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Showing posts with the label Dylan Thomas

The Companionship of Books: About Poetry by Peter Leyland

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  The Companionship of Books: About Poetry* This chapter is all about poetry+. It begins with my stay in Broad Green Hospital when I was sixteen for an operation on a torn cartilage. I had been attempting a descent from the wall bars during a school gym lesson and had landed awkwardly, so awkwardly in fact that every time I tried to run for the morning bus my knee would lock into a fixed position and necessitate a system of contortions on the ground in order to free it. Mr Almond, who saw me in Rodney Street, just around the corner from The Liverpool Institute, took one examination and immediately booked me into Broad Green for the operation.   I arrived there to find myself in a ward full of men with their legs either covered in bandages or underneath raised frames, which allowed their legs to rest underneath, without the pressure of the bedclothes. On the ward I met Alan who was a trainee teacher. We were in adjacent beds and he talked to me about novels and poetry, particul...

Writing about night – Elizabeth Kay

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Night is the time when sabre tooths and cave bears were out and about, and our eyesight was not as well adapted as theirs was. Night is scary, which is probably an evolutionary adaptation for keeping human beings safely in their caves when predators were out and about. These days the most dangerous night-time predators are leopards, crocodiles, vipers and mosquitoes. And other humans. Fear is a natural r esponse that triggers an adrenaline rush and results in the same fight-or-flight response that anger does: your heart rate and breathing quicken, your breathing becomes shallow, you feel flushed, your muscles tense up, you feel shaky, and weak at the knees. With fear, you might also find that you become dizzy or lightheaded, feel nauseous, and experience pain, tightness or heaviness in the chest. Fear causes specific behaviour patterns so that we can cope in adverse or unexpected situations that threaten our wellbeing or survival – like a fire or a physical attack. It’s a familiar emo...