Wombwell Rainbow Interviews: Catherine Ann Cullen

selected poems catherine Ann Cullen

-Dr. Catherine Ann Cullen was inaugural Poet in Residence at Poetry Ireland 2019 to 2021. She is an award-winning poet, children’s author and songwriter, and recipient of Arts Council and Irish Writers Centre bursaries and the prestigious Kavanagh Fellowship. Her poetry collections include The Other Now (Dedalus 2016). Beehive publishes her seventh book, The Song of Brigid’s Cloak, in October 2022.

The Interview

Wombwell Rainbow Interviews

  1. What inspired you to write poetry?

It must have been the state of being a restless child with a head full of nursery rhymes and songs, as I was writing poems, or rhymes at least, from about the age of five. I’ve always been interested in legends and storytelling, in family lore and local history, and in ballads, street rhymes and games, and all of those interests came together early to make poetry a way of navigating the world for me.

2. Who introduced you to poetry?

The credit has to go to my Dad, although I was lucky that both of my parents knew a lot of poetry by heart. My Dad would quote Shakespeare, Milton, Keats, Shelley, Tennyson, Wordsworth and Burns as well as Irish poets from Raifteirí to Pearse, Gogarty, McDonagh, Kavanagh and many others. He also enrolled myself and my five siblings in the library as soon as he could, and borrowed anthologies of poems for me most fortnights. We had a lot of songbooks at home because my father played guitar and was interested in songs, and I read these songsters as if they were children’s books. I was always very involved in the ballads and the stories that they told, and I didn’t really differentiate in my mind between songs and poetry.

3. How aware were you of the dominating presence of older poets?

When I was a child, I was more aware of dead poets than of older, living poets. I became more conscious of living poets in my teenage years. While I was aware that there were certain poets, such as Heaney and Mahon, whose work seemed to be known to everyone, it wasn’t a cause of concern to me. I read poetry voraciously, from the Beat poets to the Metaphysicals to the shabby poets who sold their self-published books on the streets of Dublin.  I remember getting a ticket for the adult section of my local library for the first time at the age of 12 and making a beeline for the poetry shelves. I took out every collection and anthology in turn. I shamelessly imitated the styles of poets I liked. So, while I was aware of older poets and the ‘canon’, I suppose, they didn’t get in the way of my appreciating everyone else.

4. What is your daily writing routine?

I usually write around other commitments and work, so I fit writing in either early in the morning or late in the evening. I also often write in bursts, so I have a quiet period and then a few months full of poems. Covid has taken a chunk out of my regular writing time as, since the first lockdown, I have visited my mother most evenings to keep her company. I don’t regret that, it is a choice I have made willingly, and I consider myself extremely lucky to still have a parent alive and lively. But I hope the lost writing time will affect the quantity rather than the quality of my writing. I have definitely written less over Covid, and given each poem or song more time than usual.

5. What motivates you to write?

Deadlines are the most effective motivator, but I’m also driven to capture particular moments or images that stay with me, to tell stories of my own life and family, or to respond to the stimuli of human rights issues, politics, art, nature and ideas.  I often wait for a few weeks to let an idea percolate in my mind and allow all of its aspects to emerge before I put pen to paper. It’s almost as if I am staging the poem and I visualise the movement of it, the scenes of it, and allow them to crystallise in my mind before I commit it to paper.

6. What is your work ethic?

I’m not sure I have one. Although people close to me know that I work hard most of the time, I find the phrase ‘work ethic’ a bit distasteful. To me, it conjures up a class of people which has exploited others and is likely to use labels like “workshy”, “lazy”, “scroungers” or “welfare cheats” while living off the work of others. Hearing the phrase “work ethic” makes me want to while away my hours drinking Campari sodas in a hammock. 

7. How do the writers you read when you were young influence you today?

My teenage years spent reading Dylan Thomas, Donne, Keats, Milton, Plath, Bishop, Yeats and many others have somehow made me internalise the sonnet form. When I need to write something in a hurry, my default form is the sonnet, which “makes one little room an everywhere” as Donne said of love. I fall back on form in general when in doubt, though I write a lot of free verse. Even with free verse, if I see a shape emerging, I will go with it – five lines and two, five lines and two, or some kind of mirroring, rhythm, shape in the placing of lines. The idea of ‘shaping’ my thoughts into something with a distinct form is still very appealing to me.

8. Who of today’s writers do you admire the most and why?

I love Eiléan Ní Chuilleanáin’s work and have done since I was a student of hers back in the 1980s in Trinity College Dublin. It is perfection: textured, intellectual and emotional, and reaches far beyond Ireland and Irish concerns, although it can reflect them too. Eavan Boland was recently enough with us for me to count her among today’s writers. Again, she has a voice that transcends Ireland while being part of it – a cool, precise and unfaltering voice. I’m sticking just to Irish writers here because otherwise there are just too many to name. Nuala Ní Dhomhnaill, Paula Meehan, Sinéad Morrissey, Martina Evans, Ailbhe Darcy, Aifric Mac Aodha – there are so many women whose work I admire and never tire of reading. And there are men too, of course – Theo Dorgan, Ciaran Carson, Dermot Bolger, Stephen Sexton… an endless list.  I’m also very influenced by songwriters and singers, from Bob Dylan to Joni Mitchel, John Prine, Christy Moore, Andy Irvine, Taylor Swift, Mick Hanly, Frank Harte, Niamh Parsons, Karan Casey…    

9. Why do you write, as opposed to doing anything else?

My first instinct is to answer, ‘because I can’t draw’. But I write to make sense of the world for myself, to take hold of beautiful or difficult moments and to face them, to shape them into something I can countenance.

10. What would you say to someone who asked you “How do you become a writer?”

I would say, write, read, love, listen, and pay attention. Keep at it. Submit your work. Join a group of writers if you can, especially if you are interested in reading other people’s work and giving good, encouraging and helpful feedback on it in exchange for their feedback on your work. In almost any group – certainly in any I have been part of  – there will be people whose feedback you instinctively trust more than others, people who are genuinely interested in making your work better and don’t have any other agenda. Listen to and carefully consider what they say. You don’t have to take every piece of advice, but some advice is invaluable.

11. Tell me about the writing projects you have on at the moment:

I have a children’s book coming out in October with Beehive Books, based on a song I wrote on one of the legends of (Saint) Brigid. It’s a joy to be working with a wonderful illustrator, Katya Swan, and my editor Síne Quinn, and to see the book developing. It’s a different experience to producing a book of poetry, which is a much more solitary occupation, although it does involve an editor too. I also have an anthology of children’s poetry with one other author which is, like many books in these Covid times, in a long queue for publication – but will eventually appear! I have a broadsheet of poems written during my Poetry Ireland residency on the history of the Poetry Ireland building at 11 Parnell Square, which is awaiting final design tweaks. I’ve been slowly reworking my fourth poetry collection – and I’m also writing my first non-fiction book. (although I’d argue poetry is really non-fiction.) I’m sworn to secrecy about the non-fiction one, but it will be announced in the autumn. Throw in various academic papers, mostly on ballads and street poetry, and a few song projects, and I probably have enough to be going on with on the writing front.

12. What is it about poetry rather than prose that appeals to you?

Brevity, to be honest, is a big factor in the appeal. I like the condensed aspect of poetry, the fact that it can be almost like a novel in its impact, in 14 lines or 40. I like the fact that I can give a poem my full attention and that it repays that, I find it hard to sustain my attention over longer forms.

13. What role does nature play in your writing?

I don’t think of myself as a ‘nature’ poet in particular, although of course it does worm its way into my work on occasion, and certainly through the pandemic there has been some reflecting on the solace provided by the garden and the park, for example. I think I write more about humans and their stories than about our natural surroundings in general.

14. How do you know when a poem you are writing is finished?

Paul Valéry said a work of art is never finished, only abandoned. There are certainly some poems that I am not completely happy with, but they have gone out into the world in their imperfection due to a deadline, or a sense of impatience, or the knowledge that I have done all I can to improve them. Other poems quickly make a perfect circle, or seem to complete themselves without much effort, and I’m always surprised that these are the poems that people seem to particularly enjoy and admire, as if the ease in which they were born gives them an appealing air.

15. After reading your poetry what do you hope the reader will leave with?

I’d be delighted if they left with any reaction at all, but especially with a sense of being able to identify with or empathise with the poem in some way. And, if the reader is a poet, I would be honoured if they saw anything to admire in the way I shaped the poem and my choice of words.

Celebrate #NationalMarineWeek 23rd July 7th to August 2022. Day Three of Fourteen Due To Tides. Join Larissa Reid, and I. Send me your own unpublished/published poetry/artworks/short prose about/mentioning the marine. I am looking to feature your poems/artworks about the shore, shoreline, its inhabitants, the waves, flotsam, jetsam and so on. Please contact me with your work, plus a short third person bio. Let’s celebrate the shore!

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Grip

A winter peach billowing of sky
That pours banks of snow onto dark earth;
Sparrowhawk hunches in branches,
Threatening with the same weight as the clouds.
Redwing whirr, scatter, wheel,
Tighten the cold with their presence
Bringing souls from the high fields
Down to the slate sea.
Out there, in the swelling Forth,
Humpbacks have secured themselves for this winter’s storm,
Relishing each breach into iron cold.

-Larissa Reid

Bios and Links

-Larissa Reid

A freelance science writer by trade, Larissa has written poetry and prose regularly since 2016. Notable publications include Northwords Now, Silk & Smoke, Green Ink Poetry, Fenacular, Black Bough Poetry Anthologies, and the Beyond the Swelkie Anthology. She had a poem shortlisted for the Janet Coats Memorial Prize 2020. Larissa is intrigued by visible and invisible boundary lines in landscapes – geological faultlines, myth and reality, edge-lines of land and sea. Based on Scotland’s east coast, she balances her writing life with bringing up her daughters. Larissa is a founder member of the Edinburgh-based writing group, Twisted::Colon.

Celebrate Wombwell Rainbow Interviews with me over 26 Days. Today is Letter O. One letter a day displaying all the links to those interviews. We dig into those surnames. Discover their inspirations, how they write, how did they begin. Would you love to have your name featured here? Contact me.

stars by Jean Obrien

O’Brien, Jean https://thewombwellrainbow.com/2018/11/08/wombwell-rainbow-interviews-jean-obrien/

O’Brien, Mike https://thewombwellrainbow.com/2018/09/04/wombwell-rainbow-interviews-mike-obrie/

Ogunyemi, Ernest O https://thewombwellrainbow.com/2019/10/13/wombwell-rainbow-interviews-ernest-o-ogunyemi/

Oliver, M.J https://thewombwellrainbow.com/2018/10/20/wombwell-rainbow-interviews-m-j-oliver/

Oloruntoba Tolu https://thewombwellrainbow.com/2019/10/14/wombwell-rainbow-interviews-tolu-oloruntoba/

O’Reilly, Nathanael https://thewombwellrainbow.com/2019/01/18/wombwell-rainbow-interviews-nathanael-oreilly/

Osada, Patrick https://thewombwellrainbow.com/2018/11/19/wombwell-rainbow-interviews-patrick-osada/

Osborne, Jennie https://thewombwellrainbow.com/2019/02/26/wombwell-rainbow-interviews-jennie-osborne/

Ostrum, Melissa https://thewombwellrainbow.com/2019/02/03/on-fiction-wombwell-rainbow-interviews-melissa-ostrum/

Osuoha, Ngozi Olivia https://thewombwellrainbow.com/2019/08/05/wombwell-rainbow-interviews-ngozi-olivia-osuoha/

Owen, Mark Antony https://thewombwellrainbow.com/2019/07/18/wombwell-rainbow-interviews-mark-antony-owen/

Owen, Antony https://thewombwellrainbow.com/2018/09/25/wombwell-rainbow-interviews-antony-owen/

Owen, Nick https://thewombwellrainbow.com/2018/11/12/wombwell-rainbow-interviews-nick-owen/

Oxley, William https://thewombwellrainbow.com/2019/01/30/wombwell-rainbow-interviews-william-oxley/

Oy, Voima https://thewombwellrainbow.com/2019/01/21/wombwell-rainbow-interviews-voima-oy/

Avoiding the Urge to Conquer: Nature as Experience

wendycatpratt's avatarWendy Pratt

Photo by Pixabay on Pexels.com

This week the geese began to fly over the house. They’ll go back and forth between two lakes in the area for a while yet. They will be strengthening wings, practicing formation, presumably getting newbie geese into the rhythm of long flight. Then one day soon they’ll go over the house in a great skein and not come back. It will be dusk and the nights will be drawing in and it will be early autumn rather than mid or late summer and I will have to put my sandals away and wear proper shoes. It will make me both happy and sad, as season changes always do. There are already crisped leaves lining the road to the back lane. Soon we’ll be turning our faces towards the dark months; cosy months, months of thick socks and jeans and boots and scarves, but also months…

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Celebrate #NationalMarineWeek 23rd July 7th to August 2022. Day Two of Fourteen Due To Tides. Join Larissa Reid, and I. Send me your own unpublished/published poetry/artworks/short prose about/mentioning the marine. I am looking to feature your poems/artworks about the shore, shoreline, its inhabitants, the waves, flotsam, jetsam and so on. Please contact me with your work, plus a short third person bio. Let’s celebrate the shore!

Screenshot_2022-07-14-21-07-55-17_40deb401b9ffe8e1df2f1cc5ba480b12

Backbone

The seaweed scribbles the sand like blown ink,
A Rorschach test, charting the innermost thoughts of the storm.
The sea heaves and spits its haul out on the shore;
Wings furled and splayed,
Tails curled and claws splintered.
After weeks, the ocean’s spine
Hunches over the strand line;
Bones picked, plucked, restructured
By each breathing tide;
Fueling the curve of some great mythical beast
That rises and falls silently, away in the distance.

-Larissa Reid

Bios And Links

-Larissa Reid

A freelance science writer by trade, Larissa has written poetry and prose regularly since 2016. Notable publications include Northwords Now, Silk & Smoke, Green Ink Poetry, Fenacular, Black Bough Poetry Anthologies, and the Beyond the Swelkie Anthology. She had a poem shortlisted for the Janet Coats Memorial Prize 2020. Larissa is intrigued by visible and invisible boundary lines in landscapes – geological faultlines, myth and reality, edge-lines of land and sea. Based on Scotland’s east coast, she balances her writing life with bringing up her daughters. Larissa is a founder member of the Edinburgh-based writing group, Twisted::Colon.

Celebrate Wombwell Rainbow Interviews with me over 26 Days. Today is Letter N. One letter a day displaying all the links to those interviews. We dig into those surnames. Discover their inspirations, how they write, how did they begin. Would you love to have your name featured here? Contact me.

Umbilical-Cord-by-Hasan Namir Book-Cover

Namir, Hasan https://thewombwellrainbow.com/2019/08/21/wombwell-rainbow-interviews-hasan-namir/

Naomi, Katrina https://thewombwellrainbow.com/2018/09/24/wombwell-rainbow-interviews-katrina-naomi/

Nash, Steve https://thewombwellrainbow.com/2019/09/12/wombwell-rainbow-interviews-steve-nash/

Nava, Eva Wong https://thewombwellrainbow.com/2018/09/23/wombwell-rainbow-interviews-bart-solarczyk/

Neal, Mary Ford https://thewombwellrainbow.com/2022/07/23/wombwell-rainbow-book-interviews-mary-ford-neal/

Neill, Leanne https://thewombwellrainbow.com/2018/10/11/wombwell-rainbow-interviews-leanne-neill/

Nikola-Wren, Morgan https://thewombwellrainbow.com/2018/10/23/wombwell-rainbow-interviews-morgan-nikola-wren/

Norman, Chad https://thewombwellrainbow.com/2018/12/14/the-wombwell-rainbow-chad-norman/

Norman, Graham https://thewombwellrainbow.com/2018/12/24/wombwell-rainbow-interviews-graham-norman/

Nuttall, Becky https://thewombwellrainbow.com/2018/10/24/wombwell-rainbow-interviews-becky-nuttall/

Wombwell Rainbow Book Interviews: Mary Ford Neal

-Mary Ford Neal

author of two poetry collections: ‘Dawning’ (Indigo Dreams, 2021), and ‘Relativism’ (Taproot Press, 2022). Mary’s poems have been published in Bad Lilies, One Hand Clapping, Atrium, Ink Sweat & Tears, Long Poem Magazine, Dreich, and various other magazines. She was Pushcart nominated in 2021. Mary is assistant editor of Nine Pens Press and 192 magazine.

“Dawning” can be purchased here: https://www.indigodreams.co.uk/mary-ford-neal/4595319360

Relativism can be purchased here::

The Interview

How did you decide on the order of the poems in your book?

The first collection roughly traces the arc of a relationship, so that was a major factor informing the order of the poems. But other, smaller decisions also factored in to the process – for example, I regarded certain poems as companions to one another, and it was important to me to keep those ones together, while not interfering with the storytelling. There were also some purely stylistic decisions, like not wanting to have the poems that used form or rhyme too close to one another. The second collection is longer, and I made the decision to structure it in sections. Again, there’s a narrative arc there, with each section corresponding roughly to a stage of life (e.g. childhood, or the end of life), or a state of knowledge (e.g. doubt or enlightenment). So narrative coherence has been a factor when structuring both books, but that doesn’t mean to say it necessarily will be in future.

2. How important is form in your poetry?

Most of what I write is free verse, and I think that will always be the case. My favourite poems of mine are free verse poems. But I occasionally like to use form – there are two villanelles, a triolet, and a sestina in my first book, as well as some other poems that use end rhyme, and a few prose poems. There’s even less formal poetry in my second collection – several prose poems, a sestina and a pantoum. I think form can work really well to restrain and contain content that might otherwise become emotionally overblown or extravagant. But it has to be handled with (a lot of!) care to avoid feeling unoriginal or naïve. I’ll carry on using it sparingly, I expect!

3. What is the role of nature in your poetry?

I tend not to think of what I do as ‘nature poetry’ in any sense. But the sea, and water, is everywhere in my poetry, perhaps most prominently in my first collection, but in the second book too. There are also a few references to space, in both books, and to trees in the second book. I think it’s impossible for any poet not to draw extensively on the world around them, including the natural world. But the primary focus of my poetry is undoubtedly human experience – human relationships, human suffering, and human destiny – and themes from nature are deployed in order to illuminate the human, rather than as a focus in themselves.

4. When and why did you start writing poetry?

I’ve been aware of poetry and vaguely interested in it all my life, mainly due to the influence of my dad, an English teacher who taught me poetry in school and at home. We had poetry books everywhere. But I must have written fewer than ten poems in total over the course of my life until late 2019, when it suddenly took off while I was recovering from a serious illness. I think the reason it happened then was that in practical terms, I had the time (I was on a months-long absence from work) and the things that had been blocking my creativity (the stress and relentlessness of my ‘real’ work) were temporarily removed. But I also had something to write about, a difficult relationship which became the focus of my first book. So those factors combined to make it happen when it did.

5. What poets do you remember your dad introducing you too?

Because he was my English teacher at school, he introduced me to all of the ‘curriculum’ poets (Chaucer, TS Eliot, Shakespeare, Donne, Tennyson, and so on). But at home, he was an admirer of Thomas Hardy and Robert Burns, and I remember him introducing me to their work and poems by Glasgow poets like Tom Leonard, Edwin Morgan, Liz Lochhead, and others.

6. How aware are and were you of the dominating presence of older poets traditional and contemporary?

At school, most of the poets we studied were long-dead men, and the few living ones we studied were older men, but I never questioned that. The reverence attached to their work and the fact it was most people’s introduction to ‘Poetry’ made those voices influential in one sort of way. But nowadays, I’m very aware of another sort of dominance – the power to publish or not publish, and to hand out patronages (prizes, mentorships, speaking invitations). I don’t notice those decisions being made particularly by people who are older, or male. I think domination in poetry nowadays seems more about cliquishness than age.

7. What is your daily writing  routine?

I don’t write every day, or even every other day. Between the demands of parenthood and my academic work, I wouldn’t have time for that, but in any case I don’t think I’d want to turn creative writing into anything that felt like a chore. The way I write wouldn’t really lend itself to sitting down intentionally, anyway – most of my poems tend to arrive pretty well-formed, and I then tweak things over the next weeks or months. It’s not time-consuming. What I do set aside time for is reading and thinking as much as I can. That’s the groundwork.

8. What motivates you to write?

Usually, it’s about trying to capture something, or make sense of something. Sometimes it’s about trying to imagine things that haven’t happened. And sometimes I’m not conscious of the motivation until later – I’m thinking of a particular recent poem that’s not in either of the books, which initially felt a bit surrealist and apropos of nothing, but which I read again later and its meaning was really staring me in the face.

9. How do the writers you read when you were young influence your work today?

The kind of writing that impressed me when I was very young, and that I’ve been drawn to ever since, has a quietness, or stillness. It’s rich with craft and wisdom and values. It sits within and honours the long traditions of writing even as it carries that tradition forward and adds something new to it. I’m strongly attracted to quietness and humility in writing, and turned off by disruption for its own sake, or anything that feels self-serving or egotistical.

9.1. Who wrote this kind of writing?

I take it you mean the kind I’m praising?? It’s a matter of opinion, but for me, lots of poets! The list could really be endless but some examples might be Hardy, Hopkins, Eliot, Millay, Morgan, Frost, Carson, Oliver, and plenty of living poets too.

10. Who of today’s writers do you admire the most and why?

So many! Ada Limon, for all the same reasons everyone else admires her. Amazing Scottish poets like Rob Mackenzie (for the precision of his language, his sharp humour, and his skill with form), Jay Whittaker (for the emotional impact her work has on me), Louise Peterkin (for the musicality and magical quality of her writing) and others. Maya Popa, for finding new & exquisite ways of saying universal and familiar things. GB Clarkson for being able to combine such vivid abundance (I always think of Gauguin) with a perfect restraint. The late Jay Hopler for his mastery of the short poem. Robert Selby, for his craft & the way it all comes together. John McCullough, because he always picks out something new but important to say, & says it with real skill & beauty. But I could go on and never stop. There’s an embarrassment of talent in contemporary poetry.

11. Why do you write, as opposed to doing anything else?

I’m just better at writing than I am at other creative things. I’m musical, & play a few instruments, but I don’t find I want to do it for hours on end. I’m okay at drawing but not good enough to want to do it concertedly. Words have just always been my natural medium, and literature and literacy was highly prized at home when I was growing up.

12.What would you say to someone who asked you “How do you become a writer?”

People who become good writers have several things in common, I think. First, they have a longstanding habit of reading good writing. Second, they have a reflective attitude to their own life experiences, and an ability to relate their experiences to things outside themselves. Third, they have the patience to start by being a bad or mediocre or naïve writer, and go through a process of improvement. Fourth, they have a reading & writing ‘community’ of some sort (which they may have had to construct for themselves). This list is by no means exhaustive. Of course, you may never become a writer, and that is fine too – you may be something else entirely.

13. Tell me about the writing projects you have on at the moment.

I’m thinking thematically about my next collection, and gathering together the poems for that – I have roughly half of them at the moment. I’m also working on a long poem, but that’s taking shape more slowly. My other current writing projects are all academic pieces about Law!

14. How important is White space in your writing?

It’s becoming increasingly important as I become more drawn to writing shorter poems (with the exception of the very long poem I mentioned above!). The white space is always significant – perhaps like rests in music – but even more so with short poems and micropoems. Jay Hopler’s work has really influenced me in wanting to write shorter pieces.

15. Why does “Dawning” begin and end with a question?

I suppose it’s a question I was turning around in my head at the time when I wrote ‘Dawning’. As to why it’s there at the beginning and the end, I think I loved the idea of circularity – that we end back where we began. It mirrors the relationship in the book – you feel you’re moving toward closure as the poems progress, but then right at the end there’s this hint that nothing has been concluded.

16. Once having read your books what do you hope the reader will leave with?

I’d like readers to find echoes of their own experience in my books – to feel that I’ve found a way of saying something that they might also want to say. Art is – for me – ultimately about plugging into the collective human experience, so if no-one else recognised anything of themselves in my work, I might question whether I’d done anything valuable, as opposed to purely solipsistic.

#NationalMothWeek. Day One. I will feature your published/unpublished poetry/short prose/artworks about/mentioning moths. Please include a short third person bio. “National Moth Week celebrates the beauty, life cycles, and habitats of moths. “Moth-ers” of all ages and abilities are encouraged to learn about, observe, and document moths in their backyards, parks, and neighborhoods. National Moth Week is being held, worldwide, during the last full week of July. NMW offers everyone, everywhere a unique opportunity to become a Citizen Scientist and contribute scientific data about moths. Through partnerships with major online biological data depositories, NMW participants can help map moth distribution and provide needed information on other life history aspects around the globe.” from nationalmothweek.org.

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Peppered Moth

Consider Malus Domestica and Biston Betularia,
attracting and attached,
a true contrast, a tree, a moth
in the orchard at Llanerchaeron,
a haven for the peppered moth.

Each twig-like caterpillar turns itself
into another still insect,
its wings invisible on bark,
surviving by disguise and night’s darkness,
as it survived the soot of the Industrial Revolution.

What came next made things better
for a plot of land with trees and moths.
As things got out of hand the moth evolved,
altered its course
as the apple trees grew.

-Peter J. Donnelly

Links And Bio

-Peter J. Donnelly

lives in York where he works as a hospital secretary. He has a degree in English Literature and a MA in Creative Writing from the University of Wales Lampeter. He has been published in various magazines including Dreich where these poems previously appeared. He won second prize in the Ripon Poetry Festival competition. 

Drop in by Mark Coverdale

Nigel Kent's avatarNigel Kent - Poet and Reviewer

Something different today! I’ve invited Mark Coverdale, Founder of Tonic Sta Press to reflect upon its Football is Poetry, the world’s only football sticker book of poetry!!!!

A Song for AKS Zły is a poetic narrative describing the time my wife Ania and I went on one of our frequent trips to Warsaw. AKS Zły had just been named UEFA ‘grassroots football club of the year’ and we’d become familiar with their community work, inclusive ethos and anti-discriminatory stance. Situated in a more forgotten area of the city, they could have not been more welcoming. The first match I had ever been to without a pint – there was no alcohol, swearing or any prejudicial behaviour allowed whatsoever – I must say that watching football in the Polish 5th and 7th divisions was one of the best sporting experiences I have ever had.

Football is Poetry is…

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Celebrate #NationalMarineWeek 23rd July 7th to August 2022. Day One of Fourteen Due To Tides. Join Larissa Reid, Peter Donnelly and I. Send me your own unpublished/published poetry/artworks/short prose about/mentioning the marine. I am looking to feature your poems/artworks about the shore, shoreline, its inhabitants, the waves, flotsam, jetsam and so on. Please contact me with your work, plus a short third person bio. Let’s celebrate the shore!

Screenshot_2022-07-14-21-07-55-17_40deb401b9ffe8e1df2f1cc5ba480b12

My Fourth Visit

We didn’t stay long in Exmouth.
The waves made national news that day,
the only time I’ve been to Devon in winter.
It didn’t resemble the place
where I’d had my interview at Rolle College
the last time I stayed with you,
or where I had lunch at a Chinese restaurant
with the family after we’d looked round A La Ronde.
I must have gone twice that holiday,
my paperbacks by Margot Asquith
definitely came from there, and perhaps
David Cecil’s Early Victorian Novelists
with a chunk of pages on Mrs Gaskell missing.
The birthplace of my mother,
now it’s somewhere I go with her and Dad
after funerals – first your mother’s,
then your husband’s. I hope next time
won’t be after yours.

-Peter Donnelly

Herringbone

Late summer; the gull lands to twist the neck from the body
And picks at gaping gills,
While mother-of-pearl scales
Cling to its stark yellow beak.
Slick, sleek silver, slapped hard against black rock
Back broken, bones splayed out
Picked clean
And left to bleach.
Recharged, the gull lurches forward and leaves
For another steal at the fishing boat.

Late autumn; the land is herringboned to the sea
Nipped, tucked and structured,
Laid to rest
Ready for sowing in spring.
Rainwater runs in the ruckles
Shimmering the earth under thick-set skies
Shaved curls overlap
Like the crest of a lapwing’s crown
They will return with their dance
When the warmer winds blow.

Late winter; wool blanket, herringbone weave
Wrapped up against the wind
That rattles the old worn window-frames
And sends a familiar whistle through the hole in the oak tree,
Down by the gate.
The house martin’s nest a smear against the wall
Erased by water running in invisible trails
From roof to path to land to burn to stream to river to sea
It rarely snows, here,
On the blurred boundary line between soil and salt.

Late spring; the hares have spent time enough
Berating one another for a chance at love
Chasing down the runs of the fields
Before stopping to listen, alert and wild-eyed.
The swallows return
And cut the air into ribbons
In their quest for insects
While the lapwings flip, wing over tail,
In their own bizarre ritual
Under this evening’s herringbone sky.

*Published in Northwords Now 34, October 2017

-Larissa Reid

Bios And Links

-Peter Donnelly

lives in York where he works as a hospital secretary. He has a degree in English Literature and a MA in Creative Writing from the University of Wales Lampeter. He has been published in various magazines including Dreich where these poems previously appeared. He won second prize in the Ripon Poetry Festival competition. 

-Larissa Reid

A freelance science writer by trade, Larissa has written poetry and prose regularly since 2016. Notable publications include Northwords Now, Silk & Smoke, Green Ink Poetry, Fenacular, Black Bough Poetry Anthologies, and the Beyond the Swelkie Anthology. She had a poem shortlisted for the Janet Coats Memorial Prize 2020. Larissa is intrigued by visible and invisible boundary lines in landscapes – geological faultlines, myth and reality, edge-lines of land and sea. Based on Scotland’s east coast, she balances her writing life with bringing up her daughters. Larissa is a founder member of the Edinburgh-based writing group, Twisted::Colon.