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Festschrift for Maurice Rutherford

Tuesday, 8 November 2022 at 13:18

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Celebrating a Century: a Festschrift for Maurice Rutherford,

edited by Carol Rumens and John Lucas

is now available from Shoestring Press.

The anthology contains five of my Rilke versions and work by various of Maurice's admirers, including Mary Aherne, John Alderton. James Booth, Phil Bowen, Malcolm Carson, Gillian Clarke, Andy Croft, Robert Edric, Robert Etty, Felix Hodcraft, Angela Leithton, John Lucas, John Osbourne, Carlol Rumens, Barrie Rutter, Laurence Sail, Matt Simpson, SarajhStutt, Malcolm Watson and David Wheatley.

For the Shoestring book:

Celebrating a Century: A Festschrift for Maurice Rutherford (shoestring-press.com)

Here's a link to the Maurice Rutherford website where you can find some of Maurice's poems.

Painting in Beverley Exhibition

Wednesday, 21 September 2022 at 11:20

Central Hall, University of York,91cm x 107cm. Oil on canvas. 2020

My painting of a cyclist at York University, done when I was a Royal Literary Fellow there will be exhibited in Beverley Art Gallery's 23rd Annual Open Exhibition, 24 September 2022 to 7 January 2023. There is a larger version of the image in the Paintings portfolio.

Central Hall, University of York,91cm x 107cm. Oil on canvas. 2020

 

 

 

 

"The Cemetery by the Sea" by Paul Valery (1871-1945)

Wednesday, 21 September 2022 at 10:03

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*"Le Cimetière Marin"

Paul Valery

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This peaceful roof, its tombs in long buckled lines:
as noon performs its daily alchemy,
doves flicker up from stones through tall blue pines.
And I am here. All this now glows for me:
the sea, the sea, once more transformed by fire;
a moment’s calm, beyond small wants, desire.

This is how my version of Paul Valery's longish poem "Le Cimetière Marin", recently featured in the Tupelo Quarterly, begins.

The poem is part of ny collection French Leave: versions and perversions which will appear from Broken Sleep Books in 2023.

For the full version clink on the link:

from French Leave: versions and perversions - by Cliff Forshaw - Tupelo Quarterly

RE:VERB online launch and reading

Wednesday, 27 July 2022 at 12:29

RE:VERB

RE:VERB is one of the collections featured in the Broken Sleep Books online launch on THURSDAY 28 JULY at 1930. For details follow the link.

Broken Sleep Books July Launch Tickets, Thu 28 Jul 2022 at 19:30 Eventbrite

For a preview of the book and a selection of poems:

Cliff Forshaw - RE:VERB Broken Sleep Books

 

Poetry Wales article on RE:VERB

Friday, 1 July 2022 at 10:26

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My article on "How I wrote RE:VERB" has just appeared on the Poetry Wales website. Click on the link below to read:

Cliff Forshaw: How I Wrote 'RE:VERB' - Poetry Wales

A previous article on the project appeared on the Royal Literary Fund website. 

Reversifying Rimbaud - The Royal Literary Fund (rlf.org.uk)

The RLF website also has an article of mine on painting and poetry:

Ut Pictura Poesis - The Royal Literary Fund (rlf.org.uk)

 

RE:VERB launch

Friday, 1 July 2022 at 10:05

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RE:VERB is due from Broken Sleep at the end of July. If you click on the link you can see further details and also peek inside at the first few pages.

Cliff Forshaw - RE:VERB Broken Sleep Books

 

HOLE

Friday, 6 May 2022 at 11:19

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Several longish fragments of my satire Hole have appeared in About Larkin - Journal of The Philip Larkin Society (No. 53. April 2022). The poem features Larkin as a Dante-figure leading the poet through a contemporary Hell. The fragments are accompanied by my paintings of Larkin, who famously hated what he called "the myth-kitty", guiding his bicycle through various mythic landcapes. These paintings feature elsewhere on the blog in the Larkinland section.

The full poem appeared on The Common website several years ago, around the time Hull was gearing up to be City of Culture. Unfortunately that on-line version didn't manage to preserve the formatting of the finale, and so I'm please to see the formatting restored to this print version. Here's a glimpse of the last page. The full poem (with different paintings)  is accessible here: http://www.thecommononline.org/features/march-2016-poetry-feature

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