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Helen Dunmore wins poetry prize

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    Helen Dunmore wins poetry prize

    From The Guardian World News
    By Allison Flood
    March 30, 2010



    Writer best known for her novels, who submitted work at the last minute 'on impulse', takes £5,000 award for single poem 'The Malarkey'

    Read the winning poem here


    Picking through the 10,467 anonymous entries for this year's National Poetry Competition, judges and poets Ruth Padel, Daljit Nagra and Neil Rollinson were sure of their winner, "The Malarkey", which Padel described as "completely arresting in its quietness [and] hidden strength". When they discovered it was by Orange prize-winning novelist and poet Helen Dunmore, "we all threw our hats in the air", said Padel.


    The haunting, carefully structured poem about loss sees an unidentified narrator asking "Why did you tell them to be quiet / and sit up straight until you came back? / The malarkey would have led you to them ... You looked away just once / as you leaned on the chip-shop counter, / and forty years were gone." Dunmore, whose novel about an incestuous sibling relationship during the 1930s, A Spell of Winter, won the inaugural Orange prize, is best-known for her fiction, but has published nine collections of poetry. She hadn't entered the National Poetry Competition "for many, many years", and submitted "The Malarkey" at the last minute, just before the deadline closed, "on an impulse".


    Hearing that she'd won the £5,000 prize, which is awarded this evening, left her "in a state of ecstasy", she said. "I was standing in a cold car park putting things into the back of the car [when I heard]. It was very emotional, very moving," she said. "I'd written the poem shortly before sending it in – it's quite a tightly organised poem, in terms of the rhymes and the near-rhymes. It's very much about containment ... I've written very few poems over the past four years ... but now I have the feeling that there is the kernel of a new collection. It is a great boost to receive the prize – a confirmation."


    Padel said that she'd liked "The Malarkey" "right from the beginning". "It hit me with its language – 'the malarkey would have led you to them' is an extraordinary thing to say. It reminded me of [CP] Cavafy," she said. "It's very adept but quite unobtrusive – it's not a flashy poem at all, but there's a lot of integrity to it. It shows what a poem can do."


    The National Poetry Competition, founded and run by the Poetry Society, was set up in 1978 and has been won in the past by poet laureate Carol Ann Duffy, Tony Harrison and Padel herself. The second prize of £1,000 was won by Ian Pindar for Mrs Beltinska in the Bath. Pindar's first collection of poetry, Emporium, will be published next year. Third prize of £500 was won by John Stammerstook, whose third collection is published in April, for Mr Punch in Soho.
    I wonder why the things that should be so simple, so natural... like loving someone and letting them see into your heart... should require so much courage?

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    Re: Helen Dunmore wins poetry prize

    Quote Originally Posted by Don View Post
    Sorry Don, but
    "Of all tyrannies, a tyranny sincerely exercised 'for the good of its victims' may be the most oppressive. It would be better to live under robber barons than under omnipotent moral busybodies. The robber baron's cruelty may sometimes sleep, his cupidity may at some point be satiated; but those who torment us 'for our own good' will torment us without end for they do so with the approval of their own conscience." -- C.S. Lewis

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    Re: Helen Dunmore wins poetry prize

    Quote Originally Posted by Midas View Post
    Sorry Don, but
    Philistine!
    I wonder why the things that should be so simple, so natural... like loving someone and letting them see into your heart... should require so much courage?

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    Re: Helen Dunmore wins poetry prize

    Quote Originally Posted by Don View Post
    Philistine!
    Guilty as charged With very few exceptions, poetry to me is so borrrring.......
    "Of all tyrannies, a tyranny sincerely exercised 'for the good of its victims' may be the most oppressive. It would be better to live under robber barons than under omnipotent moral busybodies. The robber baron's cruelty may sometimes sleep, his cupidity may at some point be satiated; but those who torment us 'for our own good' will torment us without end for they do so with the approval of their own conscience." -- C.S. Lewis

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    Re: Helen Dunmore wins poetry prize

    Quote Originally Posted by Midas View Post
    Guilty as charged With very few exceptions, poetry to me is so borrrring.......
    So, what exceptions?
    I wonder why the things that should be so simple, so natural... like loving someone and letting them see into your heart... should require so much courage?

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    Re: Helen Dunmore wins poetry prize

    Quote Originally Posted by Don View Post
    So, what exceptions?
    I honestly couldn't tell you Don, it's simply that very occasionally I'll see a piece of poetry and think "I suppose that's OK". In general though, to me, it's just a pointless waste of time, money and effort.
    "Of all tyrannies, a tyranny sincerely exercised 'for the good of its victims' may be the most oppressive. It would be better to live under robber barons than under omnipotent moral busybodies. The robber baron's cruelty may sometimes sleep, his cupidity may at some point be satiated; but those who torment us 'for our own good' will torment us without end for they do so with the approval of their own conscience." -- C.S. Lewis

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    Re: Helen Dunmore wins poetry prize

    He has no soul Don (well he does, but he likes to bury it way way down mostly), it's the science thing after all the romantic movement was largely formed in reaction to the enlightenment era and Midas is nothing if not all about reason! Although I have to say, whilst I think poetry has it's place (mostly in the diaries of angst ridden 14 year olds), generally it is self indulgent pap, that being said I have been known to indulge in a bit of Wordsworth, Blake, Keats or Shelley, usually whilst I indulged in the glorious pain of having my heart broken yet again .
    "The object of universities is not to make skilful lawyers, physicians or engineers. It is to make capable and cultivated human beings." John Stewart Mill

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    Re: Helen Dunmore wins poetry prize

    Quote Originally Posted by Opinionated View Post
    He has no soul Don (well he does, but he likes to bury it way way down mostly), it's the science thing after all the romantic movement was largely formed in reaction to the enlightenment era and Midas is nothing if not all about reason!
    I would have pegged Midas for a 'Renaissance man'. Alas he is but a Philistine, as I previously noted.

    Although I have to say, whilst I think poetry has it's place (mostly in the diaries of angst ridden 14 year olds), generally it is self indulgent pap, that being said I have been known to indulge in a bit of Wordsworth, Blake, Keats or Shelley, usually...
    May I suggest that you cease peeping into the "diaries of angst ridden 14 year olds". Stick to the poets you mentioned and perhaps add some Milton, Coleridge, Byron, Locke, Browning and Poe. I note a conspicuous absence also of Shakespeare (what are you thinking?).

    ...whilst I indulged in the glorious pain of having my heart broken yet again .
    Try this, Pablo Neruda's Sonnet 17: Sonnet XVII by Pablo Neruda
    Give it a read. If I could write something like that, I'd shoot myself and die happy.
    Last edited by Don; 01-04-2010 at 04:14 PM. Reason: fixed quote
    I wonder why the things that should be so simple, so natural... like loving someone and letting them see into your heart... should require so much courage?

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    Re: Helen Dunmore wins poetry prize

    I love reading a types of poetry, however contemporary poetry is always fascinating, and the 'Poetry Society's' open competition is for anybody to enter, yet when a professional wins you begin to wonder. Of course I write a bit of poetry myself and have recently entered some into a competition hoping that I can scoop the £1000 prize. Below is one I have written but not entered.

    A funny sonnet.

    They launched a thousand faces from a rooftop,
    so don't quote me now as to why and how far,
    they wanted to go perhaps it was all a great flop,
    and they tumbled around until they got to the car.

    The car went onwards going vroom vroom,
    going up hillsides and into the countryside,
    veering and careering to make plenty of room,
    it kept on going until it reached the seaside.

    So they got out and went round and about town,
    looking and hooking, soaking and chalking it all up,
    seeking and searching for a dressing gown brown,
    and ending up drinking from saucer and cup.

    So the moral of this tale is don't trust a poet,
    because he will probably give up and throw it.
    At a time when we're having to take such difficult decisions about how to cut back without damaging the things that matter the most, we should strain every sinew to cut error, waste and fraud.

    You will feel the full force of the law and if you are old enough to commit these crimes you are old enough to face the punishments. And to these people I would say this: you are not only wrecking the lives of others, you are potentially wrecking your own life too.

    (David Cameron) (Some of his lies.)

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