£5.95
Poetry and prose pamphlets by Candlestick Press come with an envelope and a bookmark left blank for your own message. They’re a wonderfully thoughtful alternative to the normal greetings card.
What could be better than starting each month with a poem? We begin on Exmoor, then encounter wild roses and pipistrelle bats, the green-god Lud and “violet lightnings” during a summer storm, before ending with a frosted window. These poems take us through the year, noticing the particular things that make each month unique and precious.
In stock
We begin on Exmoor and end with a frosted window in this glorious addition to this ever-popular series of Almanacs. On the way, we encounter wild roses and pipistrelle bats, the green-god Lud and “violet lightnings” during a summer storm.
The twelve poems take us through the year, noticing the particular things that make each month unique and precious. Spring is heralded in a delicious poem that relishes the rhymes and sound-patterns of the year’s most vibrant season:
“Slithery, withery Winter’s away!
Here comes dawny, yawny Spring sunrays,
rooty, shooty, tooty daffodils bright,
buttery, fluttery, butterflies light…”from ‘Here Comes Spring’ by Linda Middleton
What could be better than starting each month with a poem? We hope this beguiling selection will help you to do just that.
Poems by David Clarke, Jane Clarke, Olga Dermott-Bond, Fiona Dignan,Paul Laurence Dunbar, Marie-Louise Eyres, Kerry Hardie,Mark Haworth-Booth, George Meredith, Linda Middleton,Angela Readman and Sara Teasdale.
Cover illustration by Laura Boswell.
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“The time has come,” the Walrus said,
“To talk of many things:
Of shoes and ships and sealing-wax,
Of cabbages and kings
And why the sea is boiling hot
And whether pigs have wings.”
THE WALRUS & THE CARPENTER