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The female poets who have earned their laurels

Written By Unknown on Monday, March 3, 2014 | 2:10 PM


A celebration of the UK and Ireland's female poet laureates as part of International Women's Day



• Hear Carol Ann Duffy read her poem Mrs Schofield's GCSE


All five poet laureates of the United Kingdom, Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland this year are women. On the eve of International Women's Day this Saturday, they will perform together for the first time at the Women of the World festival at London's South Bank Centre. Here we reproduce work by the national poets of England, Wales, Scotland and the Republic of Ireland.


Carol Ann Duffy, poet laureate


Mrs Schofield's GCSE


(Penned in response to her work being removed from a GCSE curriculum)


You must prepare your bosom for his knife,

said Portia to Antonio in which

of Shakespeare's Comedies? Who killed his wife,

insane with jealousy? And which Scots witch

knew Something wicked this way comes? Who said

Is this a dagger which I see? Which Tragedy?

Whose blade was drawn which led to Tybalt's death?

To whom did dying Caesar say Et tu? And why?

Something is rotten in the state of Denmark – do you

know what this means? Explain how poetry

pursues the human like the smitten moon

above the weeping, laughing earth; how we

make prayers of it. Nothing will come of nothing:

speak again. Said by which King? You may begin.


Reprinted with permission from The Bees (Picador).


Gillian Clarke, national poet of Wales


Polar


Snowlight and sunlight, the lake glacial.

Too bright to open my eyes

in the dazzle and doze

of a distant January afternoon.


It's long ago and the house naps in the plush silence

of a house asleep, like absence,

I'm dreaming on the white bear's shoulder,

paddling the slow hours, my fingers in his fur.


His eyes are glass, each hair a needle of light.

He's pegged by his claws to the floor like a shirt on the line.

He is a soul. He is what death is. He is transparency.

a loosening floe on the sea.


But I want him alive.

I want him fierce

with belly and breath and growl and beating heart,

I want him dangerous,


I want to follow him over the snows

between the immaculate earth and now,

between the silence and the shot that rang

over the ice at the top of the globe,


when the map of the earth was something we knew by heart,

and they had not shot the bear,

had not loosed the ice,

had not, had not …


Reprinted with permission from Ice (Carcanet Press).


Liz Lochhead, Scots makar – the national poet for Scotland


In the Mid Midwinter


("'Tis the year's midnight, and it is the day's" – from John Donne's A Nocturnal upon St Lucy's Day, being the Shortest Day).


At midday on the year's midnight

into my mind came

I saw the new moon late yestreen

wi the auld moon in her airms though, no,

there is no moon of course,

there's nothing very much of anything to speak of

in the sky except a gey dreich greyness

rain-laden over Glasgow and today

there is the very least of even this for us to get

but

the light comes back

the light always comes back

and this begins tomorrow with however many minutes

more of sun and serotonin.

Meanwhile

there will be the winter moon for us to love the longest,

fat in the frosty sky among the sharpest stars,

and lines of old songs we can't remember

why we know

or when first we heard them

will aye come back

once in a blue moon to us

unbidden,

bless us with their long-travelled light.


Reprinted with permission from A Choosing (Polygon Birlinn).


Paula Meehan, Ireland's professor of poetry


Hannah, Grandmother

for Hannah McCabe


Coldest day yet of November

her voice close in my ear –


tell them priests nothing.


Was I twelve? Thirteen?


Filthy minded.


Keep your sins to yourself.


Don't be giving them a thrill.


Dirty oul feckers.


As close as she came to the birds and the bees

on her knees in front of the Madonna,

Our Lady of the Facts of Life


beside the confessional –

oak door closing like a coffin lid


neatly carpentered

waxed and buffed.


In the well made box of this poem

her voice dies.


She closes her eyes


and lowers her brow to her joined hands.

Prays hard:


woman to woman.


Reprinted with permission from Painting Rain (Carcanet Press).


WOW Laureates Night is at theQueen Elizabeth Hall, South Bank Centre, London SE1 on Friday 7 March.








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