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In Bloody Orkney subscriber-only content

Robert Crawford

  • George Mackay Brown: The Life by Maggie Fergusson
  • The Collected Poems of George Mackay Brown edited by Archie Bevan and Brian Murray  Buy this book

Poets need to dig in. This involves psychological concentration, a focus on the act of writing, but also on how to limber up for writing: they must be open to the often accidental stimuli that nourish poems. Travel can encourage this, but too much travel dilutes it. For many poets familiar ground is best. Tennyson had the gateposts of his house distinctively painted so that he didn’t carry on past them when he was out composing. Poets must also entrench themselves in sound and syntax, learn to be at home in rhythms, etymological echoes, idioms and vocabulary. This linguistic digging in can be quickened by listening to other tongues, yet it is almost unknown for a poet to settle in a language – as distinct from an accent – learned after childhood. Only a few remarkable people have written with distinction in a language that was not their first.

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Robert Crawford, whose Selected Poems were published in 2005, teaches at St Andrews.

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