Login Form






Lost Password?
No account yet? Register

Syndicate

  • Poems for Today
  • Poems for Today
  • Poems for Today
  • Poems for Today
  • Poems for Today
  • Poems for Today
  • Poems for Today
  • Poems for Today
  • Poems for Today
  • Poems for Today
  • Poems for Today
  • Poems for Today
  • Poems for Today
  • Poems for Today
  • Poems for Today
  • Poems for Today
  • Poems for Today
Home
June 08

June's poems group themselves around the theme of living with suffering.

The theorist Theodor Adorno famously said that to write a poem after Auschwitz was barbaric.  We discuss this thought on the 18th and 19th with poems from Geoffrey Hill in memory of the holocaust and a poem by Paul Celan about being in a work camp.  Earlier Thomas Hardy and Dom Moraes envision the end of things, Franz Kafka examines the strange fact that desire can be the only affirmation of life, and James Fenton, John Gillespie Magee,Stephen Crane, W B Yeats and Anna Akhmatova speak of living through conflict.

We also have poems celebrating new life - from Kate Clanchy on the 11th, and Amy Clampitt on the 16th, as well as famous memorials of death from Thomas Gray, Paul Muldoon and Anna Akhmatova.

The month ends with summer and boyhood - descriptions from Britiish poets including Dylan Thomas, Philip Larkin and BarryTebb and Americans - Charles Simic and James Whitcomb Riley,

Enjoy! 

Read more...
 
May 08

May's programs are shaped around the theme of faith.

Robert Browning's great diatribe The Lost Leader (May 8) bemoans the loss of faith in a cause, while Jenny Jospeh's The Road from Glastonbury (on the same day) explores how to live in a post-religious age. 

How to approach a God who is now  mythical but still ever-present in the imagination is the subject of the two poems on May 9 by the current Library of Congress Poet Laureate Charles Simic. while two English Poets Laureate, John Betjeman and Andrew Motion explore the difficulties of resisting the metaphysical on the approach of death.

Karl Shapiro (May 14) and Erich Fried (May 2) discuss the abandonment of left-wing idealism by the fellow-travellers of the reform movement.  While Joseph Brodsky in his long poem Nunc Dmittis (May 28) describes with a mood of celebration the feeling of certain proof in belief.

Enjoy ... and let's hope our faith in the weather may finally bring on Spring!

Read more...
 
April 08

We continue our theme of story poems this month with engrossing tales from Muriel Spark, Czeslaw Milosz, Maurice Riordan, Seamus Heaney and John Keats.

Newcomers to the program include Mimi Khalvati, Sinead Morrissey, Dick Davis, Frieda Hughes and the New Zealand poet Lauris Edmond.

We celebrate the birthdays of the two great Willliams - Wordsworth on the 7th and 8th and Shakespeare on the 23rd. 

American contributions come from Louise Gluck, Maya Angelou  and the author of All The King's Men - Robert Penn Warren;  and we have much-loved poems from old favourites - Adrian Henri, Constantin Cavafy, Tony Harrison, E J Scovell, John Donne and George Herbert.

True to John Fletcher's description, in England March came in like a lion and stayed roaring;  only now has it decided to go out like a lamb ...

We hope you enjoy the spring with PfT. 

Read more...
 
March 08

Welcome to the month of Spring!

As well as celebrating Spring - with A E Housman, Robert Frost, Salvatore Quasimodo. e e cummings and John Burnside - we also celebrate Lady Day with Denise Levertov's Annunciatiion.

Central to this month's schedule is the beginning of an exploration of story-telling in poetry.  We start with perhaps the most famous - Browning's The Pied Piper of Hamelin, spread over the 7th and 10th - and continue with story poems by W H Auden, Ovid (in a translation by Ted Hughes), Brendan Kennally, the Palestinian Mahmoud Darwish, Derek Mahon and the brilliant new English poet Frances Leviston.

The month starrts by celebrating the birthdays of five American male poets and two American women poets and - remembering that Spring is also the season of love - we revisit Anna Akhmatova's wonderful poem Cinque and explore the nature of love with Colette Bryce, Elizabeth Barrett Browniing and Michelangelo. as well as through two Forward Prize-winning poems from Kate Bingham.

Read more...
 
February 08

February - as is appropriate for the month of St Valentine's - is all about love.

We build up to Valentine's Day in England with Brian Patten and in America with Louise Bogan, Marianne Moore and Judith Viorst, celebrate it with Sharon Olds, then, returning to Europe, remember Christopher Marlowe's The Passionate Shepherd to his Love and continue with versions of his lyric by Sir Walter Raleigh, John Donne, C  Day Lewis, Ogden Nash and W D Snodgrass.

Also on the subject of love we hear the experts - Edna St Vincent Millay, W H Auden, Sylvia Plath and A R Ammons.

In between we cross the continents with poems from India, Pakistan, Iran, France, Greece, Italy and Ancient Rome.

A fantastic feast of wooing, anticipation, ecstasy and their aftermath ....

Enjoy! 

 

Read more...
 
December 07

As is appropriate for the month of Christmas, December centres on the point of view of the child, with versions of Christmas from the perspectives of children.

We also celebrate the month with lyrical descriptions from John Clare,  John Donne,  Carol Ann Duffy and Richard Wilbur and make frequent visits to Dylan Thomas's A Child's Christmas in Wales.

Apart from this, the view of Christmas is alternative rather than traditional - taken from views across the centuries, aerial perspectives, St Stephen's martyrdom - and of course interpreted by children.

We also have fine poems from a newcomers Helen Dunmore and Edwin Brock as well as old faithfuls such as Robert Graves, Carolyn Kizer, Muriel Rukeyser, Zsuzsa Rakovsky and Adrian Mitchell.

The month closes, as it begins, with the "peasant poet" John Clare.  We hope it makes a pleasant accompaniment to the stuffing and crackers, as well as the wrapping ... and thankyou letters.

 

Read more...
 
November 07

November consists of an exploration of the way we live, epitomised by Vicki Feaver's poem of that title, central to the month, and Edmund Blunden's Report on Experience on the 1st and George Szirtes's Rough Guide on the 29th.

Interspersed with these observations, we have speculations on how the world will be without human beings and what the world to come will be like from poets across the world:  Brazil, Germany, Eastern Europe Ghana, Ecuador, Scotland, Ireland and of course England and America.

Then there are a number of very personal poems:  about love (Robert Graves, Kwame Dawes), homelands (W S Graham, Marianne Moore), relationships (Sharon Olds, Nina Cassian)  and personal exploration (Anne Sexton, Arthur Hugh Clough).

And November 27th is the (wholly unsung) 250th anniversary of the great poet, painter, philosopher William Blake.  We celebrate it with an excerpt from America.

Brighten the encroaching evenings of Samhain (the Celtic winter festival of November 1st) with Poem for Today.

Read more...
 
adrian mitchell

 

On October 24 we celebrate Adrian's 75th birthday.

Read a new poem of Adrian's

Read more...
 
More...
<< Start < Prev 1 2 Next > End >>

Results 1 - 9 of 14

Latest Blog...

June 08
June's poems group themselves around the theme of living with suffering. The theorist Theodor Adorno famously said that to write a poem after Auschwitz was barbaric.  We discuss this thou...
Read More ...
May 08
May's programs are shaped around the theme of faith. Robert Browning's great diatribe The Lost Leader (May 8) bemoans the loss of faith in a cause, while Jenny Jospeh's The Road from Glastonbu...
Read More ...
April 08
We continue our theme of story poems this month with engrossing tales from Muriel Spark, Czeslaw Milosz, Maurice Riordan, Seamus Heaney and John Keats. Newcomers to the program include Mimi Kh...
Read More ...
March 08
Welcome to the month of Spring! As well as celebrating Spring - with A E Housman, Robert Frost, Salvatore Quasimodo. e e cummings and John Burnside - we also celebrate Lady Day with Denise Lev...
Read More ...
February 08
February - as is appropriate for the month of St Valentine's - is all about love. We build up to Valentine's Day in England with Brian Patten and in America with Louise Bogan, Marianne Moore a...
Read More ...
December 07
As is appropriate for the month of Christmas, December centres on the point of view of the child, with versions of Christmas from the perspectives of children. We also celebrate the month with...
Read More ...
November 07
November consists of an exploration of the way we live, epitomised by Vicki Feaver's poem of that title, central to the month, and Edmund Blunden's Report on Experience on the 1st and George Szirtes...
Read More ...
adrian mitchell
  On October 24 we celebrate Adrian's 75th birthday. Read a new poem of Adrian's ...
Read More ...
October 07
October continues our autumn theme with poets from America, China, Wales, Germany and Serbia meditating on the Fall. This year's endless summer rain in the UK is producing leafage of a splendo...
Read More ...
upcoming program - Sept 24
24   Hello and welcome to Poem for Today.   Leo Marks who was born today in 1920 was the chief cryptographer of the Special Operations Executive.  He invented...
Read More ...
Poem for Today live!
kcsc.jpg

Weekdays:

15.05 Pacific
17.05 Central
18.05 EST
23.05 GMT

Polls

Your favourite poetry
 

Who's Online