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New Collected Poems: Iain Crichton-Smith [Pehme köide]

  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 546 pages, Illustrations
  • Ilmumisaeg: 27-Jan-2011
  • Kirjastus: Carcanet Press Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 1857549600
  • ISBN-13: 9781857549607
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  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 546 pages, Illustrations
  • Ilmumisaeg: 27-Jan-2011
  • Kirjastus: Carcanet Press Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 1857549600
  • ISBN-13: 9781857549607
Teised raamatud teemal:
Lain Crichton Smith's Collected Poems was awarded the Saltire Prize when it was published in 1992. This completely revised and enlarged edition includes seventy additional poems, mostly from the four books the poet published in the 1990's: Ends and Beginnings (1994), The Human Face (1996), The Leaf and The Marble (1998) and A Country for Old Men and My Canadian Uncle (2000), together with extracts from his 1971 translation of Sorley Maclean's epic Dain do Eimhir agus Dain Eile (Poems to Eimhir, 1943), a founding moment of modern Gaelic poetry.

The new introduction by Matthew McGuire of the Department of Scottish Literature, University of Glasgow, illuminates the range of Crichton Smith's achievement as a poet of Scotland and Europe, rooted in local tradition and, in Edwin Morgan's words, 'open to the whole intellectual world'.

It is the island that goes away, not we not leave it. Like an unbearable thought it sinks beyond assiduous reasoning light and wringing hands, or, as a flower roots deep into the ground, it works its darkness into the gay winds that blow about us in a later spirit. from `The Departing Island'

Iain Crichton Smith's Collected Poems was awarded the Saltire Prize when it was published in 1992. This completely revised and enlarged edition includes seventy additional poems, mostly from the four books the poet published in the 1990s: Ends and Beginnings (1994), The Human Face (1996), The Leaf and The Marble (1998) and A Country for Old Men and My Canadian Uncle (2000), together with extracts from his 1971 translation of Sorley Maclean's epic Dain do Eimhir agus Dain Eile (Poems to Eimhir, 1943), a founding moment of modern Gaelic poetry.

The new introduction by Matthew McGuire of the Department of Scottish Literature, University of Glasgow, illuminates the range of Crichton Smith's achievement as a poet of Schotland and Europe, rooted in local tradition and, in Edwin Morgan's words, `open to the whole intellectual world'.

Addressing expansive themes from love and power to submission and death this collection of poetry, culled from the author's impressive 40 year career, employs a tender, moving voice. Encapsulating the splintered lifestyles of the islands in northern Scotland, these works carry a central theme of culture divided while touching on subjects such as the tyranny of religion, the cramped life in a small community, and the struggles faced by men and women in a world defined by denials.
Introduction xix
Further Reading xxix
from The Long River (1955)
The Dedicated Spirits
1(1)
'Some days were running legs'
2(1)
Poem of Lewis
3(1)
Anchored Yachts on a Stormy Day
4(1)
From The White Noon (1959)
False Summer Leans
5(1)
In Luss Churchyard
6(1)
Highland Sunday
7(1)
End of the Season on a Stormy Day – Oban
8(1)
School Teacher
9(1)
The Widow
10(3)
Statement by a Responsible Spinster
13(1)
Night Walk 1
14(1)
Night Walk 2
14(1)
Seagulls
15(2)
Room for Living
17(1)
Beautiful Shadow
18(1)
For the Unknown Seamen of the 1939-45 War Buried in Iona Churchyard
18(1)
The Window
19(2)
From Thistles And Roses (1961)
Old Woman ('And she, being old fed from a mashed plate')
21(1)
Luss Village
22(1)
A Note on Puritans
22(1)
Schoolgirl on Speech-day in the Open Air
23(1)
Dying is not Setting Out
24(1)
John Knox
25(1)
About that Mile
25(2)
Sunday Morning Walk
27(1)
Love Songs of a Puritan
28(2)
Kierkegaard
30(1)
By Ferry to the Island
31(1)
Culloden and After
32(1)
A Young Highland Girl Studying Poetry
33(1)
For Angus MacLeod
34(1)
Studies in Power
35(1)
Home
36(1)
For My Mother
37(1)
Deer On The High Hills (1962) 38(13)
From The Law And The Grace (1965)
Old Woman (Tour thorned back')
51(1)
The Witches
52(1)
Two Girls Singing
53(1)
Old Highland Lady Reading Newspaper
53(1)
Lenin
54(1)
The Argument
55(1)
Johnson in the Highlands
56(1)
Face of an Old Highland Woman
57(1)
The Clearances
57(1)
'It is the old'
58(1)
At the Firth of Lorne
58(1)
The Law and the Grace
59(1)
Hume
60(1)
Rythm
60(1)
Preparation for a Death
61(1)
Encounter in a School Corridor
62(1)
To Forget the Dead
63(1)
The Chess Player
63(1)
Envoi (Remember me when you come into your kingdom)
64(1)
From Three Regional Voices (1968)
The Departing Island
65(1)
Old Woman ('Overwhelmed with kindnesses...')
66(1)
Money-man Only
66(1)
Returning Exile (Home he came after Canada)
67(1)
She Teaches Lear
68(3)
From From Bourgeois Land (1969)
Entering Your House
71(1)
Hamlet
72(1)
Epitaph
73(1)
'It was the heavy jokes'
74(1)
In Youth
74(1)
The Wind Roars
75(1)
Young Girl Singing Psalm
76(1)
At the Sale
77(1)
'More than twenty years ago'
78(2)
'I take it from you'
80(1)
'To hell with this poetry reading'
80(1)
'What's your Success?'
80(1)
'Children, follow the dwarfs'
81(1)
Ben Dorain (1969). Translated From The Gaelic Of Duncan Ban Macintyre 82(19)
From Lines Review (1969)
Old Woman with Flowers
101(1)
Glasgow
101(1)
The House We Lived In
102(1)
Return to the Council House
103(1)
School Sports, at the Turnstiles
104(1)
Mr M.
105(1)
In the Classics Room
106(1)
Hear us, O Lord
107(1)
Homage to George Orwell
108(3)
From Transparencies: A Sequence
111(2)
Shall Gaelic Die?
113(6)
From Poems To Eimhir (1971). Translated From The Gaelic Of Sorley Maclean 119(10)
From Hamlet In Autumn (1972)
On a Summer's Day
129(1)
Dead for a Rat
130(1)
Dear Hamlet
131(1)
How often I feel like you
132(1)
Russian Poem
133(5)
Party
138(1)
Dipping Your Spoon
139(1)
Shane
139(1)
Chaplin
140(1)
End of Schooldays
140(1)
For Keats
141(1)
For John Maclean, Headmaster, and Classical and Gaelic Scholar
142(4)
Gaelic Songs
146(1)
Not to Islands
147(1)
For Ann in America in the Autumn
148(1)
In the Chinese Restaurant
148(1)
The Small Snags
149(1)
Children in Winter
150(1)
Lear and Carroll
150(1)
Give Me Your Hand
151(1)
Christmas, 1971
152(1)
The Letter
152(1)
In the Time of the Useless Pity
153(1)
Finis not Tragedy
154(1)
Everything Is Silent
155(1)
From Love Poems And Elegies (1972)
'You lived in Glasgow'
156(2)
'You told me once'
158(1)
'My sailor father'
158(1)
'That island formed you'
159(1)
The Space-ship
159(1)
On Looking at the Dead
160(1)
'Of the uncomplicated dairy girl'
161(1)
'Tinily a star goes down'
162(1)
Contrasts
162(1)
Moonlight over the island
163(1)
'The chair in which you've sat'
164(1)
Argument
165(3)
'The world's a minefield'
168(1)
The place without music
168(1)
At the Scott Exhibition, Edinburgh Festival
169(1)
From Penguin Modern Poets 21 (1972)
By the Sea
170(9)
Jean Brodie's Children
179(1)
If You Are About to Die Now
179(2)
The White Air of March
181(13)
From Orpheus And Other Poems (1974)
The Island ('And as for that island...')
194(1)
In the Dark
194(1)
Orpheus
195(6)
Breughel
201(1)
Poem for Auden
201(2)
The Glass of Water
203(1)
From Poems For Donalda (1974)
Helplessly
204(1)
The Present
204(1)
The Shadows
205(1)
Tonight
206(2)
From The Permanent Island (1975). Translated from the author's own Gaelic
Young Girl
208(1)
You are at the bottom of my mind
208(1)
Going Home
209(1)
To an Old Woman
209(1)
The Old Woman (Tonight she is sitting by a window...')
210(1)
At the Cemetery
211(1)
At the Stones of Callanish
211(1)
What Is Wrong?
211(1)
Eight Songs for a New Ceilidh
212(2)
Oban
214(2)
Sighting the Mountains of Harris
216(1)
The Sea and the Rocks
216(1)
Song of Remembrance
216(1)
1941-1942
217(1)
The Minister
217(1)
The Rain
217(1)
Song
218(1)
Love Song
218(1)
The Highlands
218(1)
Luss
218(1)
Bareness
219(1)
On the Street
219(1)
Innocence
219(1)
The Island (There is an island...')
219(1)
When We Were Young
220(1)
Poem ('Liberal, Labour or Conservative...')
220(1)
My Poetry
220(1)
One Girl
221(1)
Freud
221(1)
The White Swan
222(1)
The Little Old Lady
222(1)
Conversation
222(1)
The Melodeon of the Spirit
223(1)
Predestination ('If I had done that...')
223(1)
For Derick Thomson
224(2)
The Prodigal Son (Under the stars of grief...')
226(1)
The Poppy
226(1)
Saturday
227(1)
Deirdre
227(1)
The Heroes
227(1)
Autumn Song
228(1)
The Fool
228(1)
To My Mother
228(1)
The Old Woman (The postman will come tonight...')
229(1)
On a Beautiful Day
229(1)
The Stone
229(1)
Raven
230(1)
On a Misty Evening
230(1)
The TV
231(3)
From The Notebooks Of Robinson Crusoe And Other Poems (1975)
My Uncle
234(2)
The Prodigal Son ('All day,' he said, 'I've been trying to write a play')
236(1)
Ceilidh
237(1)
The Sound of Music
238(1)
Incident ('She watched him...')
239(1)
Chinese Poem
240(3)
The Notebooks of Robinson Crusoe
243(5)
From In The Middle (1977)
In Yellow
248(1)
When Day is Done
248(1)
The Torches
249(1)
My Child
249(1)
The Chair
250(1)
The Scream
251(1)
Women
252(1)
Tears Are Salt
253(1)
The Old School Books
254(1)
Clouds
255(1)
None Is the Same as Another
255(1)
From Emigrants (1983). Translated From The Author's Own Gaelic
Lewis
256(1)
The Herring Girls
257(1)
Climbing and Climbing
257(1)
We Will Walk
258(1)
Berries
258(1)
When I am Reading
259(1)
On an Autumn Day
259(1)
Vancouver
260(1)
You
261(1)
Let us Raise
261(1)
From The Exiles (1984)
Returning Exile (You who come home do not tell me)
262(1)
There is no Sorrow
262(1)
Next Time
263(1)
The Exiles. Translated from the author's own Gaelic
264(1)
Always
265(1)
In the Spring
265(1)
Youth
266(1)
Australia
266(2)
Prince Charles
268(1)
No Return
269(1)
Reading Shakespeare
270(1)
Speech for Prospero
271(1)
'You'll take a bath'
272(1)
Autumn ('Autumn again. A wide-eyed absence in')
273(1)
Owl and Mouse
273(1)
'Iolaire'
274(1)
For Poets Writing in English over in Ireland
275(2)
Lost
277(1)
Hallowe'en ('Someone was playing the piano...')
278(1)
Poem ('It is always evening in a German poem')
278(1)
The Survivors
279(1)
The 'Ordinary' People
280(1)
At the Funeral of Robert Garioch
280(1)
Who Daily
281(1)
Envoi (There are)
282(1)
A Life (1986)
Lewis 1928-1945
283(8)
Aberdeen University 1945-1949
291(5)
National Service 1950-1952
296(3)
Clydebank and Dumbarton 1952-1955
299(3)
Oban 1955-1982
302(10)
Taynuilt 1982–
312(13)
The Village And Other Poems (1989)
The Village
325(31)
Nothing Will Happen
356(1)
Not in Heaven
356(1)
Helensburgh
357(1)
The Drowned
358(1)
Villagers
358(1)
Photograph of Emigrants
359(1)
Incubator
360(1)
The Story
361(1)
At the Party
362(1)
After the Edinburgh Festival
363(1)
Stupidly
364(1)
In this Pitiless Age
365(1)
Slowly
366(1)
Meeting
366(1)
Marx
367(1)
The Women
368(1)
In Belfast
368(1)
Girl and Child
369(1)
Speeding-up
369(1)
TV
370(1)
Christmas
371(1)
The Country of Pain
372(1)
Poor Artist
373(1)
Against Apartheid 1
374(1)
Against Apartheid 2
375(1)
Snow
376(2)
Cat and Mouse
378(1)
The Leaves and Us
378(1)
In the Garden
379(1)
Rose
379(1)
Autumn Stubble
380(1)
The Cat
380(1)
Early Spring
381(1)
The Black Chest
381(1)
The Traveller
382(1)
Farewell my Brother
383(3)
Listen
386(1)
From The Birlinn (uncollected, 1977). Translated from the Gaelic of Alexander Macdonald (eighteenth century)
The Storm
387(7)
Roman Poems (uncollected, 1979)
The Invasion
394(2)
Marcus Aurelius Speaks
396(3)
The Atoms
399(2)
From Ends And Beginnings (1994)
Poetry
401(1)
The Bible
401(1)
Old Lady ('All your sap is thickened towards survival')
402(2)
As Time Draws Near
404(2)
Funeral
406(2)
An Old Man Praying
408(1)
Dying Man
409(1)
In Hospital
410(1)
Dogmas
411(1)
Come, Fool
412(1)
From the Mad Ward 412(16)
London
414(1)
Aberdeen
415(1)
Putting out the Ashes
416(1)
Hallowe'en (This small child has an old man's face')
417(1)
The Fence
417(1)
Welcome
418(1)
The Gaelic Proverb
418(1)
The Poet ('Chained at his desk')
419(1)
Milton
419(1)
The Scholar
420(1)
Dream
421(2)
The Young Girls
423(1)
Books
424(1)
Others
425(1)
Insomnia
426(2)
From The Human Face (1996)
'That ethnic differences should'
428(5)
From The Leaf And The Marble (1998) 433(34)
From A Country For Old Men (2000)
The Old Man
467(1)
Those Who Talk to the Wind
468(2)
Autumn ('Autumn reminds one')
470(1)
Names
471(1)
Ashes
472(1)
Old Lady ('I salute this gallant old lady')
472(1)
On a Photograph by Dan Morrison
473(1)
Shorts
474(2)
Old Folks' Party
476(1)
In Winter
476(1)
Neighbour
477(1)
MacDiarmid
477(1)
All Day
478(1)
The Old Men
478(1)
Interviewer
479(1)
Time to Stop
480(1)
The Old Woman ('It took me a while to push her down')
480(1)
Parkhead
481(1)
For A.J. Macleod
482(1)
For Edwin Morgan
482(1)
Old Woman ('I see the old woman...')
483(1)
Leaves
483(1)
Not a Day for Dante
484(1)
Page after Page
484(1)
He Spoke
485(1)
From My Canadian Uncle (2000) 486(6)
Uncollected Poems
Crofter's Wife
492(1)
From the Train
493(1)
Art
493(1)
The Lesson
494(1)
Shylock
495(1)
Lear
495(1)
The Forest of Arden
496(1)
On an Icy Day
497(1)
On Seeing a Russian Version of Richard III at the Edinburgh Festival
497(1)
Van Gogh and the Visitors
498(1)
In Paisley Library
499(1)
Return to Aberdeen
500(1)
The Old Lady
501(1)
Predestination (The tram ran on rails')
502(1)
The Red Horse
502(1)
I Remember I Remember
503(1)
My Brother
503(1)
Old Characters
504(1)
Martha
505(1)
The Unemployed
505(1)
Autumn ('Let me read again the autumn newspapers')
506(1)
Reminder
506(1)
For Peter, Leaving for the RAF
507(1)
The Tape Runs
508(1)
Sometimes When I Am Alone
509(1)
On National Service
509(2)
Hallowe'en ('Hunting for apples')
511(1)
Top of the Pops
512(1)
By the Sea in Autumn
512(1)
The Autumn of Experience
513(1)
'She goes off to be a missionary'
514(1)
Fairy Story
515(1)
Morality Play in Cambridge in the Open Air
516(1)
At Ely Cathedral
516(1)
Incident ('As we sit in the theatre...')
517(1)
Those
518(1)
'The Tiger' by Franz Marc
518(1)
Don Quixote' by Daumier
519(1)
Detail from 'The Triumph of Death' by Breughel
519(2)
Goya
521(1)
Botticelli's 'Primavera'
521(1)
The Cry of the Woman
522(1)
The Poet ('I have outdistanced the music')
522(1)
'If in this summer'
523(2)
Index of Titles 525(11)
Index of First Lines 536
IAIN CRICHTON SMITH was born in 1928 on the island of Lewis. Educated at Aberdeen University, he became a teacher after national service. In 1977 he resigned to write full time. He received many awards, including the OBE in 1980. He died in 1998. Carcanet publish his Selected Poems (1985), Collected Poems (1992, paper-back 1996), Ends and Beginnings (1995), The Human Face (1997), The Leaf and the Marble (1998) and Selected Stories (1990).