‘I prefer a civic blur to a sight-seeing tour, which is why we have meandered the town in this throw-away manner.’ - Jan Morris, Trieste and
the Meaning of Nowhere
A Child’s Garden of Physics (1) - Andrew Philip
A Child’s Garden of Physics (1) - Andrew Philip
Trauchled by the paraphernalia
of a life spent tinkering
— the long stands, the mundae hammers —
MacAdam settles
to cobbling light apart
into constituent darknesses:
pit mirk, pick mirk, part mirk, heart mirk.
Even so, there’s hardly
enough mirk in this world
to account for the breadth of black
he thinks must lie
at the core of everything.
And here it is, nestling
in the pleasant land of Counterfact,
spreading as the sun droops:
the fundamental particle of night.
It shades in/out of being
the way MacAdam does when not
observing himself at a distance,
his anchor ego flowing
through various queerlike states
akin to the nocton’s flavours:
still, thrang, change, dread,
silent and sudden. The quirks
the hour has flung at him
gather in the corner of his shed.
Now, armed with the tools
to measure the mirk aright,
he can take to the streets
to ascertain precisely what
the afterlight is made of — this
could be his service to us all.
Friday at the Fruitmarket: for more information, click here.
Finsong - Isobel Dixon
Finsong - Isobel Dixon
i.m. James Harvey
Alphabet of breath
and fish and fowl,
words the gills and wings
of the world we love and suffer in.
Kingdom of mackerel skies,
the cloud’s anatomy,
glottal branches of sense,
beautiful trachea, click-locking vertebrae.
We husband our resources,
tend. O tender emperor,
your cheer a mute command,
more subjects than you dream unwind
the bandages. The curling scrolls,
inscrutable cells. The dorsal fin
of fortune flicks, scales flex.
Mutable, curious, entire,
unfurl in the flux,
the deep, beyond-breath alphabet.
Friday at the Fruitmarket: for more information, click here.
Fruitmarket Festival Friday – Six Poets: #6: Andrew Philip
credit: Anneleen Lindsay (http://www.anneleenphotography.com/)
#6: Andrew Philip
Fruitmarket Gallery, Friday 15 August 2014, 8 pm.
Every year I look forward to returning to Edinburgh at Festival time – because I’m half-Scottish and studied at Edinburgh University, because I love the Book Festival and other festivities there, and because it’s one of the truly splendid cities of the world.
And for the last few years the Fruitmarket Gallery has given added reason for delight, providing the setting for a fine evening of poetry, whatever the festival weather. Hosted by the Fruitmarket’s inimitable Iain Morrison and local host poets Andrew Philip and Rob Mackenzie, the night alone’s been worth the trip north.
I’m very happy this year to be joining Andy and Rob again, along with Simon Barraclough, Chrissy Williams and AB Jackson, and to be hosting here, virtually, a small introduction to their brilliant work.
Here's our second Edinburgh host, Andrew Philip, to round things off.
Andrew Philip was born in Aberdeen, and grew up in a former mining village near Falkirk. He studied Linguistics at the University of Edinburgh. He published two poetry pamphlets with HappenStance Press - Tonguefire (2005) and Andrew Philip: A Sampler (2008). His first full collection, The Ambulance Box, was published by Salt in 2009; it was shortlisted for the Seamus Heaney Centre Prize for Poetry and the Scottish Mortgage Investment Trust First Book Award in 2010. The North End of the Possible was published in 2012 by Salt Publishing. He lives in Linlithgow.
A Child’s Garden of Physics (1)
Trauchled by the paraphernalia
of a life spent tinkering
— the long stands, the mundae hammers —
MacAdam settles
to cobbling light apart
into constituent darknesses:
pit mirk, pick mirk, part mirk, heart mirk.
Even so, there’s hardly
enough mirk in this world
to account for the breadth of black
he thinks must lie
at the core of everything.
And here it is, nestling
in the pleasant land of Counterfact,
spreading as the sun droops:
the fundamental particle of night.
It shades in/out of being
the way MacAdam does when not
observing himself at a distance,
his anchor ego flowing
through various queerlike states
akin to the nocton’s flavours:
still, thrang, change, dread,
silent and sudden. The quirks
the hour has flung at him
gather in the corner of his shed.
Now, armed with the tools
to measure the mirk aright,
he can take to the streets
to ascertain precisely what
the afterlight is made of — this
could be his service to us all.
See Andrew’s website here.
Follow Andrew Philip on Twitter: @ambulancebox
Fruitmarket Festival Friday – Six Poets: #5: Isobel Dixon
#5: Isobel Dixon
Fruitmarket Gallery, Friday 15 August 2014, 8 pm.
Every year I look forward to returning to Edinburgh at Festival time – because I’m half-Scottish and studied at Edinburgh University, because I love the Book Festival and other festivities there, and because it’s one of the truly splendid cities of the world.
And for the last few years the Fruitmarket Gallery has given added reason for delight, providing the setting for a fine evening of poetry, whatever the festival weather. Hosted by the Fruitmarket’s inimitable Iain Morrison and local host poets Andrew Philip and Rob Mackenzie, the night alone’s been worth the trip north.
I’m very happy this year to be joining Andy and Rob again, along with Simon Barraclough, Chrissy Williams and AB Jackson, and to be hosting here, virtually, a small introduction to their brilliant work.
And I’m up next…
Isobel Dixon's latest collections are A Fold in the Map and The Tempest Prognosticator. She co-wrote and performed in The Debris Field, about the sinking of RMS Titanic, and is working on a project with Scottish artist Doug Robertson, responding to DH Lawrence's Birds, Beasts & Flowers. She has a new collection forthcoming from Nine Arches in 2015 and a pamphlet due from Mariscat in 2016. She completed her post-graduate study in Edinburgh and no year is quite complete without a climb up Arthur's Seat.
Finsong
i.m. James Harvey
Alphabet of breath
and fish and fowl,
words the gills and wings
of the world we love and suffer in.
Kingdom of mackerel skies,
the cloud’s anatomy,
glottal branches of sense,
beautiful trachea, click-locking vertebrae.
We husband our resources,
tend. O tender emperor,
your cheer a mute command,
more subjects than you dream unwind
the bandages. The curling scrolls,
inscrutable cells. The dorsal fin
of fortune flicks, scales flex.
Mutable, curious, entire,
unfurl in the flux,
the deep, beyond-breath alphabet.
Follow Isobel Dixon on Twitter: @isobeldixon
Fruitmarket Festival Friday – Six Poets: #4: Simon Barraclough
Every year I look forward to returning to Edinburgh at Festival time – because I’m half-Scottish and studied at Edinburgh University, because I love the Book Festival and other festivities there, and because it’s one of the world’s truly splendid cities.
And for the last few years the Fruitmarket Gallery has given added reason for delight, providing the setting for a fine evening of poetry, whatever the festival weather. Hosted by the Fruitmarket’s inimitable Iain Morrison and local poets Andrew Philip and Rob Mackenzie, the night alone’s been worth the trip north.
I’m very happy this year to be joining Andy and Rob again, along with Simon Barraclough, Chrissy Williams and AB Jackson, and to be hosting here, virtually, a small introduction to their brilliant work.
Next in line is Simon Barraclough, author of the Forward-finalist debut, Los Alamos Mon Amour (Salt, 2008), Bonjour Tetris (Penned in the Margins, 2010) and Neptune Blue (Salt, 2011). He is the editor ofPsycho Poetica (Sidekick Books, 2012) and co-author of The Debris Field (Sidekick Books, 2013). He is currently poet in residence at the Mullard Space Science Laboratory.
We'll Always Have CGI Paris
Open on the galaxy, dolly zoom
through Doppler shifting stars, leave the local planets
in our wake, brush off the Moon
and rummage through the clouds to find
the crouching continent where Paris piggybacks.
Pinpoint the pyramid, dogleg along the Seine
until the camera starts to weave between the struts
of youknowwhat and youknowwhere
to finish on us kissing in the festive, fireworky air.
But we were never there. My sitcom kept me
in LA, your slasher movie debut
saw you junketing in hotel rooms out east.
We shot green screen on different days: my face
a balloon taped to a broom, your waist a tailor’s dummy;
our foggy breath was lifted from Titanic;
the cutaways to clasping hands were cut in
from a jewellery ad as all of Paris waited
to be pixellated, cut and pasted.
But we’ll always have Paris,
although our eye lines never matched
and everything we tried to hold onto
our phantom fingers passed clean through.
See Simon’s website here.
Follow him on twitter: @essbarraclough
Fruitmarket Festival Friday – Six Poets: #3: A.B. Jackson
#3: A.B. Jackson
Fruitmarket Gallery, Friday 15 August 2014, 8 pm.
Every year I look forward to returning to Edinburgh at Festival time – because I’m half-Scottish and studied at Edinburgh University, because I love the Book Festival and other festivities there, and because it’s one of the truly splendid cities of the world.
And for the last few years the Fruitmarket Gallery has given added reason for delight, providing the setting for a fine evening of poetry, whatever the festival weather. Hosted by the Fruitmarket’s inimitable Iain Morrison and local host poets Andrew Philip and Rob Mackenzie, the night alone’s been worth the trip north.
I’m very happy this year to be joining Andy and Rob again, along with Simon Barraclough, Chrissy Williams and AB Jackson, and to be hosting here, virtually, a small introduction to their brilliant work.
And we’re very happy to have A.B. Jackson returning to Scotland from Sheffield for this reading.
A.B. Jackson won the Forward prize for best collection in 2003 with Fire Stations (Anvil), and published a limited edition pamphlet, Apocrypha, with Donut Press in 2011. In 2010 he won first prize in the Edwin Morgan International Poetry Competition, and is currently studying for a PhD at Sheffield Hallam University.
Of Elephants
The clemancie of Elephants. How elephants
breed and how they disagree with Dragons.
How they make sport in a kind of Morrish dance.
The elephant who wrote Greeke and read musicke.
The elephant who cast a fancie and was enamoured upon
a wench in Egypt who sold nosegaies and wickerishe.
Their hornes, or properly Teeth, of which men make
images of the gods, fine combes, wanton toies.
Who march alwaies in troupes. Who snuffe and puffe.
Who the troublesome flie haunts.
Who cannot abide a rat or a mouse. Who are purified
by dashing and sprinkling themselves with water.
Who, enfeebled by sicknesse, lie upon their backes,
casting and flinging herbs up toward heaven.
Who adore and salute in their rude manner that planet,
the moone.
Fruitmarket Festival Friday – Six Poets: #2: Chrissy Williams
#2: Chrissy Williams
Fruitmarket Gallery, Friday 15 August 2014, 8 pm.
Every year I look forward to returning to Edinburgh at Festival time – because I’m half-Scottish and studied at Edinburgh University, because I love the Book Festival and other festivities there, and because it’s one of the truly splendid cities of the world.
And for the last few years the Fruitmarket Gallery has given added reason for delight, providing the setting for a fine evening of poetry, whatever the festival weather. Hosted by the Fruitmarket’s inimitable Iain Morrison and local host poets Andrew Philip and Rob Mackenzie, the night alone’s been worth the trip north.
I’m very happy this year to be joining Andy and Rob again, along with Simon Barraclough, Chrissy Williams and AB Jackson, and to be hosting here, virtually, a small introduction to their brilliant work.
Step up, Chrissy Williams!
Chrissy Williams is a writer and freelance editor living in London. She is director of the Free Verse: Poetry Book Fair. She has published four pamphlets. Flying Into the Bear (HappenStance, 2013) was shortlisted for the Michael Marks Awards. The Jam Trap and ANGELA are collaborations with comics artists. Her most recent pamphlet is Epigraphs (if p then q, 2014).
The Lost
Nel mezzo del cammin di nostra vita
mi ritrovai per una selva oscura,
ché la diritta via era smarrita.
At one point, midway on our path in life
When I had journeyed half of our life's way
Half way along the road we have to go
I came to in a gloomy wood
In the midway of this our mortal life
Midway upon the journey of our life
Midway along the journey of our life
I came around and found myself now searching
Through a dark wood, the right way blurred and lost
I found me in a gloomy wood, astray
I found I was in a dark forest
I found myself within a forest dark
I found myself within a shadowed forest
I found myself obscured in a great forest
Bewildered, and I knew I had lost the way
Halfway through the story of my life
I woke to find myself in a dark wood
Gone from the path direct
For I had wandered off from the straight path
For I had strayed from the straight path
For I had lost the path that does not stray
Midway in our life's journey
The straightforward pathway had been lost
Acknowledgments to various translations of Dante’s Inferno Canto I, lines 1-3,
by Appelbaum, Cary, Carson, Kirkpatrick, Longfellow, Mandelbaum, Musa
and Sisson, which have been rearranged here.
See Chrissy’s blog here.
Follow Chrissy on twitter: @chrissywilliams
Never trust anyone who has not brought a book with them.
Lemony Snicket (via behindthebloom)
Fruitmarket Festival Friday – Six Poets: #1: Rob Mackenzie
#1: Rob Mackenzie
Fruitmarket Gallery, Friday 15 August 2014, 8 pm.
Every year I look forward to returning to Edinburgh at Festival time – because I’m half-Scottish and studied at Edinburgh University, because I love the Book Festival and other festivities there, and because it’s one of the truly splendid cities of the world.
And for the last few years the Fruitmarket Gallery has given added reason for delight, providing the setting for a fine evening of poetry, whatever the festival weather. Hosted by the Fruitmarket’s inimitable Iain Morrison and local host poets Andrew Philip and Rob Mackenzie, the night alone’s been worth the trip north.
I’m very happy this year to be joining Andy and Rob again, along with Simon Barraclough, Chrissy Williams and AB Jackson, and to be hosting here, virtually, a small introduction to their brilliant work.
First up is Rob A. Mackenzie
Rob A. Mackenzie was born and brought up in Glasgow and lives in Leith. He has published two pamphlets (with HappenStance and Salt) and two full collections (both with Salt), the latest of which,The Good News, was published in April 2013. He is reviews editor of Magma poetry magazine.
The Point
The point is to repeat. To repeat the point,
the point is worth repeating, even if not:
we need to stick by the manual, even if useless,
to talk about how we think the things we’ve thought.
The point is worth repeating, even if not
worth retweeting. We cannot trust ourselves
to talk about how we think the things we’ve thought.
Our independence, our politics, our fitting demise
are not worth retweeting. We cannot trust ourselves
to train a parrot. We need experts to refine
our independence, our politics, our fitting demise,
like the Prime Minister and his unlikeable sidekick.
To train a parrot, we need experts to refine
our received pronunciation. Repeat after me,
“We like the Prime Minister and his unlikeable sidekick” –
not to sound desperate, but sing fortissimo, with comedy
in received pronunciation. Repeat after me,
as the point is to repeat, to repeat the point,
not to sound desperate. Sing fortissimo, with comedy,
we need to stick by the manual, even if useless.
See Rob’s blog here.
Follow Rob A. Mackenzie on Twitter: @rob_a_mack
The Point - Rob A. Mackenzie
The Point - Rob A. Mackenzie
The point is to repeat. To repeat the point,
the point is worth repeating, even if not:
we need to stick by the manual, even if useless,
to talk about how we think the things we’ve thought.
The point is worth repeating, even if not
worth retweeting. We cannot trust ourselves
to talk about how we think the things we’ve thought.
Our independence, our politics, our fitting demise
are not worth retweeting. We cannot trust ourselves
to train a parrot. We need experts to refine
our independence, our politics, our fitting demise,
like the Prime Minister and his unlikeable sidekick.
To train a parrot, we need experts to refine
our received pronunciation. Repeat after me,
“We like the Prime Minister and his unlikeable sidekick” –
not to sound desperate, but sing fortissimo, with comedy
in received pronunciation. Repeat after me,
as the point is to repeat, to repeat the point,
not to sound desperate. Sing fortissimo, with comedy,
we need to stick by the manual, even if useless.
~Rob Mackenzie
Friday at the Fruitmarket: for more information, click here.
Twilight of the Iguana - Summer School Poetry Workshop
Twilight of the Iguana - Summer School Poetry Workshop
Poetry School, Friday 25 July, 10:30 - 4:30
And a splendid photo of an iguana by Bjørn Christian Tørrissen
“I want my translation to be something impossible yet extant, something existing on the border of two utterly incompatible worlds, and yet to be a bridge between those worlds. I want the reader of the English version to feel the same shock I felt when reading the original. I don’t want to make it easy or acceptable, or to over-domesticate the text. There is an incredible poetry in the Hungarian language. Sometimes it’s infinitely gentle, sometimes it’s savage poetry.”
An interview with translator Ottilie Mulzet on László Krasznahorkai.
“Maybe, sometimes, ‘Wish You Were Here’ is actually enough.”
Sadie Stein on the postcard in the age of e-mail and social media.
poetryarchive.org | Poetry archive
http://www.poetryarchive.org/poem/loch-ness-monsters-song
The Loch Ness Monster’s Song by Edwin Morgan. :)
I Leave This at Your Ear by W. S. Graham
http://www.scottishpoetrylibrary.org.uk/poetry/poems/i-leave-your-ear
For Nessie Dunsmuir / / I leave this at your ear for when you wake, / A creature in its abstract cage asleep. / Your dreams blindfold…
One of the great love poems.
By W.S. Graham, for his wife Nessie Dunsmuir (a little bit of a Scots/Nessie theme today….).
The Debris Field Poets’ Reunion Night
The Debris Field Poets’ Reunion Night, St Pancras. Waiting for champagne… From left to right, Simon Barraclough, Chris McCabe, Isobel Dixon. Waiter Mathieu behind the camera.
A most excellent recording mic. A most excellent name. :)
Write me a poem she said
a love poem
All poems are love poems I said
I don’t understand she said
It’s hard to explain I said
- Raymond Carver, From ‘For Semra, With Martial Vigor’