The bard celebrates two other fine practitioners of the art, and laments a lost brewer
Of Trees and Words
Claire Booker
Changes to the national curriculum will omit the study of any poetry written after 1980.
A scheme to sell off heritage woodland was considered by this government.
Unleash your hypocritic minds, ye Tory hearts
of oak! Uproot our ancient woods with bodgers’ hands;
each tree, a many-antlered monarch in your sights,
run to ground and blasted, to salvage fiscal plans.
Oh yes, you say re-plant; great oaks from acorns grow.
Yet in five hundred years, when England rings once more
to children’s gasps will they peer up and wonder how,
when this basilica of bark, stain-glassed in green, bore
first leaf, their ancestors were fooled by frauds? For I spy
bad logic: you’ll lop live poetry, talley-ho it
from school curricula, yet lovingly tie
yellow ribbons round the weathered trunks of poets
labelled ‘heritage’. Thus, petty minds make kindling
of the root and lifeblood of our future flourishings.
JAN WOOLF invigilates images that meditate on Palestine, and the people who witness them
RUTH AYLETT reviews two collections of outright political poetry
by Clare Evans
by Widad Nabi


