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| annie |
Posted: Nov 4 2009, 01:41 PM
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Love-Child of the Muse Group: Member of Poets On Fire Forum Posts: 65 Member No.: 281 Joined: 2-October 07 |
Dear Poets on Fire
I am looking for poems (of any era) which deal in some way with the occult, the miraculous or the paranormal. I would be grateful for any suggestions. |
| Matthew Francis |
Posted: Nov 4 2009, 02:30 PM
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Dark Matter Group: Member of Poets On Fire Forum Posts: 554 Member No.: 183 Joined: 25-June 07 |
Off the top of my head:
The Ancient Mariner Tam o' Shanter The Raven Two poems by Robert Frost, 'The Pauper Witch of Grafton' and The Witch of Coos' (both favourites of mine. I love the bit in 'The Witch of Coos' about the skeleton which 'carried itself like a pile of dishes' up the stairs.) Robert Graves, 'Welsh Incident' John Donne, 'The Apparition' Edwin Morgan, 'The Mummy' |
| mgranier |
Posted: Nov 4 2009, 02:46 PM
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Opus Posthumous Group: Member of Poets On Fire Forum Posts: 770 Member No.: 264 Joined: 11-September 07 |
I love that genre. I made a similar request a couple of years ago on this forum, for a course I was setting up for the Adult Ed Dept. in UCD, provisionally called 'Ghost Train'. While looking for material, I found (or someone might have sent me) this short one by Stephen Crane:
There Is A Grey Thing… There is a grey thing that lives in the tree-tops None knows the horror of its sight Save those who meet death in the wilderness But one is enabled to see To see branches move at its passing To hear at times the wail of black laughter And to come often upon mystic places Places where the thing has just been. The shortest poem I have ever written is a 'ghost poem'. I posted it on my Lightbox blog recently, with a photo/illustration: Ghost Story |
| Chris Hamilton-Emery |
Posted: Nov 4 2009, 04:03 PM
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![]() Practically Homer Group: Member of Poets On Fire Forum Posts: 1,168 Member No.: 27 Joined: 25-April 06 |
I don't normally blow my own trumpet, but my first collection Dr Mephisto is littered with the occult.
-------------------- Salt Audio Books — for literature on the move or in the classroom
http://www.saltpublishing.com/books/audio/ Catch up with the new Salt blog: http://blog.saltpublishing.com/ Buy every Salt book from John Sandoe (Books) Ltd in Chelsea |
| John McCullough |
Posted: Nov 4 2009, 05:55 PM
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Bright Spark Group: Member of Poets On Fire Forum Posts: 19 Member No.: 1,123 Joined: 6-September 09 |
To add to the ones mentioned above, below is a link to a website which has 66 poems on ghosts and the occult by famous poets including James Merrill (whose ouija board poems in The Book of Ephraim are generally well regarded), Louise Gluck, Weldon Kees and traditional favourites like Walter de la Mare's 'The Listeners'...
http://www.poetryfoundation.org/archive/to....8.1.html?id=65 In terms of other contemporary poets, Helen Mort recently published a pamphlet with Tall Lighthouse called A Pint for the Ghost and I did one with them called The Lives of Ghosts as part of the pilot series last year. Both of these, as the titles suggest, contain much inspired by the paranormal. August Kleinzahler has a fair few poems on such subjects. 'Where Souls Go' is one of his best-known pieces and there's also the fabulous 'Green River Cemetery: Springs' (in Red Sauce, Whiskey and Snow plus his new Selected) and 'Ghosts' (in Live at the Hong Kong Nile Club). Thom Gunn has a dark poem envisaging the afterlife called 'Death's Door' in The Man with Night Sweats. 'Fog' by Mark Doty in My Alexandria also looks at the spirit world and there's a great poem by Ken Smith called 'After Mr Mayhew's Visit' in his Bloodaxe Selected. 'Bedfellows' in Don Paterson's first collection Nil Nil is also worth a look. Hope this is useful. |
| John McCullough |
Posted: Nov 4 2009, 06:20 PM
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Bright Spark Group: Member of Poets On Fire Forum Posts: 19 Member No.: 1,123 Joined: 6-September 09 |
More poems...
'The New Bride' by Catherine Smith is narrated by a ghost. It's in her first collection The Butcher's Hands. Michael Symmons Roberts' sequence 'Food for Risen Bodies' in Corpus is very good. Allen Ginsberg's 'A Supermarket in California' is probably my single favourite poem in this area (even though in general I'm not a massive Ginsberg fan). And Yeats has plenty. I particularly like 'The Valley of the Black Pig'. |
| mgranier |
Posted: Nov 4 2009, 06:21 PM
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Opus Posthumous Group: Member of Poets On Fire Forum Posts: 770 Member No.: 264 Joined: 11-September 07 |
And of course there's Katy's lovely and eerie 'Your Ghosts', from Me And The Dead.
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| annie |
Posted: Nov 4 2009, 06:34 PM
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Love-Child of the Muse Group: Member of Poets On Fire Forum Posts: 65 Member No.: 281 Joined: 2-October 07 |
Fabulous. Warmest thanks to Mgranier, Matthew, Chris and Matthew
Annie xxxxxxxxx |
| annie |
Posted: Nov 4 2009, 06:35 PM
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Love-Child of the Muse Group: Member of Poets On Fire Forum Posts: 65 Member No.: 281 Joined: 2-October 07 |
John. Thank you so much
Annie |
| Tony Williams |
Posted: Nov 4 2009, 07:17 PM
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![]() Red Giant Group: Member of Poets On Fire Forum Posts: 176 Member No.: 187 Joined: 26-June 07 |
There's also Emily Dickinson's ‘Because I could not stop for Death’, written in the voice of a centuries-old corpse.
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| Anne B |
Posted: Nov 4 2009, 08:32 PM
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![]() Love-Child of the Muse Group: Member of Poets On Fire Forum Posts: 50 Member No.: 197 Joined: 12-July 07 |
And on the subject of miracles, David Constantine's pair of Lazarus poems ("Christ to Lazarus" and "Lazarus to Christ") are worth a look.
Mostly though, don't poets concern themselves with the ordinary made miraculous, rather than miracles? Elizabeth Bishop's A Miracle for Breakfast, frex. Maybe worth a quick look here: miracle poems |
| Amy Key |
Posted: Nov 4 2009, 10:24 PM
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![]() Red Giant Group: Member of Poets On Fire Forum Posts: 130 Member No.: 345 Joined: 21-February 08 |
Hi Annie
I adore 'poem to line my casket with' by Joshua Bell. Can send it to you if you'd like. Amy xx |
| Chris Hamilton-Emery |
Posted: Nov 4 2009, 11:18 PM
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![]() Practically Homer Group: Member of Poets On Fire Forum Posts: 1,168 Member No.: 27 Joined: 25-April 06 |
Oh, and I must mention Ghost & Other Sonnets by Geraldine Monk.
And The Grimoire of Grimalkin by Sascha Aurora Akhtar. -------------------- Salt Audio Books — for literature on the move or in the classroom
http://www.saltpublishing.com/books/audio/ Catch up with the new Salt blog: http://blog.saltpublishing.com/ Buy every Salt book from John Sandoe (Books) Ltd in Chelsea |
| KEB |
Posted: Nov 4 2009, 11:56 PM
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Dark Matter Group: Member of Poets On Fire Forum Posts: 663 Member No.: 11 Joined: 23-April 06 |
Thanks Mark!
Annie, one poem I'd always want to include in this category is Keats' This Living Hand, which although about the hand that's writing the poem, both prefigures and conjures away the ravages of death through what looks like a pre-emptive pact... astonishing every time. Keats again, La Belle Dame Sans Merci. Edna St Vincent Millay has a poem called The Little Ghost which gives me a genuine chill. Then there's dear old Jimmy Merrill, as John says; The Changing Light at Sandover, huge, but with quotable sections. Michael's Haunts. Ciaran Carson, there are things in the Twelfth of Never, his wonderful collection... leprechauns and things. It's a marvellous book. Then there's the old chestnuts: "one fine day in the middle of the night/ two dead boys got up to fight"; "As I was going up the stair/ I met a man who wasn't there," etc. ... -------------------- |
| Michelle McGrane |
Posted: Nov 5 2009, 08:13 AM
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![]() Love-Child of the Muse Group: Member of Poets On Fire Forum Posts: 68 Member No.: 1,117 Joined: 7-June 09 |
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| KEB |
Posted: Nov 5 2009, 09:21 AM
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Dark Matter Group: Member of Poets On Fire Forum Posts: 663 Member No.: 11 Joined: 23-April 06 |
YES, THAT'S the one I was going to add! Marvellous poem. All kinds of weird.
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| Steven Waling |
Posted: Nov 5 2009, 10:10 AM
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Dark Matter Group: Member of Poets On Fire Forum Posts: 681 Member No.: 190 Joined: 28-June 07 |
I was going to mention the Geraldine Monk - and also of course there's her Interegnum - about the Lancashire Witches.
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| Michelle McGrane |
Posted: Nov 5 2009, 11:32 AM
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![]() Love-Child of the Muse Group: Member of Poets On Fire Forum Posts: 68 Member No.: 1,117 Joined: 7-June 09 |
Angela France's Occupation (Ragged Raven Press, 2009) contains a number of magical poems: 'Ronan', 'Sea Hare', 'Rejecting Gravity', 'Preparations for a working day', A Hare is a kind of Witch', 'View from the crossroads', 'Mothering the Unmade', 'The Real Bedtime Story' - and more.
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| mgranier |
Posted: Nov 5 2009, 11:56 AM
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Opus Posthumous Group: Member of Poets On Fire Forum Posts: 770 Member No.: 264 Joined: 11-September 07 |
Matthew Sweeney has a nicely savage little poem called, I think, 'How Witches Went Invisible'.
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| Michelle McGrane |
Posted: Nov 5 2009, 12:21 PM
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![]() Love-Child of the Muse Group: Member of Poets On Fire Forum Posts: 68 Member No.: 1,117 Joined: 7-June 09 |
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