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Poet
Jan Owen
B. 1940
Jan Owen, born in Adelaide in 1940, traces her lineage back through generations of Welsh seafarers and Cornish miners. She studied arts and librarianship and raised three children before claiming time to write and travel. From her prize-winning first book…
Poet
Peter Dale
B. 1938
Peter Dale (b. 1938) studied English at Oxford University where he became friends with the poets Ian Hamilton and Kevin Crossley-Holland, and William Cookson with whom Dale went on to edit the influential poetry quarterly Agenda. Dale’s first collection, Walk…
Poet
Roger McGough
B. 1937
Roger McGough (b. 1937) is one of Britain’s best-loved poets. Top-selling The Mersey Sound: Penguin Modern Poets 10 with Liverpool poets Brian Patten and Adrian Henri, hits with Mike McCartney and John Gorman in The Scaffold and college touring with…
Poet
Harold Pinter
B. 1930 D. 2008
Harold Pinter (1930 – 2008) is best known for theatrical work, but was a poet before a playwright, and in early 2005, told the BBC that he was leaving plays to focus on poetry and political speeches. His poetry publications…
Poet
Patricia Beer
B. 1924 D. 1999
Patricia Beer (1924-1999) was born in Exmouth, Devon, into a Plymouth Brethren family, a childhood she recalls vividly in her autobiography Mrs Beer’s House. Educated at Exmouth Grammar School, Exeter University and Oxford, she lived in Italy lecturing in English…
Poet
John Heath Stubbs
B. 1918 D. 2006
John Heath-Stubbs (1918 – 2006) recalled how the teacher at his tiny village school read her pupils Our Island Story, sparking in him the lifelong fascination with history that informed his poetic career. He completed his education at Worcester College…
Poet
Seamus Heaney
B. 1939 D. 2013
Seamus Heaney (1939 – 2013) was the eldest child of nine born to a farming family in County Derry, Northern Ireland. He won a scholarship to St Columb’s College, Derry, beginning an academic career that would lead, through Queen’s University…
Poet
Ian Duhig
B. 1954
Ian Duhig (b. 1954) was the eighth of eleven children born to Irish parents with a liking for poetry. He has won the National Poetry Competition twice, and also the Forward Prize for Best Poem; his collection, The Lammas Hireling,…
Poet
David Gascoyne
B. 1916 D. 2001
David Gascoyne (1916-2001) was born in Harrow, the son of a bank manager, and educated at Salisbury Cathedral School. However, it didn’t take the young Gascoyne long to leave this conservative background behind, publishing his first poetry collection at the…
Poet
Vicki Feaver
B. 1943
Vicki Feaver (b. 1943) grew up in Nottingham “in a house of quarrelling women”, an emotional inheritance which finds later expression in her poetry. She studied Music at Durham University and English University College, London and worked as a lecturer…
Poet
U A Fanthorpe
B. 1929 D. 2009
U. A. Fanthorpe (1929 – 2009) spent her earliest years in Kent. She attended St Anne’s College Oxford afterwards becoming a teacher and ultimately Head of English at Cheltenham Ladies’ College. However, she only began writing when she turned her…
Poet
Anthony Thwaite
B. 1930 D. 2021
Anthony Thwaite (b. 1930 – d. 2021) was deeply involved in English literary life; in addition to 15 volumes of his own poetry, he was a a publisher and literary editor of magazines such as The Listener and the New…
Poet
Adrian Henri
B. 1932 D. 2000
Adrian Henri (b. 1932- d. 2000) was a much-loved figure in the world of performance poetry, fine art and beyond. Born in Birkenhead, Henri grew up in Rhyl, Wales, during the war years and trained as a painter at King’s…
Poem
Sestina: April - George Elliott Clarke
This poem is titled ‘Sestina: April’. It is a poem that follows the poetic form of the sestina. After gods, we surrender to lovers, Seeking beauty that always satisfies, To revel in sunlit obscenities, Every gay April, in the spring…
Poem
This poem is also a blues poem and it is titled ‘Hard Nails’, and I give this to my character George Hamilton. George Hamilton speaking, or singing, ‘Hard Nails’. Geo: Hard nails split my frail bones; Hard nails gouge my tomb…
Poem
(the can opener was invented forty-eight years after the tin can) When you asked me for a love poem, (another love poem) my thoughts were immediately drawn to the early days of the food canning industry – all those strangely…
Poem
At the Poetry Conference - Wendy Cope
Melancholy’s grape: today I’ve bitten it. I’m sad because you live so far away. I need to write a poem but I’ve written it Already: 1989, LA. Here we are again and I am crying. Nothing has changed except that…
Poem
The poem begins: I loved a man in Liverpool but he is gone now, and now I am here. And this ‘here’ is understood as the man-sized space occupied by the poet at the time of the poem, not the…