
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R310
R291
Discovery Miles 2 910
Save R19 (6%)
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Edwin Morgan was appointed Poet Laureate of Glasgow in 1999, and
many of these poems reflect the life of the city both now and in
the past. But equally the poetry moves to other places and other
worlds. A sequence of poems about a demon allows the mind to
expatiate on a wide range of subjects, social, psychological,
philosophical. Some of the poems have been set to music, both jazz
and classical. In many ways it is a book of voices and observation,
a book of accessible storytelling.
This reprint of Morgan's popular and well-respected 1952 modern
English translation of the Anglo-Saxon epic captures a taut
expression of the poem's themes of danger, voyaging, displacement,
loyalty, and loss. Morgan provides a fluid, modern voice from this
medieval masterwork while retaining a clear authenticity, making it
highly accessible to the contemporary reader.
Preface by Alasdair Gray Blasting into the future, across alien
worlds and distant galaxies, fantastic technologies and potential
threats to humanity, Where Rockets Burn Through brings science
fiction and poetry together in one explosive, genre-busting
collection. Discover an array of poems by more than forty
contemporary UK writers, including Edwin Morgan, Jane Yolen, Ron
Butlin, WN Herbert, Ken MacLeod and Kirsten Irving, plus an
exclusive essay on Sci-fi poetry by Steve Sneyd. Jump in, strap up
and switch on the photon cannon -
This is a reproduction of a book published before 1923. This book
may have occasional imperfectionssuch as missing or blurred pages,
poor pictures, errant marks, etc. that were either part of the
original artifact, or were introduced by the scanning process. We
believe this work is culturally important, and despite the
imperfections, have elected to bring it back into print as part of
our continuing commitment to the preservation of printed
worksworldwide. We appreciate your understanding of the
imperfections in the preservation process, and hope you enjoy this
valuable book.++++The below data was compiled from various
identification fields in the bibliographic record of this title.
This data is provided as an additional tool in helping to ensure
edition identification: ++++ A.D.: A Trilogy On The Life Of Jesus
Christ Edwin Morgan Carcanet, 1875 Drama; General; Bible; Christian
drama, English; Drama / English, Irish, Scottish, Welsh; Drama /
General; Drama / Religious & Liturgical
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