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December 08

It's with great sadness that I have to convey to you news of the death of the fine English poet Adrian Mitchell.  Adrian was also my friend and collaborator and much celebrated in these programs.  He was a poet of commitment who fought against the degrading of freedom and of the environment wherever he found it - and he found it in many places because he was very aware of the international situation.  He will be an important voice lost to the world.

Read a poem by Adrian.

Sadly too, I have to tell you that the economic crisis has brought to an end Poem for Today's funding and  it will have to stop being aired at the end of this month.

I would love to keep it going but it costs a considerable amount to make and I am penniless myself ...

There is, of course, a five-year catalogue of programs, so you may be able to persuade the station to re-broadcast them - or contact this site for specific shows/poems you would like to hear again.  Over the years we've built up a substantial library of work and are always willing to help with your poetic searches.

We have a number of December-specific poems from American and British writers, together with many Christmas poems new to the show.  Among birthdays we celebrate Carol Ann Duffy - hotly tipped to be the next Poet Laureate - Edward Arlington Robinson and Kenneth Rexroth, Philip Larkin, Rainer Maria Rilke and many more - truly a poetic feast.

Have an enjoyable poetic Christmas despite the frosty financial situation - and let's hope the New Year will bring us all better fortune ....

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November 08

As is appropriate for November, our theme is the supernatural ... living on the edge between life and death, the presence of death in life and of life in death.

Celebrating Halloween,  we look at the possibilties for afterlife with Jo Shapcott and, a poet new to the program, the American Dana Gioia.  Patricia Beer talks about her relationship with her dead mother in The Lost Woman and the Portuguese poet Sophia de Mello Breyner talks of her late husband's approach to death in The Small Square.  While we commemorate the dead of war with Karl Shapiro's Elegy for a Dead Soldier.

Robert Graves bridges the gap from this theme into our celebration of married love with No More Ghosts.  Then we have poems to wives from Graves, George Szirtes, W S Graham and - to Shakespeare's wife - from Carol Ann Duffy.

And to husbands or other partners from Sharon Olds, Margaret Atwood, Vicki Feaver and - Sophia de Mello Breyner.

Sadly it looks unlikely that the show will continue to receive funding ... and may have to finish at the end of the year.

Enjoy it while you can ...

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October 08

 

Autumn is perhaps a good time to think about losing things ...

We have Elizabeth Bishop on the art of losing, Edna St Vincent Millay, E J Scovell and the British Poet Laureate Andrew Motion on losing people ... joined later in the month by Pamela Gillilan and Denise Levertov.

The Irish poet Paul Durcan expresses his anger at losing friends through terrorism and Elizabeth Jennings looks at an old man and an old woman on the very brink of existence.

But there is hope too:  the great Palestinian poet Mahmoud Darwish, who died in August, celebrates his country in In This Land and gives us a hope for the future in Another Day Will Come.  Philip Booth and Selima Hill celebrate the joys of sharing existence with others and Robert Herrick, Anne Sexton and - a new voice - the New Zealand poet James Baxter all delight in the pleasures of everyday events.

Enjoy ...

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September 08

A wide international selection of poets this month - from South America:  a Colombian living in the US, an Ecuadoran and two from Chile  including the great Neruda.  Two each from Canada, Italy, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland.  Poland, Jamaica, Israel and the Czech Republic are all represented, along with the customary sprinkling of American and English voices.

We commemorate the 7th anniversary of 9/11 as well as mourning the passing of summer ... hoping for an Indian one.

Last month saw the death of the poet known as the voice of the Palestinian people, Mahmoud Darwish.  We'll revisit his work next month.

Enjoy ... 

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August 08

As summer begins to wane, we observe its passing with Emily Dickinson and Edward Arlington Robinson, and comment on the gradual fading of human relationships with a number of poets new to the program - Medbh McGuckian, Thomas Blackburn, Esta Spalding, Michael Laskey, Mairi MacInnes and, from America, Gjertrud Schnackenberg.

Old favorites are here too - Shelley and Tennyson, Ted Hughes and Thom Gunn, Dorothy Parker and John Betjeman ...

Enjoy! 

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July 08

Celebrate Summer with Poem for Today!

We have summer poems from across the world, interspersed, as always, by meditations on the human condition.

Sadly, my attempt at sympathetic magic - to bring summer conditions to the UK through evoking images of warmth, fruitfulness and languor - has only succeeded in bringing yet further downpours.

I thought it might be time to build an ark but the hardware stores are all out of gopherwood. 

Ah, well ... 

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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!

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Latest Blog...

December 08
It's with great sadness that I have to convey to you news of the death of the fine English poet Adrian Mitchell.  Adrian was also my friend and collaborator and much celebrated in these program...
Read More ...
November 08
As is appropriate for November, our theme is the supernatural ... living on the edge between life and death, the presence of death in life and of life in death. Celebrating Halloween,  we...
Read More ...
October 08
  Autumn is perhaps a good time to think about losing things ... We have Elizabeth Bishop on the art of losing, Edna St Vincent Millay, E J Scovell and the British Poet Laureate And...
Read More ...
September 08
A wide international selection of poets this month - from South America:  a Colombian living in the US, an Ecuadoran and two from Chile  including the great Neruda.  Two each from Can...
Read More ...
August 08
As summer begins to wane, we observe its passing with Emily Dickinson and Edward Arlington Robinson, and comment on the gradual fading of human relationships with a number of poets new to the progra...
Read More ...
July 08
Celebrate Summer with Poem for Today! We have summer poems from across the world, interspersed, as always, by meditations on the human condition. Sadly, my attempt at sympathetic magic -...
Read More ...
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 ...
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