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Not Daffodils Edith Bright-butler
Not Daffodils
Edith Bright-butler
The first poem I remember writing was school work at the age of ten, about King Canute. The teacher, I think, felt like the King, unable to hold back the tide. The stanzas, like waves, kept coming. Later, English was my main subject in which I got a Degree. However, I chose to teach juniors rather than English at a higher level, perhaps fearing frustration? If anyone asked me the question they asked Mr. Chipping, I would have answered as he did "Hundreds of them-and all boys". I had a memorable experience at a Summer School at Reading University when I recited two of my bereavement poems. "You won't cry, will you" the tutor asked me beforehand. "No", I replied, "But they will", I could have added with hindsight "Every cloud can have a silver lining"-yes, a good poem. It is good to make people laugh and I do like to, but I prefer the salt in tears-"crisps and salted peanuts rather than jelly or sweet biscuits at a party". However, in "Not Daffodils", I have, as it were, held a mirror to a known poem and reflect its beauty-as in "Lea-Creaver" and "Shut Out"-or, more often, humorously to distort it.
| Medios de comunicación | Libros Paperback Book (Libro con tapa blanda y lomo encolado) |
| Publicado | 31 de mayo de 2011 |
| ISBN13 | 9781453556382 |
| Editores | XLIBRIS |
| Páginas | 70 |
| Dimensiones | 5 × 152 × 229 mm · 113 g |
| Lengua | Inglés |
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