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Louis MacNeice
Corner Seat Suspended in a moving night Windows between you and the world Museums Museums offer us, running from among the buses, Aubade Having bitten on life like a sharp apple Having felt with fingers that the sky is blue, Not the twilight of the gods but a precise dawn The Sunlight On The Garden The sunlight on the garden Our freedom as free lances The sky was good for flying And not expecting pardon, Comments And another thing: it's nearly impossible to find an anthology of MacNiece's work. I haven't actually checked Amazon, I'll admit, but I can't find one in the Portland area. There are probably a dozen of his poems scattered around the web, though. Maybe more. I once compiled all I could find for a never-published weblog entry. Good stuff. Amazon has a volume of selected works (in that Faber&Faber series with the patterned covers with a pencil sketch of the author, they're generally pretty good), but the Collected is priced at $116 so I wonder if it's not out of print pretty much everywhere. You are welcome to borrow my copy -- purchased from the U Qld library when they inexplicably ditched it -- of his Collected Poems. Just email me a snailmail address and I'll post it to you, you can post it back when you're done photocopying, oops, I mean reading it. There are also copies at http://www.alibris.com for not much, e.g. $12.25 for that Faber & Faber "Selected Poems" book, among others. Ralf Post a comment |
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!!!!!
The Sunlight on the Garden is perhaps my single most favorite poem, first heard on Garrison Keillor's "The Writer's Almanac" several years ago.
In fact, I just composed an entry this morning (for posting later this week) that makes use of that poem. Again. I post it at least once a year.
It's a great, melancholy piece of work.