ISSUE
10 (2006)
[240pp. ISBN 09530674-9-1. 7.50]
Contents: Articles
John
Hines, ‘“Aire disguis’d”: Metaphors of Genre
and Henry Vaughan’s Sacred
Hymns’
Jeremy
Hooker, ‘Reflections on “ground”’
Jonathan
Nauman and Peter Thomas, ‘Sir Charles Egerton of Newborough’
Holly
Faith Nelson, ‘“Make all things new! And without end!”
The Eschatological Vision of Henry Vaughan’
Glyn
Pursglove, ‘“Storms turn to music”’
Myra
Schneider, ‘Repair: Writing, Poetry and Therapy’
John
Powell Ward, ‘Traherne’s Cosmic Consciousness’
John
Welch, ‘When in Rome’
Contents: Poetry
Gary
Allen, ‘Equinox’
John
Barnie, ‘Between the Town and Llanwenarth’; ‘The
Deri in August’
Glenda
Beagan, ‘Time’s Egg’; ‘Brighid’
Ruth
Bidgood, ‘Renegade’
Linda
Black, ‘Who is to say?’
Alison
Brackenbury, ‘In Orbit’; ‘On the visit’
B.J.
Buckley, ‘Parallel Universe’
Anne
Cluysenaar, ‘Now’
Tony
Connor, ‘Phillips Table Model V’
Clare
Crossman, ‘Sunflowers’
Neil
Curry, ‘Beneath the Wave Off Kanagawa’
Pat
Earnshaw, ‘Fugitive Art’
Rose
Flint, ‘Creative Writing: for J’
Kate
Foley, ‘To Dream of Animals’
Peter
Gruffydd, ‘Mixing Colours’
Graham
Hartill, ‘Bronze Fennel’
Seamus
Heaney, ‘Moyulla’
Jeremy
Hilton, ‘A Long Darkness’
Jacqueline
Karp, ‘Caged in’
Mimi
Khalvati, ‘On Lines from Fahmida Riaz and Foroogh Farrokhzad’;
Ghazal (of Ghazals)’; ‘On a Line from Sappho’
John
Killick, ‘The Big House’
Lotte
Kramer, ‘The Ampersand’
Mary
MacRae, ‘Stone Lanterns’; As dew’
Mary
Michaels, ‘Fresco’
Hubert
Moore, ‘Watering’
Fiona
Owen, ‘Why I write’
Ann
Phillips, ‘Life Mask’
Jane
Routh, ‘The Path to the Helleborine’; ‘The River
Pilot’s Wife’
Anne
Ryland, ‘Seal Song’
Penelope
Shuttle, ‘Shawl of Dew’; ‘Fatherghost’
Mercer
Simpson, ‘The Island of Fishermen’; ‘For the Lost
Explorers’
Kim
Taplin, ‘Not a Breath’; ‘”We Are Made To
Lov”’
Brian
Walsham, ‘See’
Lynne
Wycherley, ‘The Westray Angel’
Open
Poetry Competition, Short Poems:
Pat Borthwick, ‘Past
Twelve O’clock’ (1st Prize)
Kate Foley, ‘Throwing
Up The Baby’ (2nd Prize)
Lauraine Palmeri, ‘The
Story of Hen-body and the Secret Self of Egg’ (3rd Prize)
Commended:
Linda Black ‘See a Penny’
Daphne Gloag, ‘Adam
Delving’
Mary MacRae, ‘The Clearing’
M.C. Newton, ‘A window
in our new house overlooks the sea’
Dilys Wood, ‘In Northamptonshire,
I Am’
Open
Poetry Competition, Long Poems:
Stephen Parr, ‘Visiting
the Etruscan Tombs at Volterra’ (1st Prize)
Sean Street, ‘The Broadcast’
(2nd Prize)
Elizabeth Burns, ‘Interiors
(after Gwen John)’ (3rd Prize)
Commended:
Heather Coffey, ‘Votive’
Rose Flint, ‘The City
of Cherished Words’
Giles Goodland, ‘Myths
of the Origin of Language’
Amanda Parkin, ‘Skin’
Visual Art
Issue 10 features images (inc. cover art) from the oil
paintings of Ernest Zobole (1927–1999).
Contributors
GARY
ALLEN was born in Ballymena, Co. Antrim. Three collections:
Languages, Flambard/Black Mountain, 2002; Exile, Black
Mountain, 2004; North of Nowhere, Lagan Press, 2005. A novel,
Cillin, Black Mountain, 2005.
JOHN
BARNIE’s latest collection is At the Salt Hotel,
Headland, 2003. Sea Lilies: Selected Poems 1984-2003 will
be published by Seren in the summer of 2006.
GLENDA
BEAGAN is a native of Rhuddlan, North Wales. She has published
two volumes of short stories, The Medlar Tree and Changes
and Dreams, both with Seren, and a poetry collection, Vixen,
with Honno.
RUTH
BIDGOOD’s New and Selected Poems, Seren, 2004,
was short-listed for the Roland Mathias Prize. Her 1992 selection
and The Fluent Moment, 1996, were short-listed for the Welsh
Book of the Year. She lives in mid-Wales.
LINDA
BLACK studied Fine Art at Leeds Art College and etching at
the Slade. Her poems have been published in various magazines and
in the anthology Entering the Tapestry, Enitharmon.
PAT
BORTHWICK lives on a farm near the North Yorkshire Moors.
Her writing has its roots in changing land and skyscapes. Her latest
collection, Swim, was published by Mudfog in March, 2005.
ALISON
BRACKENBURY’s latest collection of poems is Bricks
and Ballads, Carcanet, 2004. New poems can be seen on her website,ww.alisonbrackenbury.co.uk.
B.J.
BUCKLEY, a Montana writer, teaches in Arts-in-Schools Programmes.
Her new book of poems, with co-author Dawn Senior, is Moonhorses
and the Red Bull, Pronghorn Press, Greybull, Wyoming.
ELIZABETH
BURNS has published two collections of poetry and several
pamphlets, including The Blue Flower: Poems on the Life and Art
of Gwen John, Galdragon Press, 2004.
ANNE
CLUYSENAAR: Timeslips (Carcanet, 1997); in 2008 Seren
intends to publish her sequence in Alfred Russell Wallace; currently
working (supported by a Welsh Academi Writers Bursary) on a group
of geological poems, Wales Through Time.
HEATHER
COFFEY lives in the Chilterns and has poems in competition
anthologies and in South, Magma and Entering the
Tapestry, Enitharmon. She has completed her first collection,
The Water Common.
TONY
CONNOR was born in Manchester in 1930, where he was a textile
designer for sixteen years. He has lived and taught in the USA.
His Things Unsaid, New and Selected Poems 1960-2005
is due out from Anvil Press Poetry in May 2006.
CLARE
CROSSMAN lives in Cambridgeshire. She has published Landscapes,
Redbeck Press, 1996, Going Back, Firewater Press, 2002 and
The Shell Notebook Poems, Shoestring Press, 2004. ‘Sunflowers’
is from Fenlight, poems for music.
NEIL
CURRY lives in the Lake District. His most recent collection
is The Road to the Gunpowder House. His study of Christopher
Smart was published in 2005 by Northcote House.
PAT
EARNSHAW’s manuscript based on childhood memories of
infancy won an Arts Council of England South East grant, and was
a semi-finalist in the Robert E. Lee and Ruth L. Wilson Poetry Award
Contest (USA) in 2004. Her pamphlet, Gothic Tales, was listed
in the Poetry Book Society’s Winter Bulletin 2005.
ROSE
FLINT is Poet in Residence for the Kingfisher Project in
Salisbury, using writing in a variety of healthcare settings. Her
latest collections are Firesigns, Poetry Salzburg and Nekyia,
Stride.
KATE
FOLEY has worked as a nurse, midwife and teacher; but much
of her working life was spent in the field of archaeological science
and conservation. She now lives in Amsterdam while working on her
fourth collection.
DAPHNE
GLOAG worked in medical editing and journalism. Diversities
of Silence, Brentham Press, appeared in 1995. Prizes
include the Poetry on the Lake (first prize) and Scintilla
(long poem, third prize). She’s married to poet Peter Williamson.
GILES
GOODLAND lives in London and works on a dictionary, His last
book was A Spy in the House of Years. A further book, Capital,
is due from Salt next year.
PETER
GRUFFYDD, Bristol-based, widely published, award-winning
poet, translator and writer, at present engaged on a long work about
prisons, after a Residency at HMP Long Lartin, Worcestershire.
GRAHAM
HARTILL lives in the Black Mountains. His selected poems,
Cennau’s Bell, was published by the Collective Press
in 2005 and his latest collection, Winged Heads, is due from
Parthian Books this year.
SEAMUS
HEANEY’s latest collection of poetry, District and
Circle, is due to be published on May 2nd, 2006, the fortieth
anniversary of his first collection, Death of a Naturalist.
JEREMY
HILTON has eleven books of poetry, including a long poem
Shadow Engineering, Galloping Dog Press, 1991, and Slipstream,
Edizioni Ripostes, 2003. Lighting Up Tim, Troubadour
Press, his new collection, appears in 2006. Edits and publishes
Fire.
JOHN
HINES, after working in field archaeology, read English Language
and Literature and took his D.Phil in Archaeology at Oxford. From
1983–97 he lectured in English at Cardiff University before
transferring to a Chair in the School of History and Archaeology.
His recent Voices in the Past integrates these two strands
of study.
JEREMY
HOOKER’s The Cut of the Light: Poems 1965-2005
is forthcoming from Enitharmon. His poetry has been recorded by
‘The Poetry Archive’.
JACQUELINE
KARP’s second collection of poetry, Tears of Honey
and Gold, Five Leaves, 2004, dwells on her attachment to Spain
MIMI
KHALVATI’s Carcanet collections include Selected
Poems (2000) and The Chine (2002). She is the founder
of The Poetry School, and currently holds a Royal Literary Fund
Fellowship at City University.
JOHN
KILLICK is a published poet and critic. Co-author with Myra
Schneider of Writing for Self-Discovery, Element, 1997. He
works with dementia patients and is Associate Research Fellow in
Communication through the Arts at Stirling University.
LOTTE
KRAMER, widely published poet, with ten books, most recently
Black Over Red, The Phantom Lane, and Selected
and New Poems from Rockingham Press. Anthologised in England
and abroad. Also an exhibited painter.
MARY
MacRAE has published in magazines including Scintilla,
PN Review and Magma; poems also appear in Four Caves of
the Heart, Second Light Publications, and in the Poetry School
Anthology, Entering the Tapestry, Enitharmon.
MARY
MICHAELS’ collection of poems, The Shape of the
Rock, Sea Cow. 2003, was selected for the Alternative Generation
list in 2005. A selection of prose fictions will be appearing in
2006.
HUBERT
MOORE’ sixth full collection, The Hearing Room,
is due from Shoestring Press in 2006. Also from Shoestring is his
latest collection, Touching Down in Utopia.
JONATHAN NAUMAN has taught literature
and writing at colleges in Pennsylvania and New England. His Vaughan
work has appeared in Scintilla, the George Herbert Journal
and the Huntington Library Quarterly.
HOLLY
FAITH NELSON teaches at Trinity Western University, Canada.
She has published articles on Vaughan, Shakespeare, Margaret Cavendish
and James Hogg; and recently co-edited Eikon Basilike and
Of Paradise and Light:Essays on Henry Vaughan and John Milton
in Honor of Alan Rudrum.
M.C.
NEWTON lives is North Wales. Her work appears regularly in
poetry magazines, and her first collection will be published by
Peterloo Poets in 2006.
FIONA
OWEN is the author of Imagining the Full Hundred and
O My Swan. She also co-writes and performs music with Gorwel
Owen, and teaches literature, humanities and creative writing for
the Open University.
LAURAINE
PALMERI has published in many magazines: Staple, Iota,
Obsessed with Pipework, Outposts, Fatchance, Interpreter’s
House, etc. Past occupations include journalism and social
work. Now retired from her vegetarian B&B, she is researching
family history.
AMANDA
PARKYN started writing poetry in her 60’s. She lives
in Staffordshire and maintains close links with South Africa. Her
poems have appeared in Poetry News, Mslexia, Raw Edge and
the Ticking Crocodile anthology.
STEPHEN
PARR is a member of the Western Buddhist Order, established
in 1968. He is also co-leader of ‘Wolf at the Door’,
leading professional creative writing courses around the world.
He now lives in Bristol and writes full-time.
ANN
PHILLIPS has worked in publishing and college administration,
and lives in Cambridge. She had poems included in Oxford Poets
2004 and is currently working on a collection.
GLYN
PURSGLOVE, Reader of English at the University of Wales Swansea,
has published widely, including much on seventeenth century and
modern poetry. Several of his papers, originating at the annual
Vaughan Association Colloquiums, have appeared in Scintilla.
He is reviews editor of Acumen.
JANE
ROUTH won the Poetry Business Competition with Circumnavigation
which was shortlisted for the Forward (Best First Collection) Prize
in 2003. Recent poems feature in The Allotment: New Lyric Poets,
ed. Andy Brown, 2006.
ANNE
RYLAND’s first collection, Autumnologist, will
be published by Arrowhead Press in May. Last year she received a
Northern Promise Award from New Writing North.
MYRA
SCHNEIDER’s most recent books are Writing My Way
Through Cancer, a journal with poems, Jessica Kingsley, 2003,
and Multiplying the Moon, Enitharmon, 2004. She is currently
co-editing with Dilys Wood Images of Women (due from Arrowhead/SLP
in October), work by contemporary women poets partly Arts Council
funded.
PENELOPE
SHUTTLE is the widow of Peter Redgrove. A Hawthornden Fellow,
2005, her new collection, Redgrove’s Wife, appears
from Bloodaxe in June, 2006. She has lived in Cornwall since 1970.
MERCER SIMPSON’s poetry collections
are East Anglian Wordscapes and Rain from a Clear Blue
Sky. Many of his poems have appeared in magazines and anthologies,
particularly in Wales.
SEAN
STREET has published six collections of poetry. Prose includes
texts on radio history, as well as writings on Gerard Manley Hopkins
and the Dymock Poets. He has worked in radio as a writer, producer
and presenter for 35 years, and is Professor of Radio at Bournemouth
University.
KIM
TAPLIN has written a number of books including The English
Path, Perry Green Press, a study of footpaths in literature
and, most recently, From Parched Creek, Redbeck Press, a
volume of poetry.
PETER
THOMAS’ latest essay, ‘Henry Vaughan, Orpheus,
and The Empowerment of Poetry’, appeared in Of Paradise
and Light: Essays on Henry Vaughan and John Milton in Honor of Alan
Rudrum, University of Delaware Press, 2005.
BRIAN
WALSHAM born in Sheffield, was a prolific writer of poetry
and a staunch supporter of the UVVA and Scintilla. It is
with sorrow that we received news of his recent death.
JOHN
POWELL WARD is Honorary Research Fellow at the University
of Wales, Swansea. In 2004 he published his Selected and New
Poems, Seren, and The Spell of the Song, Fairleigh Dickinson
University Press, USA, a wide-ranging study of the alphabet, its
theory and applications. He lives in Kent and Gower.
JOHN
WELCH, born in London in 1942 and retired from school-teaching
four years ago, has recently published a number of articles touching
his experience of psychoanalysis. His fourth collection of poems,
The Eastern Boroughs, appeared from Shearsman Books in 2004.
DILYS
WOOD is the co-ordinator of Second Light Poets and SLN Publishing.
Her collection is Women Come to Death, Katabasis, 1997.
LYNNE
WYCHERLEY’s second collection, North Flight,
is due from Shoestring Press in July, 2006. It charts a lyrical
journey from her birth-place in the Fens to Orkney, Shetland and
Iceland.
ART WORK: ERNEST ZOBOLE
(1927–1999) was born and spent almost all his life
in the Rhondda Valley. That place, where rural and urban are not
things apart, was from first to last the great subject of his painting.
He was an artist intensely absorbed with his locality, totally committed,
and so identifying with it that after the 1960s he effectively withdrew
from the metropolitan art world, not in order to retreat into a
narrow provincialism, but to go his own way, enter ever more deeply
into the treal landscape of his imagination. Rooted in place—and
in European visual culture—he found a way of being both fixed
and free, inside and outside, looking on and exploring within, of
being simultaneously local and universal. For his art was anything
but stationary, evolving through the years (as he and the valley
changed) from pricture as window to a form of painting, a kind of
magic realism, in which he could, as he put it, ‘travel around
in space and time’—and, not least, thrust himself into
his landscape, the detached and involved observer, visionary painter
of mankind's paradoxical condition beneath the stars.
Cover image: ‘Penrhys’ (c.
1950), oil on board, 61 x 39.5cm. Reproduced courtesy of the National
Museum and Galleries of Wales. Copyright rests with the Estate of
Ernest Zobole.

Last
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04-Oct-2006
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This document is maintained by Anthony
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