Transcript

John Butcher – Author
Hi again, and as we embark on our studies in the arts and humanities it’s inevitable really that we might end up in an academic library. And for the study of poetry, that’s really important really, because we need to have access to some volumes, perhaps of contemporary poetry, or indeed of some older poetry. For example one of the poets we’ll be using during our course is Elizabeth Barrett Browning, who we've got there, and also we need to have access perhaps to some critical studies of poetry, looking at interpretation and some biographical studies of poets as well.
And one of the things we might do is feel slightly awestruck when we think about some of the poetry through history – just plucked here Keats’ poetical works, not a thin volume as you can see, and a set of poetry that he produced before sadly dying at the age of just 25. But we shouldn’t be in awe of this, and in many ways the important thing about this course is to recognise that there can be examples of poetry found all around us. So not just in academic libraries, but let’s try and imagine, let’s say it’s early February and we’re wandering around a greetings card shop or a supermarket, looking for that Valentine’s Day card, and perhaps we come across a Purple Ronnie, and I’d just like to give you a little bit of a poem now to illustrate the point I'm making. So, for example, Millionaire Poem:
If I had a million pounds
I know what I would do
I'd buy some extra special times
And spend them all with you.
Now I admit I'm slightly moved by that, and that kind of effect is important in literature, and we've also even there got some examples of poetic techniques. There’s a rhyme there that’s quite easy to spot. There’s something much more complex, an example of hyperbole, a very exaggerated twist in the end there. But I think the important thing is to recognise, as my daughter keeps reminding me, that poetry is all around us. She particularly favours the lyrics from popular music. One of her particular favourites a couplet from the Arctic Monkeys:
And her lips are like the galaxy’s edge
And her kiss the colour of a constellation falling into place.
So even there we've got strong imagery, we've got a simile, a metaphor, and the point really is that poetry is all around us. It’s prevalent in our lives, and I think it’s really important that we understand better how poetry affects us in the way it does.