
Years ago, I was shortlisted for a poem in the internationally-acclaimed Bridport Prize competition.
To be honest, it wasn’t very good but it was a pleasing accomplishment because poems aren’t really my thing. This is probably because, despite studying them quite closely, I find them tricky to analyse, decipher and I always get a bit flustered with the rules.
It’s silly really, because I love the poetry in many song lyrics – I’m thinking Bob Dylan, Joni Mitchell, Ian Dury. I adore those lines in National Express by the Divine Comedy about the jolly hostess and her large behind…
Here’s one of my favourite Joni Mitchell numbers.
If that isn’t poetry, I don’t know what is.
I think perhaps it’s because I’ve studied poetry closely for a creative writing degree that it’s reinforced my natural – and lazy -resistance to anything that requires me to think rather than just imbibe through natural osmosis.
So I need to cast off the hang-ups and fear of getting it wrong and just enjoy poetry for its lyricism, rhythm, cadence and imagery. I should just go with the flow and embrace the sheer joy and beauty in hearing or reading a great poem.
So, on World Poetry Day, tell me – what are your favourite poems?
I like the Spike Milligan one about the worm:
Today I saw a little worm, wriggling on his belly. Perhaps he’d like to come inside and see what’s on the telly.
I like The Voice by Thomas Hardy. I like anything written by Christina Rossetti. I like this one by William Butler Yates:
He wishes for the cloths of heaven
Had I the heavens’ embroidered cloths,
Enwrought with golden and silver light,
The blue and the dim and the dark cloths
Of night and light and the half-light,
I would spread the cloths under your feet:
But I, being poor, have only my dreams;
I have spread my dreams under your feet;
Tread softly because you tread on my dreams.
But come to think of it, my favourite poem is Ithaka by Greek poet C P Cavafy. I saw somewhere that it was read at Jackie Kennedy’s funeral in May 1994.
Here it is read by the wonderful Sean Connery with music by Greece’s own Vangelis. Cheesy but profound.
That’s about it.
Love, Maddie x














