Caught by the River

National Poetry Day

4th October 2012

Wee have also Sound-Houses, wher wee practise and demonstrate all Sounds, and their Generation. Wee have Harmonies which you have not, of Quarter-Sounds and lesser Slides of Sounds. Diverse Instruments of Musick likewise to you unknowne, some sweeter than any you have; Together with Bells and Rings that are dainty and sweet. Wee represent Small Sounds as Great and Deepe; Likewise Great Sounds, Extenuate and Sharpe; Wee make diverse Tremblings and Warblings of Sounds, which in their Originall are Entire. Wee represent and imitate all Articulate Sounds and Letters, and the Voices and Notes of Beasts and Birds. Wee have certaine Helps, which sett to the Eare doe further the Hearing greatly. Wee have also diverse Strange and Artificiall Eccho’s, Reflecting the Voice many times, and as it were Tossing it; And some that give back the Voice Lowder then it came, some Shriller, and some Deeper; Yea, some rendring the Voice, Differing in the Letters or Articulate Sound, from that they receyve. Wee have also meanes to convey Sounds in Trunks and Pipes, in strange Lines, and Distances.

Francis Bacon from New Atlantis, 1627

chosen by Chris Watson:
Not a poem, but nevertheless poetic, I keep this for reference on my desktop. I was introduced to the ‘New Atlantis’ via the cover page handbook of my EMS Synthi AKS in 1978.

Cake

I wanted one life
You wanted another
We couldn’t have our cake
So we ate eachother

Roger McGough

(chosen by Nina ‘Mrs Bun’ Walsh)