David Green

David Green (Books) is the imprint under which I publish booklets of my own poems, or did. The 'Collected Poems' are now available as a pdf. The website is now what it has become. It keeps me out of more trouble than it gets me into. I hope you find at least some of it worthwhile.

Sunday 29 September 2013

Music at Midnight

John Drury, Music at Midnight, The Life and Poetry of George Herbert (Allen Lane)

Divinity saturated his world....It followed that proofs or disproofs of God's existence just didn't arise: there was no place outside God where they could be contrived, nor any to which they could reasonably be addressed.

John Drury explains at an early stage that for George Herbert, God is everywhere and in everything and thus his relationship with God is the theme that dominates his poetry to the exclusion of almost all else. It is so absolute that the shifting interest of his poems is more in how he views the 'recalcitrant matter of human life'.
Drury makes the poem Love (III) central to Herbert's work, beginning with it and referring back to it regularly. There is no sound basis for dating the poems since they were only in manuscript until published after his death, as were Donne's and the poems of others, which was not unusual at the time, and so they are not calibrated against events in Herbert's life.
It comes as no surprise, of course, to find that Love is really about God but Herbert is devoted in style to a clarity and cleanness in his highly formal poetry that makes his 'mysticism' quite accessible. He is not a puritanical spiritualist, though, but open to pleasure, sensuality, music and good times. His attachment to the scriptures is equal to that of any Calvinist without it having the same effect on his morality.
The title of the book refers to an anecdote in which he helps a poor man with a poorer horse in distress on his way and is dirtied in the process but he explains that the knowledge that he played the part of such a good Samaritan will be like 'music at midnight' when he thinks back on it.
We get every indication from Izaak Walton, Aubrey and contemporary accounts of Herbert as a gifted, devoted and devout man who suffers illness from an early age before his untimely death but Drury does enough to detain him on this side of sainthood. In his career at Cambridge, he was eminent enough to take up the duties of Orator, involving writing official speeches, addresses and tributes. His flattery of Buckingham, 'the subject of the king's headlong and spectacular infatuation', was 'incongruous, to say the least' but more so when put together with the story a few pages later where, also with reference to Buckingham, he 'could also enjoy playing the cynical courtier with appropriate innuendo'. I'm sure we would have liked to have heard more about that.
Drury's account of the life is accompanied throughout by discussions of the poems in which he provides appreciative, workmanlike summaries. After a while both the poems and the summaries started to look a bit similar to me but there are times when Herbert's sustained devotion flows over into genuinely entertaining 'metaphysics', as in both Affliction (I) and Employment (II) in which he considers the prospect of becoming a tree as a solution to the problems of being a flawed, inadequate man in the face of an absolute, perfect God. In C20th atheist terms, this equates to existential anguish causing a Being-for-others to envy the condition of a Being-in-itself.
Herbert dies with still about 100 pages of his biography to go, a bit like Julius Caesar dying half way through the play Shakespeare wrote about him. Drury offers a long coda on such themes as Herbert's critical treatment since then and a consideration of Herbert's days and years.
I immediately became more of a fan of Coleridge, whose attitude seemed to pre-echo what I had been thinking, when he wrote,
G. Herbert is a true poet, but a poet sui generis, the merits of whose poems will never be felt without a sympathy with the mind and character of the man.
Drury says that 'sympathy with Herbert is not difficult'. But, in one sense, it is impossible.
Herbert's legacy was to foster a few minor imitators before Vaughan and Crashaw took up differing but similar lines and I suspect Vaughan is more likely to be my man in this specialist area. But when, in the C20th, the likes of Elizabeth Bishop and Helen Vendler are very sympathetic to Herbert then it looks like he does have the angels on his side.
There is a very minor inconsistency in John Drury's approach in the way the he takes time to helpfully explain to the reader such terms as 'conceit' and 'synecdoche', which I would have thought most readers of this book would be familiar with, but then he describes Abraham Cowley as 'eupeptic' and doesn't tell us what that means and so I have to look it up. I think it suggests that Cowley was of a generally happy disposition.
The book does what it has to do. It is neither Drury's or Herbert's fault that Herbert wasn't Wyatt. It will look good alongside such books as Stubbs' Donne, Bate's Clare, Donaldson's Jonson, Coote's Keats as well as all the accounts of Shakespeare, plus Motion's Larkin, Feinstein's Hughes, a few versions of Auden and even one of Mina Loy. I wonder whether to reorganize the bookshelves to make that possible.
I never used to read biographies. I was taught to think that the text was all that mattered but now we find out that Elizabeth Bishop said that,
the only real way to understand poetry is to know the life and beliefs of the poet.
And perhaps that is truer than it appeared to be when Roland Barthes prematurely announced the 'death of the author'.
All things considered, though, it hasn't done enough to promote Herbert to a higher position in my estimation. I just know more about him now and I am grateful for that.   

Saturday 28 September 2013

Friday 27 September 2013

Heaney Tribute Event

I will have to keep my ticket to see Seamus Heaney as a momento.

His lecture is to be replaced by a tribute event to include just about every relevant star name you could wish for, which is the least one might expect.

But you can't conjure a Seamus Heaney however fine the materials you try to do it from and a Wednesday night in November is no time to be getting the last coach home from London and so, to whoever is due to sit in B33, I'm sorry I missed you.

I'm sure it will be a wonderful evening.

Coming Back Soon - The Saturday Nap

As the year hurtles towards October and the return of some proper jump racing, it will soon be time for The Saturday Nap feature to resume here on Friday evenings. In my role as amateur horse racing journalist, we will have a quick look at the weekend prospects and select one horse with the ultimate intention of showing a profit by Boxing Day. Two years ago that profit was marginal but last year those who stayed the distance and didn't abandon the project, which was an option with two weeks to go, would have had a very tidy 30% return on their stakes.
The strategy is first to pick the right race, which is often a novice hurdle, and then a horse which is usually from one of the major stables and thus we are looking for anything from even money to 3/1 as our odds of reward. We will possibly have a punt on a big handicap to see if we can go well clear of breaking even if the opportunity arises.
We might start next week or it might be the week after but if the tip isn't here on Friday night then let's say it will be there by 11 a.m. on Saturday morning.
By way of a preview I might mention the ante-post portfolio which has a few bets lying in wait for Cheltenham next March, which is where nearly everything is aimed these days notwithstanding the proliferation of festivals in which Aintree is then followed by Punchestown. I think even Yarmouth had a festival a couple of weeks ago.
The New One is the horse I'm looking forward to the most, progressing into his first senior season with the Champion Hurdle as the obvious target. I am happy enough with the 10/1 I have there and will augment it at shorter prices as soon as there is more evidence that he will be a genuine prospect but he is surely that already.
Last year's Gold Cup selection, Silvianiaco Conti, was travelling well in behind Bobsworth when tipping over and so at 8/1 looks fair value in a race is hard to win twice in two years whoever you are. At Fisher's Cross is another big favourite and he is added to the other two to make a Cheltenham treble which multiplies 8/1, 6/1 and 4/1 very attractively.
But the biggest question is what route will Sprinter Sacre take through the season. Quite possibly the best horse I have ever seen, there seems inadequate adventure in keeping him to two mile races. He saw off Cue Card with the same sort of majesty over two and a half miles and so his quote for the Gold Cup is interesting but only something to be looked at just yet. He would surely go to a King George first and I hope that will be this year. Maybe the more gruelling Cheltenham championship will wait another year and he will retain the two mile Champion Chase this season.
This all features increasingly in one's thoughts as my most successful year ever as a punter approaches its climax. This is the time of year I expect to do best. I have given back a chunk of this year's profit in recent weeks and so the first objective is to restore some of that before seeing if we can't end 2013 on a joyously lucrative high.

Wednesday 25 September 2013

It's late September


and I really should be back at school


Wednesday 18 September 2013

Poetry Pot Hunt


And the winner of the 2013 Portsmouth Poetry Society Competition was, ahem, me.

It seems that it is 7 years since I last won a prize for writing poems. But, there again, you don't win anything if you don't enter anything.

The Italian Chapel, Orkney was judged the winner in a field of 9 poems on a theme of 'recycling'.

I congratulated the judge, who was not present, on a fine choice. It is a privilege to become a part of the history of the society and join the list of winners of the Rummage Cup, so called because it was bought for the purpose from a rummage sale many years ago.

The poem is included in The Perfect Murder.

The T.S.Eliot Prize Tour - Portsmouth

T.S. Eliot Prize Tour, Portsmouth Grammar School, Sept 17th.

Portsmouth hosted the first of ten dates on the T.S. Eliot Prize Tour, marking the twentieth anniversary of the prize. The Grammar School library, or one of them, was an opulent setting with its gold chandelier and luxury curtains and my misgivings that my ticket was only number 12 were dispelled when the room was comfortably full with an audience of perhaps 60.
Maggie Sawkins represented Portsmouth impressively. I had forgotten how good she is, actually, and her stock rose further when she mentioned that her favourite pop group in the 70's was the inestimable Darts before resding her poem on the subject, Come Back My Love.
Tim Liardet was engaging and, like all these poets, confirmed that a poetry reading these days is no longer so much the inward-looking self indulgence of distracted nonchalance but an open, entertaining explication of the work. He finished with some new poems on the theme of self-portraits but revealed that his next book was coming soon, meaning Spring 2015 which necessitates it being with his editor by Spring 2014. Good heavens. I thought you put together a Word document, e-mailed it to the printers and the book was ready later in the same week.
W.N. (Bill) Herbert stood in for the indisposed Penelope Shuttle and was animated and generous in performance of poems from Omnesia. Among other things, he will be remembered as the first poet I ever saw reading from an i-pad.
And, in the way of things that you somehow get the impression that the biggest name goes last, George Szirtes was tender and lively, exploring the beauty of words in themselves in his list poem of imaginary colours and other poems from his latest book, Bad Machine, the bad machine being the body that we both delight in and are hostage to.
Portsmouth was glad to see such poets and they were well worth supporting. It would be nice to have similar events here more often but it is, of course, down to those of us who want them to put them on. But one could not have wished to be presented with a more companionable group of poets.

Signed Poetry Books - George Szirtes

I don't know why I had formed the impression that George Szirtes was a difficult poet. It certainly turns out not to be true on the evidence of this fine book and a warm and welcoming reading in Portsmouth.

Signed Poetry Books - Tim Liardet

The visit of the T.S. Eliot Prize tour to Portsmouth not only provided the city with a fine evening of poetry readings but enhanced the signed books collection, too.

Monday 16 September 2013

Signed Poetry Books - Roy Fisher

Just arrived is Roy Fisher's The Long and the Short of It, which is signed.

Sunday 15 September 2013

Ticket to Ryde

And so today I realized an ambition. Not a lifelong ambition but a minor one that has grown up in the last few years. I wanted to go on the hovercraft. But research a few weeks ago established that it cost £17.50 for a return ticket, two rides of about 10 minutes each, and it didn't appeal as good value. However, once I mentioned this, a colleague and Isle of Wight resident said he had some complimentary tickets and gave me two which I thought was kind since all he'll get back is a booklet of poems.
There is an episode of  The Royle Family in which Nana mentions that she has never been on this or that form of transport so Jim eventually asks, 'is there any form of transport that you have been on?' I feel like her but less so now that I've been on a hovercraft as well as having been transported by car, bike (including tandem), motorbike, ship, pedalo, gondola, hydrofoil, aeroplane, chair-lift, roller-coaster, spacehopper, scooter, bus, coach, tram, trolley-bus, donkey, horse and cart and Saturn V rocket. Well, no, not that last one.

Once in Ryde, I thought I had better make use of the visit and so walked to Quarr Abbey and by happy accident witnessed the office held in the church at 1 pm which I took to be Sext. It was a strange affair, with some chant and response, that lasted not much more than 10 minutes, and one can see from where some football crowds developed their sustained end-to-end barrage of 'Red & White Army'. I hadn't realized that quite so many of the faithful at places like The County Ground, Swindon, were lapsed monks. While it clearly means a great deal to them, it impresses the atheist observer mainly through its timeless recognition of ritual, something done entirely because it is done and that is that.
But if that free show didn't attract a bumper attendance then the tea shop was doing a brisk trade which makes one wonder which way round they would prefer it- a packed congregation for Sext paying only donations and an empty cafe or the way it really is.
The ride bumped and swayed a little bit, less so on the way back than on the way there and it is not noticeable when the craft lands on its concrete slipway and so one concludes after a new experience just a few weeks before one's 54th birthday that the spray and minor drama of its launch onto the water make it look more exciting from the outside that it feels like being on the inside. I suppose that could be said of a few things.

Saturday 14 September 2013

Monday 9 September 2013

The Perfect Murder

The Perfect Murder is available this week, a month ahead of its official publication date but readers of this website can have it pre-release.
14 poems, 4 years after the previous title, is exactly on schedule. It is possibly my best booklet yet without necessarily having my very best poems in it but perhaps it has the least wrong with it. Thanks to input from a helpful printer, it has somewhat better design standards compared to its predecessors and that includes a nice gloss cover.
The poems are-


Twilight
The Perfect Murder
The Lepidopterist’s Wife
Not at All
Scent
Fiction
Ночью по городу
An Indiscretion
The Book Club Murder
World Of Its Own
The Italian Chapel, Orkney
Passing
A Somewhere Violin
Michael
 
It is listed at £2.50, you can e-mail me for one at dg217.888@ntlworld.com and you don't have to pay for it if you don't feel like it. It is quite a dull book. It doesn't invite the reader to 'see the world in a new way' or deliver a succession of shocks to their expectations and so it isn't very fashionable. In fact there might be some who would say it isn't poetry at all. 

Friday 6 September 2013

View from the Boundary

So, what would be the proper thing to do when asked to dance in a job interview. I've thought about it quite a lot. Although it would not be a factor in making one's decision, the music on offer on the item in the news this week was All Around the World by Daft Punk.
I will be ready for it now if it ever happens but wouldn't have been without this prior warning. I remember a few years ago when a story came out that schoolchildren had been included on the interview panel assessing potential teachers at a school and one of them had asked a candidate to dance to a Michael Jackson record.
I have decided that the best course of action is to say,  Put the music on, then and then remain motionless in your chair, staring at the interviewer who had issued the invitation. If and when they point out that you aren't dancing you can proceed to question their definition of 'dance', examine notions of stillness, non-dance and anti-dance with them and put it to them that if they expected dance to involve movement then perhaps they had a rigidly mainstream perception of the medium.
And then it turns out that one possible motive behind asking the question is to see whether the candidate will stand their ground and be confident enough to refuse.
So perhaps I got it right after all.
I'm not completely averse to dancing even if I'm not as prone to it as I was a few decades ago but it has always been something I prefer to do when I feel like it and not to order. And it's not the only thing.
-
Portsmouth has some poetry events of note forthcoming in the Autumn, mainly thanks to Tongues and Grooves who are marking their first 10 years. George Szirtes, Penelope Shuttle and Tim Liardet will be joined by Maggie Sawkins for this, http://www.poetrybooks.co.uk/projects/43/ and it should be worth supporting.
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And The Perfect Murder, my new title, is 'with the printers', undergoing some sort of surgery by negotiation at present, but I'm sure it will look good and within a reasonable distance of what I hoped it might look like when it is finished.
The ISBN system might have moved on since I last had anything to do with it, though. I've submitted the same old hard copy form as I have done ever since 1990 but there's no sign of the title anywhere on the internet. Oh, no. I hope I don't have a labyrinthine journey through some vast bureaucracy to sort that out. Possibly not, there are still a few organisations that one can ring up and find a very helpful person at the other end.
Otherwise I might have to ask if it would help if I danced for them and then just sit and stare until they give way.