Tag Archives: Poetry

‘Two Cures for Love’ – Wendy Cope

Wendy Cope is one of my favourite modern poets. Her work is both poignant and funny, often in the same poem, and totally relatable. This anthology is subtitled ‘Selected poems 1979- 2006′, and includes work from Making Cocoa for Kingsley Amis, Serious Concerns, and If I Don’t Know, as well as some previously unpublished poems.

 The thing that makes this collection particularly interesting is that it has notes on all of the poems at the end. In the introduction Cope notes that, when Making Cocoa for Kingsley Amis was set as an A-level text, several years ago, many of the pupils (and indeed teachers) did not always recognise the in-jokes, references and parodies that her work involves. The notes aim to address this, and give further insight into her poetry, and sense of humour.

Two Cures for Love  includes some of my favourite Cope poems, such as ‘Defining the Problem’, ‘From June to December’, ‘The Orange’ and ‘Names’, and is a wonderful introduction to Cope’s deceptively clever poetry.


Just a quick poem

I was watching South Riding this evening on iplayer when Sarah Burton (brilliantly played by Anna Maxwell Martin) recited the following poem to a student:

Western wind when wilt thou blow
The small rain down can rain
Christ if my love were in my arms
And I in my bed again.

I can’t find an exact date for, rather predictably as it is by an anonymous author, but I think it was written in the 16th century. As Mr.Bibliomouse is currently working in Sweden for a year, this poem is rather poignant, and touched a chord.

 


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