Songs of Ourselves Volume 2 - Public
Songs of Ourselves Volume 2 - Public
Songs of Ourselves Volume 2 - Public
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Contents
Introduction xi
Acknowledgements xiii
PART 1
Love and Family
1 The Clod and the Pebble 3
WILLIAM BLAKE
2 Song 4
LADY MARY WROTH
3 A Silent Love 5
EDWARD DYER
4 Passion 6
KATHLEEN RAINE
5 Winter Song 7
ELIZABETH TOLLET
6 Last Sonnet 8
JOHN KEATS
7 Love (III) 9
GEORGE HERBERT
8 Lovers’ Infiniteness 10
JOHN DONNE
9 The Bargain 12
SIR PHILIP SIDNEY
10 To My Dear and Loving Husband 13
ANNE BRADSTREET
11 ‘She was a Phantom of Delight’ 14
WILLIAM WORDSWORTH
12 If Thou must Love Me 15
ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING
13 The Wedding 16
MONIZA ALVI
14 Tiger in the Menagerie 18
EMMA JONES
15 The Pride of Lions 19
JOANNA PRESTON
iv Contents
16 lion heart 20
AMANDA CHONG
17 To Mrs. Reynolds’s Cat 22
JOHN KEATS
18 Sonnet 19 23
WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE
19 Heart and Mind 24
EDITH SITWELL
20 For My Grandmother Knitting 25
LIZ LOCHHEAD
21 The Uncles 27
JOHN GOODBY
22 Surplus Value 29
DAVID C. WARD
23 Father Returning Home 30
DILIP CHITRE
24 In the Park 31
GWEN HARWOOD
25 The Lost Woman. . . 32
PATRICIA BEER
26 Stabat Mater 34
SAM HUNT
27 Coming Home 35
OWEN SHEERS
28 On My First Daughter 36
BEN JONSON
29 Sons, Departing 37
JOHN CASSIDY
PART 2
Birds, Beasts, and the Weather
30 In Praise of Creation 41
ELIZABETH JENNINGS
31 Upon a Wasp Chilled with Cold 42
EDWARD TAYLOR
32 Taking Back 44
JACK UNDERWOOD
33 ‘Blessed by the Indifference…’ from The Flowers of Crete 45
CHRISTOPHER REID
34 Australia 1970 46
JUDITH WRIGHT
Contents v
35 The Poplar-Field 47
WILLIAM COWPER
36 Ode on Melancholy 48
JOHN KEATS
37 Description of Spring 50
HENRY HOWARD, EARL OF SURREY
38 The Spring 51
THOMAS CAREW
39 Coming 52
PHILIP LARKIN
40 The Darkling Thrush 53
THOMAS HARDY
41 Stormcock in Elder 55
RUTH PITTER
42 The Caged Skylark 57
GERARD MANLEY HOPKINS
43 Parrot 58
STEVIE SMITH
44 At the Parrot House, Taronga Park 59
VIVIAN SMITH
45 Eel Tail 60
ALICE OSWALD
46 Cetacean 62
PETER READING
47 The Kraken 63
ALFRED, LORD TENNYSON
48 Watching for Dolphins 64
DAVID CONSTANTINE
49 Afternoon with Irish Cows 66
BILLY COLLINS
50 The Buck in the Snow 68
EDNA ST VINCENT MILLAY
51 London Snow 69
ROBERT BRIDGES
52 from Crossing Brooklyn Ferry 71
WALT WHITMAN
53 The Storm-Wind 73
WILLIAM BARNES
54 The Sea Eats the Land at Home 74
KOFI AWOONOR
55 You will Know When You Get There 75
ALLEN CURNOW
vi Contents
PART 3
Travel, Migration, and Society
60 Excelsior 83
HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW
61 The Mountain 85
ELIZABETH BISHOP
62 The Road 86
NANCY FOTHERINGHAM CATO
63 The Instant of My Death 87
SARAH JACKSON
64 The Bus 88
ARUN KOLATKAR
65 At the Bus Station 89
JULIUS CHINGONO
66 These are the Times We Live in 90
IMTIAZ DHARKER
67 The Border Builder 92
CAROL RUMENS
68 The Migrant 93
A.L. HENDRIKS
69 The White House 94
CLAUDE MCKAY
70 The Enemies 95
ELIZABETH JENNINGS
71 Who in One Lifetime 96
MURIEL RUKEYSER
72 The Hour is Come 97
LOUISA LAWSON
73 At the “Capitol” 98
KEVIN HALLIGAN
74 Boxes 99
SAMPURNA CHATTARJI
Contents vii
PART 4
Love, Wisdom, and Age
91 A Complaint 129
WILLIAM WORDSWORTH
92 A Song of Faith Forsworn 130
JOHN WARREN, LORD DE TABLEY
93 The Forsaken Wife 132
ELIZABETH THOMAS (‘CORINNA’)
viii Contents
PART 5
War, Sleep, and Death
121 Distant Fields / ANZAC Parade 173
RHIAN GALLAGHER
122 Lament for the Country Soldiers 174
LES MURRAY
123 “I Have a Rendezvous with Death” 176
ALAN SEEGER
124 The Death-Bed 177
SIEGFRIED SASSOON
125 A Wife in London (December, 1899) 179
THOMAS HARDY
126 Song 180
ALUN LEWIS
127 from Blenheim 182
JOHN PHILIPS
128 After Blenheim 184
ROBERT SOUTHEY
129 from Fears in Solitude 187
SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE
130 Soldier, Rest! 189
SIR WALTER SCOTT
131 The Dead Knight 191
JOHN MASEFIELD
132 From the Coptic 192
STEVIE SMITH
133 Futility 194
WILFRED OWEN
x Contents
Short glosses have been provided where the meaning of words, phrases or names (such as
mythological characters) might not be known.
xii Introduction
It is assumed that readers will have access to and use a good dictionary, so only the
more obviously obscure words have been glossed. The glosses provided could certainly be
added to or reworded because that is the nature of poetry: one definition of poetry is that it
is untranslatable writing.
Glosses should not be taken to indicate that glossed words have particular significance
and the glosses do not attempt to explain the poem. They have been deliberately kept to
the minimum so that they do not distract from the experience of reading the poem. It is
important that students do not feel put off by not knowing every word of a poem on first
reading; students should be encouraged by the thought that the most sophisticated reader
will often hesitate and wonder about a meaning, and the poet might want us to do just that.
Acknowledgements
Thanks to Noel Cassidy, Russell Carey, and Nick de Somogyi for their help in the making
of this anthology.
Mary Wilmer
Cambridge International Examinations
Acknowledgements
“Passion” by Kathleen Raine from The Collected Poems of Kathleen Raine (ISBN:
9780903880817), reproduced with permission from Golgonooza Press.
“The Wedding” by Moniza Alvi, Split World: Poems 1990−2005 (Bloodaxe Books, 2008).
“Tiger in the Menagerie” from The Striped World © Emma Jones and reprinted by permission
of Faber and Faber Ltd.
“lion heart” by Amanda Chong from Poems Singapore and Beyond, reproduced with
permission from Ethos Books.
“Heart and Mind” from Collected Poems by Edith Sitwell reprinted by permission of
Peters Fraser & Dunlop (www.petersfraserdunlop.com) on behalf of the Estate of Edith
Sitwell.
“The Uncles” by John Goodby from A True Prize, reproduced with permission from
Cinnamon Press.
“Surplus Value” by David C. Ward from Internal Difference, reproduced with permission
from Carcanet Press Limited, 2011.
“In the Park” by Gwen Harwood from Selected Poems, reproduced with permission
from Penguin Group (Australia), 2001.
“The Lost Woman...” by Patricia Beer from Collected Poems, reproduced with permission
from Carcanet Press Limited, 1990.
“Stabat Mater” by Sam Hunt from Collected Poems, Penguin 1980, permission for use
granted by the author.
“Sons, Departing” by John Cassidy from Night Cries, Bloodaxe 1982.
“In Praise of Creation” by Elizabeth Jennings from Collected Poems, reproduced with
permission from Carcanet Press Limited, 1987.
“Blessed by the Indifference…” by Christopher Reid from The Flowers of Crete,
reproduced with permission from Areté Books.
Judith Wright: “Australia 1970” from A Human Pattern: Selected Poems (ETT Imprint,
Sydney 2010).
“Coming” by Philip Larkin from The Complete Poems, reproduced with permission
from Faber and Faber Ltd.
“Stormcock in Elder” by Ruth Pitter, from Collected Poems (Enitharmon Press, 1996).
“Eel Tail” by Alice Oswald, permission for use granted by the author.
“Afternoon with Irish Cows” from Picnic, Lightning, by Billy Collins, © 1998. Reprinted
by permission of the University of Pittsburgh Press.
“You will Know When You Get There” by Allen Curnow from You Will Know When You
Get There: Poems 1979–81, reproduced with permission from Auckland University Press
and copyright holder Tim Curnow.
xiv Acknowledgements
“The Stars Go Over the Lonely Ocean” by Robinson Jeffers from Selected Poems,
reproduced with permission from Carcanet Press Limited, 1987.
“At the Bus Station”, First published by ‘amaBooks, Zimbabwe, 2011’ in the collection
Together, by Julius Chingono and John Eppel.
“The Enemies” by Elizabeth Jennings from Collected Poems, reproduced with permission
from Carcanet Press Limited, 1987.
“At the “Capitol”” by Kevin Halligan, from Utopia (Cambridge, UK: Springfield Books),
2009.
“an afternoon nap” by Arthur Yap, reproduced with permission from Jenny Yap and the
Literary Estate of Arthur Yap.
“Shirt” by Robert Pinsky from Figured Wheel, reproduced with permission from Carcanet
Press Limited, 1996.
“To a Millionaire” by A.R.D. Fairburn from Selected Poems 1995, reproduced with
permission from A.R.D. Fairburn Literary Estate.
“Song” by George Szirtes, New and Collected Poems (Bloodaxe Books, 2008).
“Waterfall” by Lauris Edmond from Selected Poems, Bridget Williams Books New
Zealand 2001, reproduced with permission from the Literary Estate of Lauris Edmond.
“Rhyme of the Dead Self” by A.R.D. Fairburn, reproduced with permission from
A.R.D. Fairburn Literary Estate.
“Nearing Forty” by Derek Walcott from Collected Poems, reproduced with permission
from Faber and Faber Ltd.
“Distant Fields /ANZAC Parade” by Rhian Gallagher from Shift, reproduced with
permission from Auckland University Press and Rhian Gallagher.
“Futility” is reproduced from Wilfred Owen: The War Poems (Chatto & Windus, 1994),
edited by Jon Stallworthy.
Part 1
Love and Family
Songs of Ourselves Volume 2 3
WILLIAM BLAKE
Song
straight] immediately
false matter] i.e. lies
cozen] deceive glory to] relish the opportunity to
Let him gain the hand] i.e. if you allow him his favours lighter] his kindnesses even flimsier
to get the upper hand as firm in staying] as rigidly fixed (i.e. not at all)
Songs of Ourselves Volume 2 5
A Silent Love
EDWARD DYER
the ant her gall . . . fly her spleen] i.e. even such tiny creatures possess the means to take offence
or experience sadness
fords] crossing-points in a river
dial] sun-dial (which tells the time by the gradual change of the sun’s shadow)
turtles] doves (mute birds that were supposed to mate for life)
6 Songs of Ourselves Volume 2
Passion
KATHLEEN RAINE
Winter Song
ELIZABETH TOLLET
Last Sonnet
JOHN KEATS
Love (III)
GEORGE HERBERT
FINIS.
Lovers’ Infiniteness
JOHN DONNE
Love’s riddles . . . losing sav’st it] it is the paradox of love that in giving your heart to another, it
is transfigured; and compare Matthew 16, 25, where Jesus says: ‘For whosoever will save his
life shall lose it: and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it’
12 Songs of Ourselves Volume 2
The Bargain
10
ANNE BRADSTREET
11
WILLIAM WORDSWORTH
12
13
The Wedding
MONIZA ALVI
14
EMMA JONES
No one could say how the tiger got into the menagerie.
It was too flash, too blue,
too much like the painting of a tiger.
At night the bars of the cage and the stripes of the tiger
looked into each other so long
that when it was time for those eyes to rock shut
that when the sun rose they’d gone and the tiger was
one clear orange eye that walked into the menagerie.
No one could say how the tiger got out in the menagerie.
It was too bright, too bare.
If the menagerie could, it would say ‘tiger’.
main] ocean
Songs of Ourselves Volume 2 19
15
JOANNA PRESTON
The switch to all fours was not easy – all his weight
slung from the blades of his shoulders.
His deltoids knotted like teak burls,
and I burnished them as he slept.
16
lion heart
AMANDA CHONG
keris] swords with a curved, wave-like blade bumboats] small boats, junks
22 Songs of Ourselves Volume 2
17
JOHN KEATS
Grand Climacteric] the supposedly critical age in the seven-year stages of human life (63 being its
ninth, cats supposedly having nine lives)
maul] beating
the lists . . . thou enter’dst] you entered the lists (i.e. took part in tournaments or jousts)
glass-bottled wall] i.e. a wall defended from intruders by fragments of broken glass
Songs of Ourselves Volume 2 23
18
Sonnet 19
WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE
the long-liv’d Phoenix] a single mythical bird believed to live for 500 years, then burn itself on a
pyre, before being born again from its ashes
antique] (1) old; (2) deranged
beauty’s pattern to succeeding men] the model of beauty for succeeding generations
thy wrong] your damage
24 Songs of Ourselves Volume 2
19
EDITH SITWELL
Said the Sun to the Moon—‘When you are but a lonely white crone,
And I, a dead King in my golden armour somewhere in a dark wood,
Remember only this of our hopeless love
That never till Time is done
Will the fire of the heart and the fire of the mind be one.’
Hercules . . . Samson] the strongman superheroes of Greek mythology and the Bible, each of
whom was betrayed and undone by love
the pillars of the seas] the supposed boundary-columns at the entrance to the Mediterranean
Songs of Ourselves Volume 2 25
20
LIZ LOCHHEAD
21
The Uncles
JOHN GOODBY
‘Red Square’] the central square in Moscow (until 1991 the capital of the Soviet Union)
tolerance gauges, allan keys] i.e. various engineering tools
ply a broom] i.e. do the sweeping up
gone west] (slang) i.e. ‘gone for a burton’, ‘bought it’ (i.e. of wartime airmen who were lost in
action or ‘went missing’)
epoch-stewed] i.e. left to stew for ages
chamfered] bevelled, planed
Songs of Ourselves Volume 2 29
22
Surplus Value
DAVID C. WARD
bantam] literally a small but muscular variety Fords or Chevys] makes of car
of chicken; hence slender but strong went south] collapsed, lost power, ‘went belly-up’
Harley soft-tail] a make of motorcycle food stamps] welfare payments
Iron City] a brand of beer Saginaw River] in Michigan
30 Songs of Ourselves Volume 2
23
DILIP CHITRE